While I realize that the camel passing through the eye of the needle is metaphorical, there are Bible Commentaries that nevertheless explain that there as this gate to Jerusalem that blahblahblah, and yadayadayada and this explanation is allegedly called "Biblical scholarship". There is another passage where the believer allegedly must hate his parents to be redeemed and that too is explained in a very convoluted manner in some Biblical commentaries. There are those, and perhaps you, Mauricio, are not one of them, who claim that not one bit of the Bible is metaphorical, that it is all entirely and fundamentally true.
And that is what I am saying: that Biblical "Scholarship" differs from other scholarship in an essential manner. It starts with a phrase in the Bible being necessarily accurate and then attempt to prove how something preposterous, outrageous or illogical can nonetheless be logically true. Other types of study never not start with a conclusion and walk backwards, in other words.
I have read the Bible entirely through twice, with the help of two commentaries, one my grandmother left me that is fundamentalist, and another by Isaac Asimov, which is not.
I would recommend a couple of fictional works that anyone who has a familiarity with the Bible might find interesting, because I enjoyed both of them.
Lamb, The Gospel according to Biff, Jesus' Boyhood Pal, by Christopher Moore
and The Gospel according to Jesus Christ, by Jos? Saramago.
The first is not as sacrilegious as it sounds, and is very amusing. it explains what Jesus and his pal Biff were up to during all those missing years. The second was written by a Portuguese Literary Nobel Prize winner who was thrown out of the Church for heresy and out of Portugal for annoying the military government. The latter book has been translated into English quite well, and into Spanish by the author's Spanish wife. Saramago has a unique style of writing and is entirely capable of writing a novel in which he does not give any names to his characters. No one writes like either Moore or Saramago.
Both books will give anyone a lot to think about.
The Bible, said to be the best-selling book of all time is currently ranked #8145 in Kindle downloads priced at a modest $1.69.