shernren
you are not reading this.
- Feb 17, 2005
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Deny it if you wish but evolution has been enthusiastically accepted by the world and not by the church. So I don't see how the statement is in any false or misleading.
Evolution has been rejected by the American church, not the Church.
As an example gluadys said "A global flood, for example, has already been falsified by multiple lines of evidence." Correct me if I'm wrong but that is claiming that Scripture is unverifiable, unsupportable and thereby unreliable.
A global flood is someone's interpretation of Scripture. Someone's interpretation of Scripture is verifiably and supportably not true. That doesn't mean that Scripture itself, or any other interpretation of Scripture, is similarly false.
I'm sorry for the misunderstanding.

I wasn't trying to say that science made ethical claims. I was, unsuccessfully, trying to make a comparison between someone who claims their science is sound with someone who claims their hermaneutic is sound. Gluadys was comparing science with scripture when she said "When we have every reason to believe the science is sound, it is just as appropriate to question our interpretation of scripture as to question scientific conclusions because of what we read in scripture." All I was doing is showing that there are plenty of people who think their hermaneutic is sound by believing that homosexuality is permissible. That doesn't somehow then make it a sound doctrine because they can twist the Scriptures in the same way scientists truly believe they see nature a certain way.
Anyway, let's just drop it, obviously I'm not conveying my thoughts very well here.
But the TE hermeneutic is not like the hermeneutic you mentioned back there, because it never alters the moral and theological implications of Scripture, no matter how much it alters our scientific understanding of which parts of Scripture are historical and which aren't. We still do believe that whatever is in the Bible is there for a reason; we just think that for some passages the reason is not to serve as a simple, literal, historical account of what actually transpired. If God put the story of the Flood into the Bible to show that He is wrathful towards sin, then we had better do all we can to avoid that wrath, whether or not the Flood actually happened and whether or not it was global!
In fact, it can well be a misnomer to speak of the TE hermeneutic, because there really is no one true method of interpreting Scripture across the board. TE is simply an admission that scientific evidence indicates to us that evolution was the most likely means by which God created us. That's all. A TE's theology is little affected by evolution; it is built far more upon the much more important issues of what s/he thinks of God and humanity and sin and redemption and the afterlife and morality. Against this vast backdrop of diversity, accepting evolution really isn't much of a homogenizing factor.
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