Help, I can't find a good answer about the Bible's narrator.
This morning, I read John chapter 4. Tired from his journey to Galilee, Jesus rests by a well and speaks with a woman about living water.
It's just her . . . and him.
How is the author, John, able to accurately capture the conversation, verbatim? There are many other places in the bible where no one is around yet conversations or inner thoughts are revealed.
Like in Judges when Samson walks by the lion that he previously killed with his bare hands and scoops out honey from it's carcass. No one was there! In fact, he later turns this into a riddle for 30 men, knowing that only he can provide the answer. How did the author, Samuel, know what only Samson knew?
Do we just take it on faith that each author was God inspired? Was Samson so noteworthy that his deeds became widely known? Or is it understood that there was some level of story telling added by authors in order to teach from parables, like Jesus did?
Note: this is a serious question. I wonder if it's reasonable to look at stories like Samson's as a parable rather than a chronicle of hard facts.