Originally Posted by
amingb
Ang naka confuse sa Bible kay naay mga Verse nga we need to Prove Historically kay wala kaau ma Detail, But its not the Issue, the issue is people misinterpreted it.
This is also CORRECT. The literary construction of the Bible alone is NOT AT ALL TIMES "what you see is what you get." The diversity of writing styles reflect the culture or practices the authors saw at the time of writing. That's why you read a different "feel" of God during Moses' time (who is a bit legalistic and wrathful) and during the time of David (who is merciful and forgiving). The same goes for other scriptures. We CANNOT EXACTLY KNOW why they were written in such themes simply for sheer lack of historical data.
There are Christians that scare the hell out of another [Christian] by quoting mostly the anthologies of God's wrath which you will find mostly in the Old Testament or perhaps the Revelations.
Some or many quote indiscriminately the Bible to conveniently support their own views or certain theologies. Examples of which are the verses just presented by the thread-starter (no offense meant to the thread-starter, and i don't also mean he is like that). If you're going to read each verse in ISOLATION you will find out there are seemingly contradictory verses elsewhere. But if you'll read the verses before or after it, you will find it actually meant another thing. You may try reading those examples and you'll see what I mean.
Some just also literally interpret the Bible rather than symbolically. This is where most of the conflict arises. A good is Noah's Story. For the fundamentalists, they say it was a global flood. For those who interpret the Great Deluge symbolically, they say it was just one strong downpour/catastrophy long ago and that it is not relevant to the whole message of the story.
Others also liberally interpret the Bible out of whim to cash in on gullible people. And you know darn well who they are