The high regard for religious scriptures in the
Judeo-Christian tradition seems to relate in part to a process of
canonization of the
Hebrew Bible, which occurred over the course of a few centuries from approximately 200 BCE to 200 CE. In the Jewish tradition, the highly regarded written word represented a direct conduit to the mind of God, and the later
rabbinical school of Judaism encouraged the attendant scholarship that accompanied a literary religion. Similarly, the
canonization of the
New Testament by the
Early Christian Church became an important aspect in the formation of the separate religious identity for Christianity. Ecclesiastical authorities used the acceptance or rejection of specific scriptural books as a major indicator of group identity, and it played a role in the determination of
excommunications in Christianity and in
cherem in the Jewish tradition.
Origen (184–253 CE), familiar with reading and interpreting
Hellenistic literature, taught that some parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted non-literally. Concerning the Genesis account of creation, he wrote: "who is so silly as to believe that God ... planted a paradise eastward in Eden, and set in it a visible and palpable tree of life ... [and] anyone who tasted its fruit with his bodily teeth would gain life?" He also proposed that such
hermeneutics should be applied to the gospel accounts as well. , 17th century
Church Father Augustine of Hippo (354–430 CE) wrote of the need for reason in interpreting Jewish and Christian scripture, and of much of the
Book of Genesis being an extended metaphor. But Augustine also implicitly accepted the
literalism of the creation of Adam and Eve, and he explicitly accepted the literalism of the virginity of
Jesus's mother
Mary. In the
Reformation,
Martin Luther (1483–1546 CE) separated the
biblical apocrypha from the rest of the Old Testament books in
his 1534 Bible, reflecting scholarly doubts that had continued for centuries, and the
Westminster Confession of 1646 demoted them to a status that denied their canonicity. American Protestant literalists and biblical inerrantists have adopted this smaller
Protestant Bible as a work not merely inspired by God but, in fact, representing the
Word of God without possibility of error or contradiction. Biblical literalism first became an issue in the 18th century, enough so for
Diderot to mention it in his
Encyclopédie.
Karen Armstrong sees "[p]reoccupation with literal truth" as "a product of the scientific revolution". == Clarity of the text ==