I know I've seen you post this before, I just forgot it when I was posting just now. My bad. I'll have to answer specifically to that.
Good, I was beginning to wonder if our past discussions were forgotten.
I think that evolution really isn't "man using his reasoning combined with science to supercede God and His Word", on two counts. But first, can we establish that there really
is a scientific interpretation of the evidence that can lead us to accept that evolution happened, the earth and universe is old, etc.? In other words, that the scientific phenomena can account for what we actually do see today, whether or not they actually happened. Of course, you may not agree with that. But let's take the easy way out and assume you do for now.
Without a doubt I do.
If you do, then evolution (etc.) ceases to be offensive the way you described it, on two counts. Firstly on a purely practical level, it is completely appropriate to make a scientific description of the world, even if it is only approximate. Science doesn't expect people to rise from the grave even though we know someone did just that. We don't expect people to float on water or burn it without some supernatural intervention. So it wouldn't really be wrong to say that "Given no supernatural intervention, we can account for this and that feature of the world by the fact that it is old." It is no different from our knowledge that given the normal order of things people stay dead and water doesn't burn.
Good points, at least when addressed to the secular world. However for me as a Christian I have extreme difficultly understanding how other Christians can so easily dismiss Scripture with scientific explanations.
On a deeper level, however, the question is whether or not we would have any good reason to doubt the scientific description of how everything came about. Is the Bible sufficient reason for us to doubt this scientific description of the world's creation? (Of course, this will strike you as doing things the wrong way around. I know.)
I'm glad you recognize that, it helps me to know you understand. Your question "Is the Bible sufficient reason for us to doubt this scientific description of the world's creation?" is the crux of the problem. I believe it is and it would appear that you don't. My question to you would be, what is your plumb line on which all truth is measured? To me the Bible is the source of truth in all matters of which it speaks, what this approach does is make all of life so much easier. I never have to ever wonder whether there is some other 'truth' out there that will also supercede the Bible. It just doesn't exist.
In the first place one must ask: if God wanted the Bible to supersede science why did He do such a bad job of it? The Bible tells us almost nothing about science and doesn't even give any clues. If God's revelation were really about the physical nature of the world one would expect His Chosen people to be the strongest scientists in the world; and yet Israel in the OT is really a technological midget being pushed around by the superpowers of its day. God used the Bible to show us what we would never have known on our own.
See this is where we divert. I don't believe He did a bad job of anything. The reason we think we do know so much is because our answers are based on insufficient knowledge that only appears sufficient because of our desperate hunger to know everything. Some things just weren't meant to be known.
Remember the story of the Irealites waiting on Moses while he met with God. It was only for 40 days that he was gone, yet they grew impatient and couldn't wait for his return so they made themselves an idol to worship. It's easy for me to see a parallel with evolution; we just can't accept not knowing and being in the dark so we come up with our own reality.
"But shouldn't we be asking if science is sufficient reason for us to doubt the Bible's description of creation, instead of the other way 'round?" To some, of course, the descriptions of Genesis 1 and 2 seem entirely metaphorical right from the start. The imageries of chaos waters, tohu-bohu, the covenant of the Great King etc. are quite apparent; for some, the text itself appears metaphorical before dealing with a shred of science. But not everybody is an ANE-culture geek

... so my argument would be that Scripture does not prescribe science because Scripture
assumes that we already know science. (Okay, Scripture can't really
do anything, but I am referring to the litle I think I know of God's intentions in writing it. For me, if God assumed that we already knew science before coming to the Scriptures, it is as good as saying the Scripture assumes that we already know science. Horrendous theology, but it makes for easier writing.)
Personally I could care less if we evolved through a lengthy process supervised by God. Like many have said, this still wouldn't minimize God and His creative abilities. It may not be as cool and powerful as divine fiat, but it has some of its own virtues too. The critical element for me is God said He did it in six days. Those days, in case someone were confused, are further identified by number, evenings and mornings. That is very compelling for me and for someone else to tell me it is a metaphor and not true they would have to provide a very strong biblical case to support it. What I'm being asked to do is accept a theory, that I've never seen observational proof of, over the very Word of God.
We encounter the world before we encounter the Bible, and we know what the Bible is saying precisely because it refers to things in the world. "The Promised Land flows with milk and honey" would hardly have any meaning if we did not know first what milk and honey was! And more importantly, the passage never tells us what milk and honey is: it assumes that we know, and trusts us to draw the right conclusion. When Jesus walks on water, we are trusted to know that it is a miracle (interestingly, the fact that water is an image of chaos in the OT doesn't enter people's minds when they read this. Jesus wasn't just miracle-surfing, He was employing imagery that any Jew would have recognized as imagery of creation.) because we are supposed to know that people sink in water.
We know that milk and honey are good, very good.
I'm glad you recognize the symbolism of water. Water has, for the Jews, always been associated with Hades. They had a definite fear of it. For us, the simple fact that He was walking over a form of death provides a realistic understanding also, yet not nearly as complete as it was to them at the time. An example where we can glean the truth but just a weaker rendition of it. Isn't God awesome!
What then, of Genesis 1? Does Genesis 1 assume that we already know how the universe was formed? I think the situation is slightly different and in Genesis 1 how the universe was formed is irrelevant.
Good, I agree 100%!
If you look carefully, there are no "hows". God speaks and it is done; there is no hint of any "process" whatsoever. I take this to mean (again, without any reference to science) that God is not cataloguing His actions, but His creations. "You see the light? I made it. You see the darkness? I made it. You see the sea? ... " God is referring to our present reality, with stars and trees and all.
Without a doubt I agree, except He did catalog the time-frame under which He did it.
I believe that God wasn't going to bother about telling us the how because He knew we'd find out eventually and we'd be spot on. But He worried a lot about the why; right from the start everybody was getting it wrong worshipping the Sun and all. And that is what Genesis 1 is about: not how God created, but why.
If this were true then why did He make it very clear about it taking 6 full days?
And so I don't think that the sciences you have in mind (evolution, etc.) really supersede the Scriptures, if the Scriptures themselves already have essentially nothing to say on the matter. As we've seen, Scripture seems to essentially leave the job of describing the universe to us; what it does is to take up all those descriptions (for which it leaves us responsible) and piece them together into an authoritative description of God.
But I've already shown you how they do have something to say on the matter. As far as the rest, well yes it is left to us to describe the universe and piece it together into an authoritative description of God, as you so nicely put it. The thing is Scripture should be our plumb line, not science.
(Brownie points for not mentioning geocentrism or a flat earth anywhere!)
Noted
