For you it may be nothing. For others, they will be prepared to die for its words.
Oh it means a great deal to me. It isn't "nothing" to me at all. I think the Bible is critically important to our understanding, not just of history, but of who we are --- as individuals, as spouses, as towns and cities, as nations and as people of Earth. I think it shows the evolution of our thinking throughout time. I can see this fact in the movement away from an "angry" God (old testament) to a more forgiving and "loving" God (new testament). But to me, and just to me mind you, the Bible is more the "gathered writings" of many people who dug down deep into their souls to find the very best they could find (given their time periods and cultural beliefs). I would like to think we have progressed more toward science now than towards storytelling (and the fire and brimstone of judgement). But the worth of the earlier writers is never lost, just "seen in the light" of what we know today.
when we go into court we don't put our hands on a Marvel Comic and swear to tell the truth. Religious books are such books that we do swear on. It is a book which has held significant authority in our Western Culture and indeed in other cultures as well. It has also has a significant influence on our legal systems, our constitutions, our social structures, and even on the way we conduct science and humanities, including the arts and music. And more than this - it still retains a highly authoritative aspect of billions of people around the world.
Very true! Religion still holds sway. And as I said up above, it is critically important to who all of us are, here in America. And even though I no longer believe in religion per se, I was still raised Christian. Consequently, my moral compass still owes much of its earliest existence to the Bible. Still, I had to unlearn so very many entrenched ideas that hurt me, rather than helped me, in any way. I'm sure it is different for everyone.