Hi TS,
Oh dear. You’re not seriously claiming the Bible to be prophetic are you? Seriously though?
You’re new here so let’s take this a step at a time. To be prophetic – ie, actually to foretell the future – any text would need to satisfy various conditions.
Let me just interrupt you there. Prophecy doesn't indicate a foretelling of the future as such, as a fortune teller would deceive one into thinking were possible. The future doesn't exist. But that doesn't mean certain outcomes aren't foreseeable. When Ezekiel prophesied to the wind he simply expressed God's command to the wind. (Ezekiel 37:9-10) When Jesus was slapped at trial and told to prophecy who struck him they were asking him to reveal who had already done it (Luke 22:63-64) In other words, diviners and demons use deception in order to appear to magically see into the future while God, through divine revelation to his prophets, or holy spirit, reveals something that he will make sure happens or can see in advance the outcome of.
They include:
1. Non-inevitability. “A great city will fall” isn’t a prophecy – many cities will “fall” given enough time.
2. Precision. “A terrible plague will occur” - which plague? The bubonic plague? Spanish Flu? Covid-19? Where? There’s something called the narrative fallacy – essentially we look at what happened, and then retro-fit it to an earlier story and thereby think to have been prophesied. It’s just poor reasoning.
3. Consistency. This is called the problem of silent evidence. If I predict 100 things and one of them happens but 99 don’t, does that mean I have the power of prophecy? Why not? Short answer – you have to take into account the Bible's misses as well as the hits if you want to claim prophecies.
4. Context. Biblical "prophecies" concern only phenomena that would have been known, a least conceptually, to the authors. Why no prophecies about ipods or MRI scanners?
There are more basic tests in reason than these, but you get the idea. Show me something in the Bible that’s a prophecy in a logically sound way and then we’ll have something to discuss. Until then though…
Hmmm . . . how 'bout Cyrus? Babylon fell in 539 BCE. Roughly 193 years before she fell the Bible predicted it.
When the prophecy was made the Medes, often mentioned with the Persians, were a group of splintered tribes on the fringes of the Assyrian Empire.
Isaiah 13:1, 17 - The pronouncement against Babylon that Isaiah the son of Amoz saw in vision: "Here I am arousing against them the Medes, who account silver itself as nothing and who, as respects gold, take no delight in it."
Isaiah 43:14; 44:28; 45:1 - This is what Jehovah has said, the Repurchaser of you people, the Holy One of Israel: "For your sakes I will send to Babylon and cause the bars of the prisons to come down, and the Chaldeans in the ships with whining cries on their part. the One saying of Cyrus, 'He is my shepherd, and all that I delight in he will completely carry out'; even in [my] saying of Jerusalem, 'She will be rebuilt,' and of the temple, 'You will have your foundation laid.'" This is what Jehovah has said to his anointed one, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have taken hold of, to subdue before him nations, so that I may ungird even the hips of kings; to open before him the two-leaved doors, so that even the gates will not be shut:
Jeremiah 51:11-12 - "Polish the arrows. Fill the circular shields, O men. Jehovah has aroused the spirit of the kings of the Medes, because it is against Babylon that his idea is, in order to bring her to ruin. For it is the vengeance of Jehovah, the vengeance for his temple. Against the walls of Babylon lift up a signal. Make strong the watch. Post the watchmen. Make ready those lying in ambush. For Jehovah both has formed the idea and will certainly do what he has spoken against the inhabitants of Babylon."
Cyrus approached the walls of Babylon. According to Xenophon, Cyropaedia, VII, vss. 7, 13 Babylon wasn't concerned with the Medes. They believed they had provisions for more than twenty years. Cyrus didn't see how it would be possible to storm those walls. Herodotus wrote that they were 300 feet tall. Cyrus and the Chaldeans weren't aware of the prophecies of Isaiah and Jeremiah.
Isaiah 44:24, 27-28 - This is what Jehovah has said, your Repurchaser and the Former of you from the belly: “I, Jehovah, am doing everything, stretching out the heavens by myself, laying out the earth. Who was with me? the One saying to the watery deep, 'Be evaporated; and all your rivers I shall dry up'; the One saying of Cyrus, 'He is my shepherd, and all that I delight in he will completely carry out'; even in [my] saying of Jerusalem, 'She will be rebuilt,' and of the temple, 'You will have your foundation laid.'"
Jeremiah 51:57 - "And I will make her princes and her wise ones, her governors and her deputy rulers and her mighty men drunk, and they must sleep an indefinitely lasting sleep, from which they will not wake up," is the utterance of the King, whose name is Jehovah of armies.
Cyropædia, VII, vss. 15-16 reported that Cyrus found out there was a festival in Babylon when all of her citizens were usually drinking and reveling all night long. During that time his men opened up the heads of the trenches at the river so that it's bed traveling through the city became easily passible.
They entered the city through the river gates encountering very little resistance, just as Isaiah 45:1 and Jeremiah 51:31 had foretold.
All very lovely if you like that kind of thing no doubt, but what you were actually asked was how a "real understanding of the Bible" tell you anything about the truth or otherwise of its fundamental claims. If the Biblical authors assert there to be such a thing as a “soul” no amount of further expiation about this supposed soul will tell you anything about the veracity or otherwise of the initial clam of its existence at all.
Why not?
Atheism doesn’t “hinge on” that at all. Sure it’s trivially easy to falsify the Bible literalists, but unless the more nuanced, allegorical theists can produce sound arguments to justify their beliefs then atheism is the only rational response to their claims too.
It can't even address the simple subject of deity. It has no idea what it denies the existence of. That's rational? I don't think so. Atheism is an uninformed response to tradition.
Then you need to tell us what you mean by “mythology”. What mythology is it that you think post-Enlightenment thinking rests on exactly? The closest I can get to what JP is actually saying (though he won’t say so) is that all understandings rest on axioms (which is true), and therefore that all understandings at some level have equivalence (which isn’t). If you think he’s trying to say something else though, perhaps you could explain it in plain terms.
I already have. There's a transcendent morality. The ethic that drives our culture is predicated on the idea of God. You can't just take it away and expect the culture to remain intact without any foundational support.