*I fail to see any particular "thorny questions raised."
*
Ezekiel 14:20 and James 5:11 seem to refer to Job as a historical figure.
That seems "thorny" to me, as well as interesting.
On 10/7/06, Carol or John Burgeson <burgytwo@juno.com> wrote:
> David wrote: "calling the whole story "ALICE IN WONDERLAND" seems to
> raise all sorts of thorny questions about inspiration, scriptural
> authority, and the objective reality of the faith."
>
> "ALICE IN WONDERLAND" was probably not the best example. How about
> "PILGRIM'S PROGRESS?"
>
> I fail to see any particular "thorny questions raised." Some interesting
> ones, perhaps. But as Marcus Borg observed, "In most cases the historical
> questions are not the interesting ones."
>
> Burgy
>
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Received on Sat Oct 7 16:38:47 2006
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