Everyone approaches scripture with their own presumptions. The trick is recognizing what they are and how they influence what we understand about what we are reading.
I'm currently reading John Walton's (and coauthor D. Brent Sandy) book,
"The Lost World of Scripture" [LINK] in which he further expounds on the ideas expressed in
'Lost World of Genesis' that Quantum mentioned.
I'm finding it a tough read; my mind's not as flexible as it was when I was younger.
So far
I'm only 55 pages into it but it deals a lot with the topic of this thread.
As I read it I'm comparing it to
one of the most influential books I read as a young Christian, Bernard Ramm's classic book,
"The Christian View of Science and Scripture" (1954). Ramm's book dramatically influenced my hermeneutical methodology (the way scripture is approached) and made me the "
liberal" that I am. :smilewinkgrin:
In Walton's book, the chapters are arranged in a series of propositions (
presumptions if you will) that build upon each other.
Proposition #3 is
"Effective Communication Must Accommodate to the Culture and Nature of the Audience"
And
Proposition #4 is
"The Bible Contains No New Revelation About the Workings and Understandings of the Material World"
He writes:
"…no statements in the Bible offered the original audience new insight into how the material world regularly works or how the naturalistic cause-and-effect system operates. …the perspectives on the material world that we find in the text accommodate the Old World Science of the time and are part of the locution adopted in order to communicate clearly to the target audience." (pp. 51,52)
Rob