Yes, Catholics take the Bible literally. What that means, though, as the Catechism states, is that we look for the meaning that the author of any given Scripture passage meant to convey, we don't just look at the words on the page and take them at face value.
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Read More »All of that is to say that, yes, Catholics take the Bible literally. As the Catechism says, the literal sense of Scripture is what all the other senses of Scripture are based on. So, if we don’t get the literal sense right, then we don’t get the spiritual sense right. But, we do not just look at the words on the page and necessarily take them at face value. If we were to do that, we might not properly understand what the author was trying to tell us. The literal meaning of a passage is the meaning the author of that passage intended to convey. It can sometimes be difficult to discern. That’s why we have to look to authentic Catholic Scripture scholarship for help, and, even more importantly, that’s why we have to look to the Magisterium of the Catholic Church for help, in understanding the Scriptures. Now, what about these spiritual sense of Scripture that I mentioned above? The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) tells us that not only does the text of Scripture reveal to us things about God and His plan of salvation (the literal sense), but that the “realities and events” about which Scripture speaks can, in and of themselves, be signs that further our knowledge of God and His plan (CCC #117). For example, 1 Peter 3:20-21 speaks of Noah’s ark as a sign of Baptism. People were “saved through water.” This meaning behind the literal meaning is known as the spiritual sense of Scripture. The Catechism tells us that there are three spiritual senses of Scripture: the allegorical, the moral, and the anagogical (CCC #117). The allegorical sense refers to how any given event in the Bible can be understood in a more profound way by recognizing its “significance in Christ.” For example, is there anything allegorical – anything that speaks to us of Christ – in the story of the Passover meal? Indeed there is. We can see the Passover meal in a more significant way when we recognize it as a sign pointing to the Passion and death of Christ. You have the slaughter of a spotless lamb whose blood would save the people of Israel from death. You have a lamb whose bones were not to be broken (John 19:36; Exodus 12:46). A lamb that had to be eaten (the Eucharist). Looking at biblical events with an eye to how they might acquire deeper significance in Christ helps us to understand that God reveals His plan to us not only through words, but through events as well. The moral sense of Scripture is that which leads us to “act justly.” An obvious example of this is the story of God giving Moses the 10 Commandments. In the New Testament, we have the story of the servant who owed much to his master and the master forgave him of his entire debt, but then that servant turned around and did not forgive someone who owed him a much smaller debt. The master, when he hears of this, gets angry with the first servant and reimposes the debt upon him and tosses him in jail. We are taught that we must forgive in order to receive forgiveness. The third spiritual sense is the anagogical sense. The anagogical leads us to “view events and realities in terms of their eternal significance.” The example the Catechism gives is that of the Church on earth being a sign of the heavenly Jerusalem. Another example would be the story of Sodom and Gomorrah – of how wickedness leads to destruction, not necessarily physical destruction as in the case of those two cities, but more importantly, to spiritual destruction. The parable of the Prodigal Son is another example. It tells us that we must turn away from sin and to the Father in a spirit of repentance in order to be accepted into the Father’s house – heaven.
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Read More »As mentioned, these three spiritual senses depend on the literal sense. Problems in the interpretation of the Bible have come when someone interprets the Bible in only a literal sense, not recognizing that the events of Scripture point to certain realities in the plan of salvation in a way that goes beyond just what the words on the pages say. This is a more fundamentalist mode of interpretation. On the other end, however, problems in the interpretation of the Bible have arisen when someone interprets the Bible in a completely spiritual sense and minimizes, or even dismisses, the literal sense of Scripture. This is particularly true when it comes to the stories found in Genesis. I’ve had theologians say things along the lines of, “Well, we know Adam and Eve didn’t really exist, that’s just a story made up by different writers to convey a particular theological message.” Really?! Or, I’ve been told many times, and read in many places, that Jesus didn’t really work any miracles, that the miracle accounts were inserted into the Gospels by His followers many decades after His death to, in essence, help them convey a transcendent message about the Christ and the Christian religion.
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