Super Dan1
Member
I have a strong faith in God, but having read quite a bit recently about the historicity of the Old Testament, I've become very troubled.
I have long held the belief that the Bible is all a divinely inspired parable up to the end of the Tower of Babel story in the Book of Genesis, then from Abraham onwards it is all true.
But I've recently read that the vast majority of Bible scholars hold the view that most of the Old Testament was written during the Babylonian exile period and that there is absolutely no evidence that Moses existed or the Exodus ever happened. There is no trace of the Egyptian army in the Red Sea or any trace of the Israelites in the Sinai desert even though they spent 40 years there. Also archealogical evidence all suggests that the Israelites were native Canaanites and that the conquest described in Joshua never happened.
So does that mean that the latter half of Genesis, and all of Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy and Joshua are myth? If so, at what point does the Bible start to become literally true?
Jesus believed in the literal truth of all of the Hebrew Bible. But if He is God then He is omniscient (all knowing), so how can Christianity be true if basically the first half of the Old Testament never historically took place?
I'm sorry if this offends anyone, but I'm having a bit of a crisis in my faith here and would appreciate hearing what fellow believing Christians have to say about this.
I have long held the belief that the Bible is all a divinely inspired parable up to the end of the Tower of Babel story in the Book of Genesis, then from Abraham onwards it is all true.
But I've recently read that the vast majority of Bible scholars hold the view that most of the Old Testament was written during the Babylonian exile period and that there is absolutely no evidence that Moses existed or the Exodus ever happened. There is no trace of the Egyptian army in the Red Sea or any trace of the Israelites in the Sinai desert even though they spent 40 years there. Also archealogical evidence all suggests that the Israelites were native Canaanites and that the conquest described in Joshua never happened.
So does that mean that the latter half of Genesis, and all of Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy and Joshua are myth? If so, at what point does the Bible start to become literally true?
Jesus believed in the literal truth of all of the Hebrew Bible. But if He is God then He is omniscient (all knowing), so how can Christianity be true if basically the first half of the Old Testament never historically took place?
I'm sorry if this offends anyone, but I'm having a bit of a crisis in my faith here and would appreciate hearing what fellow believing Christians have to say about this.