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Ham's Creation Museum

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Digit

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No, it's saying that if the evidence contradicts creationists' beliefs about scripture, then that evidence is to be ignored. This is massively dishonest, and about as unscientific as one can get. Science is about deriving explanations from evidence and then modifying those explanations when the evidence warrants. Creationism, as the AIG website shows is about making up a conclusion first, and then cherry-picking or forcing the facts to fit (and ignoring the facts that don't fit).



This wasn't addressed to me, but I feel obligated to answer. If the facts revealed that my beliefs (whether those beliefs were religious or mundane) were incorrect or incomplete in some way, I would modify my beliefs. Anything else would not only be self-harming, but rather dishonest as well.
Heya,

It appears we disagree with their method, and that's ok. :)

I think in reality, we can relate it to the moral absolutes that God has provided for us, and expects us to live by. We cannot modify those absolutes, based on our experiences and their evidence, in the real world, as they are inflexible. To say that they are figurative guides, does them injustice and dilutes their meaning.

You didn't actually answer my question. Let me clarify. If you found something that blatantly contradicted the Bible, and there was no room to modify your belief and remain Christian, what would you do?

I can answer that without hesitation. I would reject that new find, and I would do so under the belief that either we have not understood the find correctly, and it warrants further study, or that we have received results that are ambiguous and not representative of the actual truth. This is what I believe is happening with the theory of evolution.

Cheers!
Digit
 
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Dannager

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I'm really disappointed with this forum.
We're not here to please you.
This is my first post and people here are just as blindly sure of themselves as anywhere else, regardless of reality.
Yeah, creationists really need to work on that aspect of themselves.
I visited the creation museum the day it opened, and it is awesome.
Awesomely...bad?
It's historically and scientifically accurate and well-designed.
It is neither of the first two things, from an objective standpoint. It may be the third, but really that's not my place to judge.
It is a great place for not only bringing new people to Christ but reaffirming the faith of existing believers.
Read: repeating lies to ourselves over and over until we're convinced that they're the truth.
I'm tired of being ridiculed for my beliefs.
Then I suggest you get some beliefs that aren't ridiculous.
I was looking for a cool forum with nice people and it looks like this one isn't it.
We're cool and we're nice. We're just not like you.
 
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Digit

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We're not here to please you.

Yeah, creationists really need to work on that aspect of themselves.

Awesomely...bad?

It is neither of the first two things, from an objective standpoint. It may be the third, but really that's not my place to judge.

Read: repeating lies to ourselves over and over until we're convinced that they're the truth.

Then I suggest you get some beliefs that aren't ridiculous.

We're cool and we're nice. We're just not like you.

Hows that loving your neighbour working out for you Dannager? ;)

Digit
 
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Deamiter

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I think in reality, we can relate it to the moral absolutes that God has provided for us, and expects us to live by. We cannot modify those absolutes, based on our experiences and their evidence, in the real world, as they are inflexible. To say that they are figurative guides, does them injustice and dilutes their meaning.
You're discussing two entirely seperate issues here. Which evolutionary creationists here do you think are modifying moral absolutes? Is the interpretation of the factual content (note that we agree on the moral/spiritual content) of Genesis 1-11 somehow saying that a moral absolute is flexible? We're in perfect agreement about moral absolutes and to claim that by viewing Genesis 1-11 as a myth designed primarily to convey those spiritual truths we are somehow diluting the spiritual message is simply nonsense.

You didn't actually answer my question. Let me clarify. If you found something that blatantly contradicted the Bible, and there was no room to modify your belief and remain Christian, what would you do?
There's one detail in both this question and in the AIG statement that is begging the question. You ask if we found something that "blatantly contradicted the Bible" but doesn't our knowledge of the Earth "blatantly contradict" the Bible when it claims the Earth sits on pillars for its foundation? AIG makes the same mistake in saying that it rejects conclusions that contradict "the Bible" when they're actually filtering evidence with their interpretation of the Bible. Unless your interpretation is infallable, discussing the inerrancy of scripture on such a detailed level is nonsensical as your understanding of the details could be horribly flawed. Evolutionary creationists usually accept the inerrancy of scripture in spiritual matters but because such a doctrine is useless without similar inerrancy of interpretation we usually don't use it as a theological cudgel to pound home our beliefs in debate.
I can answer that without hesitation. I would reject that new find, and I would do so under the belief that either we have not understood the find correctly, and it warrants further study, or that we have received results that are ambiguous and not representative of the actual truth. This is what I believe is happening with the theory of evolution.
And if after futher study the results were shown not to be ambiguous? If you could use a time machine and watch Jesus die on the cross and stay with his body for months until it rotted away sans resurrection?

You're absolutely right to be skeptical as we all are when people claim that Christianity has been disproven. It would be silly to give up your beliefs based on every claim thrown about like the recent media circus about Jesus' tomb being found! And yes, as I believe most or all of us have pretty strong faith and aren't looking to disprove Christianity, it would take extrordinary evidence to convince us that Jesus didn't die and rise again! At the same time, I don't believe God rewards blind faith. We aren't called to convert and immediately seclude ourselves away to avoid any suggestion that our understanding might be wrong! We are to open our eyes and our hearts, always seeking the truth, and engage with truth claims counter to Christianity. And we aren't supposed to engage them just to flatly say they are wrong, we're to honestly evaluate them to see if WE are wrong.

You and I both honestly believe that there will never be evidence disproving the existance of God or the death and resurrection of Jesus and the further ministry of his disciples. However, while we would both be very skeptical of any such claims, you seem to assert that no matter the evidence (say a time machine as an extreme case) you would shut your eyes and ears and hold to your beliefs. We are certainly not called to believe in spite of evidence!
 
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Digit

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Hey Deamiter,

The moral absolutes example was a simple one to highlight that we need to stick to the absolute basic presented facts. If we were to read into the laws, and start taking them figuratively we would end in chaos. In fact, it's a risk I fail to see the benefit in taking. God speaks with absolute truth.

Where does the Bible claim the earth sites on pillars as it's foundation? Last I read, God hung the Earth upon nothing...

A time machine I feel is a somewhat golden-bullet to the argument. As that constitutes 100% gain in knowledge, which is not what anything we can do today allows us to gain. If we were able to do that, then the outcome is obvious, Christianity would not be true and as soon as that fails to be so, everything else falls down too. Which is why Genesis, and Biblical truths are so important, because if you look into the Outreach forums, people are picking apart the Bible and asking questions based on it's events. They need to feel and know that is one hundred percent true, without flaw. That's an incredible thing, and testifies to God's greatness.

As soon as one thing can be bent, it's seen as a weakness, because then so can another... and another... until really, there is no absolute truth.

Digit
 
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Digit

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He's clearly not interested in being loved and I'm really not that interested in putting on a show for someone who probably is a hit-n-run poster.
Because that's what God said right? Love your neighbour unless you aren't interested on putting on a show for them, or you think they don't want to be loved?

Enough said on that methinks.

All the best,
Digit
 
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jereth

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Well I've said this often enough and I'll say this again. The Creation Museum is a huge waste of money. If they were sincere about actually doing science (instead of souping up creationism by giving it an already-peeling layer of scientism), this money would have gone to fund research groups, or to resettle allegedly persecuted scientists in new creationist facilities, or something else better.

How about giving the $27 million to starving children, or to Bible translation, or third world missionaries.

Better than using it to tell untruths.
 
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Digit

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How about giving the $27 million to starving children, or to Bible translation, or third world missionaries.

Better than using it to tell untruths.
So the fact that God actually gets represented in a museum, isn't worth the asking price?

How about, we don't celebrate New Years, and instead donate all the money from the fireworks displays to said charities and organisations? I watched a display in the UK this Christmas gone that cost £5000000.00, and lasted 10 minutes. It made me feel a little ill knowing that. :(

Digit
 
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Dannager

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Because that's what God said right? Love your neighbour unless you aren't interested on putting on a show for them, or you think they don't want to be loved?
Touche. It's just difficult to deal with people like this sometimes. A lot of us have become slightly jaded when it comes to dealing with hit-n-run creationists. It's frustrating to take the time to pose thoughtful arguments only to realize that the person on the other end wasn't here to participate in the debate to begin with. We still have to counter their arguments because if we don't we run the risk of lurkers thinking that no counter exists.
 
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Digit

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No, it's not. God doesn't belong in museums.
Really? o_O

So the fact that God created everything, doesn't deserve a mention in our history at all, or the fact that you feel God used evolution to create, doesn't deserve even a small mention?

*snip - decided that was unkind.*

Digit
 
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Dannager

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Really? o_O

So the fact that God created everything, doesn't deserve a mention in our history at all, or the fact that you feel God used evolution to create, doesn't deserve even a small mention?
Museums exist to educate, not preach. If you want to teach people that you believe God created, there's a place for that already: it's called a church. I would never consider impressing my religious beliefs upon people in the guise of a museum. It's disingenuous.

EDIT: Removed response to edit.
 
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Digit

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Museums exist to educate, not preach. If you want to teach people that you believe God created, there's a place for that already: it's called a church. I would never consider impressing my religious beliefs upon people in the guise of a museum. It's disingenuous.

EDIT: Removed response to edit.
Ok, lets check this out:
mu·se·um
premium.gif
(myōō-zē'əm) Pronunciation Key
n. A building, place, or institution devoted to the acquisition, conservation, study, exhibition, and educational interpretation of objects having scientific, historical, or artistic value.

Now, depending on the kind of museum you go to, there will be explanations of things, and these are rarely Biblical at all. In that regard, I would love to see God represented there, as the author of it all. Yet He doesn't feature in their explanations at all. In fact, many strictly omit Him, as a theory of dinosaur extinction, the great flood is never mentioned as a possibility. It's not like we have any real reason to beleive it was an asteroid either.

I feel that Christians should present a united front on these things. Our worldview has a foundation, which is God. He has given us all these approaches to the doctrines of the world. He has grounded our ethics, our law, our philosophy, economy and so on. These very things originally came from Him, and to be a Christian and not wish Him represented as having a hand in everything, I feel, is a step away from Him.

Let me put it plainly. If in a museum, at the evolution exhibit, it was mentioned that God used this system to create the creatures of the world, I would love that. As He being there, is a step in the right direction, whereas His omission in everything, will never get us anywhere.

How can you find that, which you don't even believe is lost in the first place?

Digit
 
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Dannager

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Now, depending on the kind of museum you go to, there will be explanations of things, and these are rarely Biblical at all. In that regard, I would love to see God represented there, as the author of it all.
That's what a church is for.
Yet He doesn't feature in their explanations at all.
That's because God isn't an explanation.
In fact, many strictly omit Him, as a theory of dinosaur extinction, the great flood is never mentioned as a possibility.
That's because it isn't a possibility. The flood supposedly occurred a few thousand years ago. We're quite certain that the mass extinction event that killed off the last of the dinosaurs took place many millions of years before that.
It's not like we have any real reason to beleive it was an asteroid either.
Actually, we do. Please check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretaceous-Tertiary_extinction_event and scroll down to the section where theories on the cause for the extinction event are discussed.
I feel that Christians should present a united front on these things.
No united front is available. Christianity is not one religion. Denominations aside, two religions exist within what is called Christianity - fundamentalism and non-fundamentalism. We cannot present a united front because our worldviews are at odds with one another.
Our worldview has a foundation, which is God.
No, your worldview has the Bible at its foundation, which you take to be the literal word of God. Our worldview has God as its foundation, and we take the Bible to be a divinely inspired collection of moral and spiritual messages, but recognize that it is not intended literally in many places.
He has given us all these approaches to the doctrines of the world. He has grounded our ethics, our law, our philosophy, economy and so on. These very things originally came from Him, and to be a Christian and not wish Him represented as having a hand in everything, I feel, is a step away from Him.
To wish God represented in having a hand in things that God clearly did not (and in fact didn't even take place, such as young-earth creationism's beliefs) is a step away.
Let me put it plainly. If in a museum, at the evolution exhibit, it was mentioned that God used this system to create the creatures of the world, I would love that.
I would hate it. We believe that based on faith. Museums are a place for education based on knowledge, facts and study. There is no place for faith-based explanations in a museum. That's simply not what they are for. Using the guise of a museum to present a religious message (especially a wrong religious message) is abhorrent.
As He being there, is a step in the right direction, whereas His omission in everything, will never get us anywhere.
God isn't omitted from everything. Preach to the unbelievers and show them your compassion and kind-hearted nature. That is how you get somewhere. Not by deceiving the public and wasting millions of dollars on wrong-headed pursuits like a creationist museum.
 
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Digit

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That's what a church is for.
God should be present in every aspect in your life, both in praise and worship and in education. To relegate detailed education to the church, is not what it's their for. Church is about communing with other Christians, and about worshipping God, and learning more about His character. It's not to go into minute detail over how and why things work. Museums offer explanations for such things, and as a Christian, I wish they would paint the full picture.

That's because God isn't an explanation.
I never said that He was, I said he doesn't feature in them. His work, is totally omitted, if you stepped into a museum today, you would never even get the impression that there IS a God at all. What kind of education is that? It's a secular, agnostic education that refuses to admit the existance of God. I find that abhorrent.

That's because it isn't a possibility. The flood supposedly occurred a few thousand years ago. We're quite certain that the mass extinction event that killed off the last of the dinosaurs took place many millions of years before that.
I was using that as an example, that there is never any mention of an alternative theory. As you said, we've adopted something which we have absolutely no idea occurred with any certainty, AND something that we have no idea occurred at the time dinosaurs roamed the land. We base these things on flawed radio-cardbon dating systems. Great stuff!

Actually, we do. Please check out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretaceous-Tertiary_extinction_event and scroll down to the section where theories on the cause for the extinction event are discussed.
Ok, lets not debate this as we clearly don't agree and it will further dissolve into a powder-keg argument.

No united front is available. Christianity is not one religion. Denominations aside, two religions exist within what is called Christianity - fundamentalism and non-fundamentalism. We cannot present a united front because our worldviews are at odds with one another.
Yes they are, and it saddens me.

No, your worldview has the Bible at its foundation, which you take to be the literal word of God. Our worldview has God as its foundation, and we take the Bible to be a divinely inspired collection of moral and spiritual messages, but recognize that it is not intended literally in many places.
Quite simply put, that is impossible, as where do you learn about God, if not from the Bible? Definitely not a museum that's for sure. ;)

To wish God represented in having a hand in things that God clearly did not (and in fact didn't even take place, such as young-earth creationism's beliefs) is a step away.
My example was of Him having a hand in evolution, which TEs (and you I assume) clearly think He did, as such, I cannot see why you wish explicitly that He be omitted.

I would hate it. We believe that based on faith. Museums are a place for education based on knowledge, facts and study. There is no place for faith-based explanations in a museum.
You say that, yet for years evolution was just such a thing, a faith based theory. To be honest I find this line or debate quite ironic, as in actual fact many such exhibits in museums make huge assumptions about things. As an example, the colourings and markings of dinosaurs.

That's simply not what they are for. Using the guise of a museum to present a religious message (especially a wrong religious message) is abhorrent.
A religious museum, is telling a religious account of things. You need to stop saying that the message is wrong, as you cannot back that up and prove otherwise. A religious museum is not some cloak and dagger museum that is pretending to offer something it isn't. It's not like Ken Ham infiltrated the Natural History Museum and quickly setup a Noah's Ark display. It's placing God at His rightful place as our creator and telling His story as presented to us in the Bible. It's not rocket science.

God isn't omitted from everything. Preach to the unbelievers and show them your compassion and kind-hearted nature. That is how you get somewhere. Not by deceiving the public and wasting millions of dollars on wrong-headed pursuits like a creationist museum.
Oddly, I stumbled upon an Atheist run site the other day, that derided TE's for believing in both God and evolution as they couldn't understand what in Genesis prompted this figurative view of it. The reason upholding a literal telling of Genesis is important to Creationists, is because it upholds the very authoratiy that the Bible lays down. If we can decide ad-hoc what is figurative and what isn't, there will be chaos. If something in the Bible is untrue, then who's to say any of it is true? That's where the witnessing issues come into it, because all of a sudden, it's no longer a complete picture, it's half of this and half of that.

I have read a book recently called The Battle for Truth, and it's about worldviews and their approach to the 10 doctrines, one thing struck me, which is that all worldviews share similar points, except Christianity. It is unique, and as C.S. Lewis said, it's not something you would have ever guessed (like the other worldviews), it's dramatically different and unique, yet so complete.

Cheers,
Digit
 
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Digit

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Lying for God is still a sin. Building a $27 million monument to that lie compounds that sin exponentially.
You are operating under the assumption that it is indeed a lie, which is not known at this stage and therefore that statement is presumptious and false.

In addition, God judges our character and motive. What Creationists do, they do because they believe the Genesis account is literal, and because they want to represent God and His part in creation. Since neither of us have a copy of God's Judgement Handbook(tm), it is not up to either of us to put forward how God will judge actions, whether or not they are based on correct beliefs, and how they affect our sin, however I would wager that God isn't going to punish those who work according to His Word. Just my 2c.

Digit
 
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Dannager

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God should be present in every aspect in your life, both in praise and worship and in education.
God guides my conscience in every decision I make, but I do not need to artificially inject God into my science, or history, or politics to give proper thanks and praise.
To relegate detailed education to the church, is not what it's their for.
There is no detailed education on creationism. It's simple indoctrination, coming up with facts to fit a preconceived view of things. The church is where things like that belong.
Church is about communing with other Christians, and about worshipping God, and learning more about His character.
And many fundamentalists seem to think that a literal reading of the Bible is part of the "character" that God intended us to discover. It's for churches, not museums.
It's not to go into minute detail over how and why things work.
If the creationism museum were going over why and how things work in minute detail, they wouldn't be a creationism museum. It's impossible to do that and not accept evolution.
Museums offer explanations for such things, and as a Christian, I wish they would paint the full picture.
They do paint the full picture on their topic. Their topic does not extend to the supernatural. Churches are houses of the supernatural, not museums.
I never said that He was, I said he doesn't feature in them.
It's the same thing.
His work, is totally omitted
No, it's not. God's work is there, it's just not labeled as God's work. But the fact remains that the creationism museum does not discuss God's work. It discusses a fantasy that fundamentalist Christians wish were true because it justifies their flawed worldview.
if you stepped into a museum today, you would never even get the impression that there IS a God at all.
It's not a museum's purpose to give its patrons an impression that God exists. That's the job of churches.
What kind of education is that? It's a secular, agnostic education that refuses to admit the existance of God. I find that abhorrent.
It also refuses to admit the non-existence of God. Museums don't talk about the existence or non-existence of God, because that's not what they're there for. If you want to hear about whether or not God exists, go to a church or a meeting of a rationalist society.
I was using that as an example, that there is never any mention of an alternative theory.
You wouldn't like the alternate theories either. The alternate theories are things like multiple-impact cause and volcanic activity. There is not alternate theory that involves anything that you would want to hear.
As you said, we've adopted something which we have absolutely no idea occurred with any certainty
Nah, we have a pretty reasonable amount of certainty that something happened 65 million years ago to cause the extinction, and a reasonable amount of certainty that a ridiculous amount of rain and a flooded planet were not to blame. That exists only in the fantasies of fundamentalists.
AND something that we have no idea occurred at the time dinosaurs roamed the land. We base these things on flawed radio-cardbon dating systems. Great stuff!
You don't even know how radio-carbon calibration works. You're recycling what you've heard from other creationists, who heard it from other creationists, who heard it from other creationists who lied about it to promote their views.
Ok, lets not debate this as we clearly don't agree and it will further dissolve into a powder-keg argument.
I just wanted to make sure that you knew your argument didn't hold water.
Yes they are, and it saddens me.
It saddens all of us, and there is absolutely nothing we can do about it. On the one hand, TEs are usually the ones with stronger backgrounds in the natural sciences and tend to be better educated. They've come to their worldview through a combination of faith and reason, and have reconciled the real world with their religious belief. On the other hand, young-earth creationists have inherited literalist interpretations and soldier-of-God attitudes. They tend to be less educated and have not applied reason to their study of Christianity. And, as it's often said, you cannot reason someone out of a position they did not reason themselves into.
Quite simply put, that is impossible, as where do you learn about God, if not from the Bible? Definitely not a museum that's for sure. ;)
Certainly not. I learn about God in part from the Bible. It serves as a fine aid in exploring the faith, but the only literal truth God gave us is the world we live in. There is no one single tool to discovering God. It's worth noting that there was a fairly large span of time where the Bible did not exist, and yet the Christian faith remained and thrived. The Bible does not hold the keys to Christianity.
My example was of Him having a hand in evolution, which TEs (and you I assume) clearly think He did, as such, I cannot see why you wish explicitly that He be omitted.
I know what your example was of, and I told you that I don't want theistic evolution being taught in a museum. Museums are where facts are housed, and theistic evolution is not a fact. It is a worldview that couples scientific knowledge with faith in a higher power. It requires faith, and museums do not afford people faith.
You say that, yet for years evolution was just such a thing, a faith based theory.
No, it wasn't. The faith involved in religious belief and the "faith" you mention here (as a sort of cautious acceptance given an incomplete set of evidence) are two very different things. Evolution started out as all scientific theories do: a small set of facts supporting an explanation. From there it has grown without significant setback and little need for revision, which tells us that the theory is incredibly strong and very likely correct.
To be honest I find this line or debate quite ironic, as in actual fact many such exhibits in museums make huge assumptions about things. As an example, the colourings and markings of dinosaurs.
Every museum I have visited has had a disclaimer up somewhere making it clear that physical depictions of color and marking are guesswork, and that they are provided merely for aesthetic purposes.
A religious museum, is telling a religious account of things.
No, religious museums usually present a historical account of a religion from the perspective of how it arose and its acceptance in the global community. What you're talking about is a ministry disguising itself as a museum to lure in the unwitting passerby.
You need to stop saying that the message is wrong, as you cannot back that up and prove otherwise.
Actually, I can, given the enormous number of simply incorrect facts the creationism museum incorporates. If you'd like to discuss some I would be more than happy to.
A religious museum is not some cloak and dagger museum that is pretending to offer something it isn't.
This one is.
It's not like Ken Ham infiltrated the Natural History Museum and quickly setup a Noah's Ark display.
No, it's even more insidious than that. It's starting up a museum and claiming to have solid scientific evidence when none exists. I've made jokes in the past few days about this being the first museum in the history of ever to be completely unconcerned with the fact that their exhibits are not supported by empirical finding.
It's placing God at His rightful place as our creator and telling His story as presented to us in the Bible. It's not rocket science.
The right place for that is in a church.
Oddly, I stumbled upon an Atheist run site the other day, that derided TE's for believing in both God and evolution as they couldn't understand what in Genesis prompted this figurative view of it.
They simply have not studied the appropriate biblical history. The concept of literal history did not exist at the time the Bible was written. In fact, literal history is a very modern concept. People back then didn't care about how things actually went down, only that their tales held significance they could incorporate into their own lives, that they were easy to remember and that they were engaging enough to avoid their oral audience losing interest.
The reason upholding a literal telling of Genesis is important to Creationists, is because it upholds the very authoratiy that the Bible lays down.
The only ones who feel that the authority of the Bible rests on its literal nature are fundamentalists. We have no reason to feel that the Bible's authority (which we certainly see to be more limited than fundamentalists do) is in any danger.
If we can decide ad-hoc what is figurative and what isn't, there will be chaos.
Except we don't decide ad-hoc.
If something in the Bible is untrue, then who's to say any of it is true?
That whole faith thing would come into play here. You do the same thing we do, you just don't realize it. The Bible mentions a number of things that are factually untrue (four corners to the earth, resting on pillars, etc.) that you shrug off as being unimportant or figurative. Why do you do this? Because you know from observing the world around you that they can't possibly be true - reality contradicts these things, so you assume that they must be figurative. We do the same thing. Reality contradicts young-earth creationism, and thus (coupled with the fact that we realize it was not intended that way anyway) we take the Genesis account to be largely figurative.
That's where the witnessing issues come into it, because all of a sudden, it's no longer a complete picture, it's half of this and half of that.
We hardly see it as an incomplete picture. Incorporating the whole of God's creation into faith isn't dangerous or debilitating; it's utterly necessary to proper theology.
I have read a book recently called The Battle for Truth, and it's about worldviews and their approach to the 10 doctrines, one thing struck me, which is that all worldviews share similar points, except Christianity. It is unique, and as C.S. Lewis said, it's not something you would have ever guessed (like the other worldviews), it's dramatically different and unique, yet so complete.
Which Christianity are we talking about, here?
 
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