- Jun 18, 2006
- 3,856,249
- 52,665
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Republican
So.. basicaly what you are saying is this: It's obvious that some things should be taken literally while other things should not?
Correct.
It is obvious to me that genesis cannot be taken literally. A long time ago, before we humans has all the knowledge about the earth we have now, it might not have been obvious to them.
Let me give you an illustration:
Suppose you create a single beautiful rose inside of a pot, and you create it to rely on sunlight for photosynthesis. The next day, you create the sun. You then have a "secretary" document this in his own words.
6000 years later, people will look back and:
- reject you and your secretary and claim the rose had to have come after the sun
- believe you and your secretary, but claim the secretary wrote figuratively
- believe the rose came one day before the sun, taking both you and your secretary literally
- et cetera
But we know the history of the earth. We know how old the earth is. This cantradicts a literal interpetation of genesis.
I submit you don't know the history of the earth. Case in point: describe the earth on day four of its existence, from an evolutionary standpoint, then drop back five days and describe what's there.
Upvote
0