Literalism: Difference between revisions

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Any reading of [[scripture]] as [[allegory]] is potentially compatible with the [[pantheistic]] [[universalist]] interpretation of [[god]].
Any reading of [[scripture]] as [[allegory]] is potentially compatible with the [[pantheistic]] [[universalist]] interpretation of [[god]].


[[Religion]] and [[spirituality]] are not the enemies of [[truth]], as [[atheists]] would claim. The only enemy is [[literalism]].
[[Religion]] and [[spirituality]] are not the opponents of [[truth]], as [[atheists]] would claim. The only opponent is [[literalism]].


{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0_J998UD9s||center||frame}}
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0_J998UD9s||center||frame}}

Revision as of 23:02, 3 January 2024

See Biblical Literalism

It can refer to any fundamentalist religious belief based on any scripture.

The key feature of literalism is that scripture is assumed to be a literal depiction of historical events instead of allegory. This interpretation necessitates the existence of supernatural beings and forces that are incompatible with materialism.

Any reading of scripture as allegory is potentially compatible with the pantheistic universalist interpretation of god.

Religion and spirituality are not the opponents of truth, as atheists would claim. The only opponent is literalism.