All religious people do that. They pick the bits they want to follow or believe.
I have a question I have asked many times, and not one single religious person on this board has ever attempted to answer it:
What sense are you using when you decide which parts of the bible to follow and which to ignore or explain away as an irrelevant fable? Why do you think your way is the right way?
To be more fundie about it: What makes you think that the divine (or divinely inspired) words of the bible are there for you to pick and choose from at will, and still have cause to believe you are living according to God's will?
As I said I'm not Christian, but from my studies I would answer that like this (if i were Christian):
Firstly there is overwhelming evidence to support geological and geographical features of the earth and universe, its age etc. As well as evolution to an extent. So therefore the 6 "days" of creation cannot be true nor the earths age being 6-7000 years old. So that would lead me to think that the old testament is not literal, and heres more evidence. Jesus spoke in parrabals and stories to get his point across so that the dumb people would understand, just like we do with children. Now Jesus was God, so who's to say God didn't do the same. But why would he do such a thing? It may not seem reasonable in todays terms, but for the people back then things were different, for people to follow a scripture they needed (assuming) understanding's that relate to them, if God simply put "I made a big explosion, then sat on my ass for a few billion years then all you guys showed up" then its not as likely people would believe in God, nor follow "moral"* guidelines.
So was the old testament purely stories? I cannot say, but probability they were representative of certain things that happened skewed to make more of an impact eg: Walls of Jericho being blown down by men yelling, this is ridiculous, but it sounds good doesn't it?
And if you make the biblical stories more interesting, then people would thus read on to see all the prophesies of Jesus's life, death and resurrection, thus cementing his legitimacy when he comes. Why didn't many people believe him? well thats free will, just like the entire treatment of Jesus, free will, just like everything we do today is free will, God doesn't really do (as far as i know) a whole lot.
So why is Jesus real? The claims of prophecies before his birth are one big evidence, but how do we know this bloke wasn't just pretending by following scripture and getting some of the Jewish executors in on the act? Well thats kinda ridiculous, besides if you read Jesus's words/speeches, you'll see that he's a fabulous philosopher by todays standards. But the standards back then were very very different, people were so strict on their rules, so for an imposer/ crazy man to come along and say something as massive as "He who is without sin cast the first stone" is mind blowingly brave for a mere man. Just reading Jesus's words and actions (not miracles) are a huge convincer of his divinity alone, everything just seems to fit into place.
And your final question (and don't quote me, since Im not "one of them"), who cares what we think, or choose, or do, so long as you love Jesus apparently, and repent (genuinely) your sins.
So yeah that would be my strategical "picking and choosing" if i were christian purely based on logic, after the assumption that Jesus is legit of course, if not, throw it out the window.
*Some highly questionable, is morality evolutionary based, or religiously based? Thanks Dawkins for making me realise how little i know lol.





