In deference to an earlier post, literalism is a relatively modern phenomena. Much of the older scriptures were either a part of, or heavily influenced by "truth through mythology," which was a tribalistic way of seeing spiritual truths through story. Back then, myth didn't mean what it means today. In ancient times, myth was both story and performance, enacted around the fires at night as part of oral tradition, of passing on spiritual truths and keeping the night demons away. Perhaps that's why the compiler, hundreds of years later, put two different creation stories right at the start of Genesis.
During the long evolution of writing, historicity eventually became important, which is why (in part) we go from parting the sea with a stick and living for days in the belly of a whale, to less questionable "miracles" in the new testament.
In the empiricism of modern times, everything must be "literally" accurate, and people wrongly apply that empirical mindset to scripture. Ancient scriptures had a different mindset and different agenda, which is one reason why it causes so many conflicting opinions today.
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I'm not blind to your facial expression - but it may take me a few minutes to comprehend it.
A smile is not always a smile.
A frown is not always a frown.
And a blank look rarely means a blank mind.