No.... The only point I was trying to make is about ambiguity. Do you assert that there is none in the Bible? Don't know exactly why you decided to go on full attack-dog mode. Talk about "true colors"......
It's a legitimate question (at least in my mind)....... Is the Bible the literal word of god or isn't it? It's a simple yes/no question. If it is, the discussion moves in one direction. If it isn't the "literal" word then it moves in another.
I agree, it is a legit question. The question is, will you except a legitimate answer? Let's see.
So, let's define literal. In the scripture we do see certain claims. "All scripture is given by inspiration of God and is useful for.........." So, it's important to know what is being claimed and then what is not. Otherwise you are asking us to defend strawmen and red herrings, which we won't.
No where in the Bible does it say, everything in these 66 books is a literal instruction. I read the bible from a grammtico-historical method. And for good reason. It is simple and ask the question, "what was the original author,
literally communicating to his audience?" EVERY person applies this naturally when they pick up a newspaper, novel, comic book, etc.
The Bible is a collection (a library if you will) of 66 books, written over a period of 1,500 by aprroximate 40 different authors. The bible in treated allegorically becomes putty in the hand of the exegete.
Let me offer an example. In Matthew Jesus states that if you hand causes you to sin, cut it off. Is this a literal instruction? If we read this in context and with a proper exegesis we can easily determine that Jesus is not calling for self mutilation, but is instead giving the audience a
literal illustration of how dangerous sin can be.
If you want to address something ambiguous, then I suggest you at least give a specific example. I am not going to paint with a broad brush and say, "there is no ambiguity in the Bible." But, at the same time, you shouldn't make hasty generalizations and expect us to just accept that as fact. The reason is that your intentions are to malign the overall message and truth of the Bible. "It's ambigious here, so it must be ambiguous everywhere. Therefore you can't trust it." I've done this dance before.