Annihilist
Member
The Bible to me seems to be more consistent with fiction than gospel. It's just another book. It contains stories with meanings and morals and parables, of course, just like anything. The Tree of Knowledge parable in the Garden of Eden is one I'm rather fond of. It illustrates how people are punished for seeking knowledge themselves, for opening their eyes and thinking for themselves. The Serpent encouraged that; to defy God and follow oneself. How authority tries to cover up our eyes to instil obedience and submission; the serpent's character, however, represents defiance of that will. That's just one example.Lol. It's cool.
Ecclesiastes...yeah, just like the rest of Christianity we, as free-thinking rational agnostic atheists should just ignore it. Cuz it's in the Bible, but nah, it doesn't count. It doesn't sound at all like what we think God is really like, despite being in the Bible!
I'm interested in the arguments too. But only the ones that have decent reasoning behind them (Of which I am still waiting for pro-God existence arguments).
It's a collection of stories which sometimes have meanings. Like pretty much any story. They are not meant to be taken literally any more than, say, Harry Potter, for example. That is why they are inconsistent with each other sometimes - and that's fine, once we accept that they are not literal stories or Gospels. That they are mere fictions, and one should read into the metaphors and concepts illustrated, instead of simply taking it for face value.
One thing I don't get is why the Bible is seen as proof for God; as a book written by God himself and as factual and true. That makes no sense.