Janoah wrote: ↑Sun Jul 23, 2023 1:58 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jul 21, 2023 7:54 pm
But
Torah says there is not such an inconsistency between God and various male figures, such as "shepherd," "king," and "father." So if we believe
Torah...
in this topic, the argument is not blind faith in what someone said,
Someone? You mean you think the Author of
Torah is just "someone"? That's a thing I would certainly think twice before saying...
Much of the Torah cannot be taken literally. The ability to understand literally is determined by the scientific evidence that it literally could be.
"Determined by the scientific evidence that it literally could be"? I don't understand your phrasing here.
The Torah is important in upbringing the people, but a person, a people, is brought up by fables, parables, legends, more than with a history textbook.
Torah isn't merely a "history textbook," it's true. It's actually a sort of library, especially when you consider the whole
Tanakh. But the history it affirms is history, of course. Among other things, it's also poetry, prophecy, law, ethics, and a guide to knowing
HaShem. But every Torah scholar knows that.
It's not "science" that determines
Torah, because science and
Torah are not at war. In fact, one could easily make the case that science itself depended for its origin on
Torah, since it's
Torah (and not polytheism or Atheism) that taught people that the universe is the product of the work of a law-giver God, so that law-like principles can be expected within it. And without that expectation, Baconian science would never have even gotten started (as a devout Christian, Bacon himself was strongly influenced by
Torah).
When God says, "Thou shalt not commit murder," that's not a principle about which science has anything to say. Science can tell you how to cause or prevent death; it can't tell you whether you're right or wrong to do so in a given case. When
Torah records that God divided the Red Sea, that's not something science can contradict, for two other reasons: firstly, that it's in the past, so not amenable to testing by way of science, and secondly, because the claimed event is a miraculous intervention by God Himself -- and science does not tell us whether or not the Supreme Being can intervene in scientific regularities. But it would be very strange to call Him the "Supreme Being" if your claim was that he couldn't.
So what is the level of your respect for
Torah? You're Jewish, no? Do you really think
Torah is just a collection of cultural fables?