CrabCake
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As an aside it also brings up the question of whether the bible is a complete work of allegory or a partial work of allegory mixed with a literal reading. Was the story of jesus also an allegory or was it literal? And how do you tell the difference?
The bible contains many kinds of literature. You can tell what type of literature it is the same way you can tell with any other literature you run into; from the writing style, context, and content as well as from knowledge about who wrote it and how it has been used historically from the time it was written onwards.
When you read a text filled with flowery emotional language and metaphor, you know you are reading poetry.
When you read a text that begins with a greeting and appears to be written to someone, then you know you are reading an epistle (a letter).
If you read a story that includes a man whose name translates to "mankind", a woman whose name translates to "breath of life", trees called "the knowledge of good and evil" and "tree of life", and a talking snake...it should be instantly clear to you that this is allegorical.
As for the gospels, we have enough historical evidence for his existence and crucifixion and the fact that a cult formed around him which evolved into what we now call Christianity. The evidence is also fairly strong that his followers believed him to have physically resurrected. As for how much of the gospels is mythologizing / hagiography and how much is historical narrative, there is clearly much room for debate on that and there has been and will continue to be extensive debate. That's ok...there's nothing wrong with debate.
The argument of looking at genesis as an allegory instead of as scientific creationism opens up a very large can of worms as regarding to where we draw the line on all the stories in the bible being a literal translation of events or an allegorical one.
It doesn't open anything up. It's been the standard way of reading it for thousands of years. We have thousands of years worth of writings on this already. It isn't some new thing that opens up a can of worms. It's the regular way of reading it.
What opens a can of worms is the opposite...pretending that it's a historical narrative. Once you do that you have to start discarding science, you have to start explaining who Cain married and who the inhabitants of the city he went to were, and whether incest was God's tool for creation, etc... That's the can of worms that has been opened by modern evangelicals.