Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, Episcopalians, Quakers, Presbyterians, Methodists, United Church of Christ, Congregationalists, some varieties of Lutheran . . I'm sure there are more, but there are many denominations that don't see the bible as literal.
OK, OP here, it was at a Methodist Church. I guess I was surprised at the literal teaching during VBS. But maybe it is a little hard to teach a less literal interpretation to elementary aged and preschool students.
Children are naturally open to stories being just pretend, so I think if they were presented that way, the kids would get it.
Anonymous wrote:So you are looking for a church that does not teach the Bible?
Just curious, I happen to believe in evolution AND Genesis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, Episcopalians, Quakers, Presbyterians, Methodists, United Church of Christ, Congregationalists, some varieties of Lutheran . . I'm sure there are more, but there are many denominations that don't see the bible as literal.
OK, OP here, it was at a Methodist Church. I guess I was surprised at the literal teaching during VBS. But maybe it is a little hard to teach a less literal interpretation to elementary aged and preschool students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I went to Vacation Bible School with my child this last week. One of the stories that was told was Genesis. Are there denominations which do not take the bible literally? The person teaching the bible lessons talked about what happened on year "day". OK let's say I can accept that each "day" was actually billions of years and that the bible tells stories that are not literally true. Is there a denomination for me?
How old is your child?
I was raised in a protestant denomination and never encountered biblical literalists. However, as a young child, I was also taught the story of Genesis "on the first day..." and there wasn't a lot of discussion around what "day" might mean (or even beyond that). It was more coloring animals, cutting out trees, that sort of thing. I was probably 10 or 11 before biblical-stories-as-metaphor became part of my church education, and to be honest that was more likely to happen in sunday school or youth group. VBS was typically much more camp-like and religious education was very surface.
Of course every church is different, but I wouldn't be inclined to pick a church based on its VBS. I'd sit in on several services, visit youth and adult education classes, and otherwise look into the life of the church.
Anonymous wrote:So I went to Vacation Bible School with my child this last week. One of the stories that was told was Genesis. Are there denominations which do not take the bible literally? The person teaching the bible lessons talked about what happened on year "day". OK let's say I can accept that each "day" was actually billions of years and that the bible tells stories that are not literally true. Is there a denomination for me?
Anonymous wrote:For some reason I think the ones that don't take the Bible literally are also less likely to offer vacation bible school.
My episcopal school taught us all about evolution and basically said genesis is a metaphor.
Anonymous wrote:Sure, Episcopalians, Quakers, Presbyterians, Methodists, United Church of Christ, Congregationalists, some varieties of Lutheran . . I'm sure there are more, but there are many denominations that don't see the bible as literal.