Re: The Bible: Real, Fiction, or somewhere in between?
Yes, my 12 years of Catholic education, including 3 years of law school at a Jesuit university, and having gone to church probably a 1000 times in my life clearly makes me the one who is ignoring things based on an ideological bend...
For the record, I also grew up extremely active in my church (Methodist) in Tennessee. Active, in the sense that I was at church 5x every week throughout middle and high school - service and Sunday school on Sunday morning, youth group and choir practice Sunday evenings, Bible study on Tuesday, Fellowship supper on Wednesdays, and working with our "local missions" program (which I also did as a full-time summer job in high school) delivering firewood and repairing houses for needy families on Saturdays (we met at church, so I'm counting it). I had a blast and don't regret a single minute of it - I just stopped believing there was an invisible man behind the curtain many years ago. The church IS the curtain, and it's a very nice one. Just don't expect anything more.
Christians, churches, and Christianity in general *do* do many great things for society - today. Historically, not so much, but you do have to judge the church in 1200AD against what people would have been doing to each other in 1200AD without the church - people were pretty nasty to each other in general during that period, so the Church wasn't really that much worse. That fits in with my view that a religion is *more* a product of it's culture than the other way around. If Christianity were the driver, then cultural values wouldn't change very much, because the tenets of Christianity are (supposedly) fixed. Instead, what we see is that Christianity morphs right along with society - as slavery, misogyny, racism, etc become unacceptable to society, they magically become unacceptable to the church as well. Funny how that works. 100 years from now, dissing on homosexuality will be regarded by the church exactly as the prohibition on eating shellfish is seen today - a cultural artifact from another people in another time. Culture molds the church much more than the church molds culture.