PBS documentary denies inerrancy of scripture
Ed Thomas - OneNewsNow - 7/23/2008 11:00:00 AM
The producers and contributors to a fall PBS documentary titled The Bible's Buried Secrets purport that the special proves much of the book should not be taken literally. Armed with that news, a major pro-family Christian group isn't waiting until the program's airing to decry tax dollars being spent on a TV special that it says undermines Christianity.
The documentary airs
as part of Public Broadcasting System's (PBS)
Nova series on November
18, and media reports quoting statements from religious experts and the
creative crew involved give a sense of trying to
turn the established world's understanding of the Bible on its "literal"
head. Michael DePrimo is a spokesman for the American
Family Association (AFA).
"According
to the producer of The Bible's
Buried Secrets, they believe that the Bible -- especially the
Old Testament -- was written by up to 100 authors; that it was never meant
to be literal; that the story of Abraham and Sarah likely was not a real
story, but simply an allegory," DePrimo
explains.
He notes the difficulty of some of those alleged facts about biblical
history are that they serve a dangerous purpose of undermining the faith of
many who believe the scriptures are the Word of God – and undermining
statements in the scriptures, including from Jesus when he quotes the
existence of Abraham. Because PBS is subsidized heavily with tax dollars,
DePrimo says AFA does not believe those dollars
should be funding a documentary that says the Bible is a bunch of "made-up
stories."
"I think what we need to do is write to our congressmen and urge them to
withhold funding of PBS if they're going to broadcast documentaries that
directly attack the scriptures," DePrimo urges.
The American Family Association is the parent organization of the American Family News Network, which operates OneNewsNow.com.