Is the Bible incomplete?
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Re: Is the Bible incomplete?
I'll go with you. I'll rather not see this as completing the bible but as an attempt by the author to express his thought of what he thinks could have transpired
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The bible has all the stories that is needed for the Christian to thrive.
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No one can get the authority or the right to complete the bible on his/her own. This is author's input for an attempt to interpret those storiesblessing_bona wrote: ↑02 Jun 2020, 20:35I'll go with you. I'll rather not see this as completing the bible but as an attempt by the author to express his thought of what he thinks could have transpired
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- Sushan Ekanayake
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Yes, the bible has the stories with necessary details for a believer to learn from itblessing_bona wrote: ↑02 Jun 2020, 20:38 I appreciate the author's imagination of the creation era. I'd rather not attribute it to an attempt at completing the bible.
The bible has all the stories that is needed for the Christian to thrive.
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- Pearl Hijabi
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It is not a comparison, but a mere discussion whether the bible has missed out some partsPearl Hijabi wrote: ↑03 Jun 2020, 00:29 As far as I know this book is a fiction. There's no need to compare a fiction with a religious book like Bible according to me.
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Maybe the mentioned details are the only details to be known by His believers
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Your's is a very logical explanation, and it answers almost all the argumentsLian wrote: ↑03 Jun 2020, 03:34 In the first place, the bible has never been exactly complete. It is a library of separate works that were told/written hundreds of years apart. In fact, a lot of the content was passed down through oral tradition, particularly by fishermen. As a result, the details and interpretation were always changing until Constantinople used Christianity as his political campaign. This led to the era of transcribing, finding, compiling the separate stories that make up the bible today.
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Bible can stand on its own, there is no argument about that. But the point is that there are apparent gaps in the chronological storyLeDiplomatique wrote: ↑03 Jun 2020, 04:30 The bible is complete on its own. Killing Abel does not add or subtract anything from the bible because it is an independent book. The author states clearly that the additions of the book are 'fictitious accounts' added in an attempt to bolster biblical text with fictional but logical text. The bible is enough to stand on its own as the Greater Light without support from independent sources.
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True, they do enhance our spirituality and usually the fictionalizing of these elements work to draw us closer.espo wrote: ↑02 Jun 2020, 05:41I am Christian and I have no problem with fictional stories about the Bible, as long as the authors make it clear that they are fictional and make no claim to authenticity. Religious texts will always be talked about and interpreted. These interpretations will always be embodied and contextualized in the societies through which they travel. This is inevitable and I have no problem with that. As long as the core messages of Christianity are left intact, which I think they often are in these fictional stories, I do not see it as offensive or unrighteous.Dee_Robert wrote: ↑02 Jun 2020, 05:22This may be where people will have problems. I have seen Christian writers who develop fictional stories from the Bibles plot making it more relatable taking care to remain on the original track.
The problem is when someone veers off, trying to rewrite history, develop a spinoff series or something
Christians may have problems with that
But really, just how much freedom does a writer have with the original plot?
What's considered fair?
Growing up, I was often told stories about the Bible and saints which I am sure were heavily "fictionalized," but the purpose behind it was always to bring me closer to God in a way that was suitable to my age. I think everything is considered fair as long as there are no claims to authenticity to the Scriptures and the core Christian values are not altered. After all, do we not see images of Jesus and saints that might not be even close to reality? And have they not contributed to us feeling closer to them and enhancing our spirituality?
I agree with what you have said. I was wondering about the borderlines?, what happens when fiction do alter core Christian values and bring in foreign ways of thinking?
Well I suppose we can only hope it eventually doesn't
-Dee.