naomi; I didn't see your post of yesterday however, OG has, to some extent answered for me. I think earlier on I quoted Gershwin's "It ain't necessarily so". I see the bible, particularly the old testament as something written by teachers of another age in another world, but even so it is full of metaphors, some of which may still be valid today. After all something which has been of such significance and meant so much to so many people over such a long period of history can't be all bad.
Behind the main door of Gloucester Cathedral is a small, crude, stone cross made at risk to their lives by men of the Gloucestershire regiment [The Glorious Glosters]. Held in appalling conditions, starved and worked to near death in Changi jail, they managed to hold services and read from a secretly held bible, and this enabled to endure the unendurable.
They're all gone now I think, but if any were still alive they wouldn't accept some canting modern day smart ass telling them that what that bible and those services meant to them, was simply an "idealistic notion of what God ought to be".