Mr Hope
Can you tell us which bits of the Bible are actually true and not just "theological".
You see people have difficulty taking any of the Bible seriously when even avid believers like you dismiss parts as not actually being factual.
Would it not be better to throw away the Bible as it stands now, with all it's flaws which you admit and produce a version which contains only the bits that are demonstrably true. I wonder how big a book that would be?
Speaking as an unbeliever, that's strikes me as incredibly silly. The Song of Solomon is obviously a poem. In what sense is a poem 'true'? What do you mean by 'true'? Do you mean the bits of the Bible that
purport to be literal, historical truth? You obviously haven't read very much of the Bible, since a lot of it hits you in the eye as not ever having been meant to be history. Ecclesiastes is not history. The Book of Proverbs is not history. The incredibly boring Book of Leviticus is not history.
Now there will always be debate about the meaning of all the above, but I doubt whether you'd ever be able to demonstrate conclusively whether the Song of Solomon is unequivocally 'true' or not.
We don't have to pay much attention to the rednecks in the American Bible belt who want to assert that the opening chapters of Genesis are literally true as history and 'science' - any person with two brain cells can see that they are not literally true.
But I get a feeling of unease when people like yourself start talking about ditching large bits of world literature. I get the feeling that if you had your way, we'd be burning Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, because they also talk about 'gods' and are therefore obviously not 'true'. And that applies to any number of other well-known works of world literature. Vergil's Aeneid - talks of gods - burn it. Plato's philosophy - talks of a spiritual realm of 'Ideas' and his Timaeus talks of a creator-demiurge - burn them. The Popol Vuh - the classic text of Mayan mythology - burn it. And so on.