AB,
It does indeed float many millions of people's boats, but I would much rather float than sink.
In your earlier post, you suggested the possibility of the NT being based upon human mistakes and deliberate lies, but could such profound world changing insights and meanings be derived from what amounts to a concoction of lies and mistakes? I think not. And once again I no doubt stand accused of personal incredulity.
Couple of problems there. First, the NT makes various claims of
fact – that a man/god existed, was dead for a bit, then was alive again for example. These claims are either true or they’re not –
why they may not be (lies, mistakes etc) is a secondary issue. So far however, no-one has been able to produce a logical path to miracle stories being more likely to be true than not.
Second, countless other people find just as deep insights in their different "holy" texts as you find in yours. If you think the “concoction of lies and mistakes” idea about the NT is problematic for the purpose of finding meaning, then you have no choice but to accept that it'd be problematic for those other texts too – and thus that they must all be true as well. As (presumably) you don’t think that (ten commandments and all that), a moment’s thought should tell you that there doesn’t have to be a word of truth in the NT’s claims of fact for you to find it deeply meaningful nonetheless.
In other words, "...but could such profound world changing insights and meanings be derived from what amounts to a concoction of lies and mistakes? I think not" is a
non sequitur for the same reason that "if there wasn't really a hare and a tortoise then Aesop's fables couldn't be insightful" is a
non sequitur.