There are still issues for me. But I might still be a Christian if the religion isnt tied to the first half of the Bible. For me it was an in depth reading of the Old Testament that drove me away. I couldn't reconcile the Christian God being loving and the monster of the Old Testament.
Marcion's postulation of a good and gracious God (Christ) and the Demiurge (the Jewish God of War) solves that major conflict.
For me, it was like the Old Testament provided a
context for the coming of Christ. It starts with Genesis, goes into Laws, then does a deep dive into the History of the Israelites in the promised land - Joshua, Judges, Samuel, Kings, Chronicles - which to me remains one of the most fun and interesting parts of the Bible to read (
Sisera and Jael, anyone? Classic!). This provides a historical background to the time and the culture. In the back half of the OT it goes into the prophecies of the coming Messiah. All this as a lead-in or prelude to the
real story, the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles.
It's like how the first clause of the Second Amendment provides context for the second clause without being a limitation on it. I hope my clumsy attempt at a distinctively American analogy makes sense.
And no, obviously the Histories are not
really historically accurate. But they paint a picture, without which the story is, in my opinion, incomplete. This is a part of the Bible that I believe could have originated in genuine historical events (aka wars), with later embellishment and elaboration by people with a religious agenda to push. Many legends, after all, have their origins in much simpler and less supernatural history.