I believe that was my definition of cherry picking!
OK!
The sticky in the wicket is who gets to decide when some texts are reasonable and others are not.
Quite, and that rests on the logic of the argument. Is is sound, or suspect?
Fundies do this all the time.
There are fundies of every ilk. Sure, creationists and right wing conservative Christians do it, but then so do liberals ... The selective methodology of the Jesus Seminar is a stand-out example of it, and so are the claims of the likes of Bishop Spong. It's just 'liberal fundies' cannot see that they are fundies!
I'm not saying you have to believe Scripture, that, in the end, is a matter of faith.
It is unrealistic to accept the entire package as is ...
I don't think anyone does, these days, but certain US fundie groups.
i.e. many now say some of the Bible is history and some metaphor...
And again, we've been saying that for hundreds of years.
The point is, on what basis do some claim 'this' is 'true' and 'that' is metaphor ... that's where the reasoning stands or falls.
Those who say the miracles are all metaphors on the
a priori rejection of miracles are entitled to that pov, but that pov hardly constitutes a telling argument. It's an opinion at best.
Do remember we're talking about God here, so one might credibly expect a little more than the mundane.
Take the text of the man born blind, and treat it as metaphor ... then it collapses, because the text itself renders the popular metaphorical interpretation illogical.
So my contention would be:
A: Accept the miracle, or
B: Reject the miracle.
But don't invent some 'deeper metaphorical meaning' when the text quite clearly indicates there's no such thing going on. You're just inventing now ...
AND as soon as anyone starts deciding which one is which 'for their reasoning' - Ta Da! Cherry picking!
Then the whole peer review process of critique and reason, on which scholarship stands, falls under that definition.