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is creation outside of science's scope?

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archaeologist

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However, science can determine that the Earth is older than 6,000 years and that there was no global flood.

prove it please but remember what K.A.Kitchen said---"absence of evidence is not evidence for absence."

science cannot prove there was no global flood because of all the activitythat has transpired which eradicated any evidence besides, even if we found the ark, no one would accept it as 'the' ark.

Jesus pointed this out in a parable when the rich man died and he asked to have lazerus sent back to his brothers. the answer was that his brothers would not believe even if that took place. (paraphrase Lk. 16:19-31)

so it wouldn't matter what evidence we believers provided, if you don't believe God's word then you won't believe the evidence.

as for the dating of the earth, at best it is a guess as most dating systems are not verifiable and c-14 has come under attack again for its unreliability despite the synchronizing with dendochronology & coral dating.

it is pretty hard to date something when you have no idea when the actual beginning took place nor when time began.

By the way--science cannot verify anything concerning evolution or dating because there are no ancient records to corroborate its findings or anything to verify the claims of scientists except other scientists. that is a good example of circular reasoning.then there is
too much information that is lost, excluded, ignored or destroyed, the fossil record cannot provide a time frame as there is nothing to verify that such a procession took place as described by evolutionists.

at best the fossil record can only proclaim that such an animal existed at some point in time in the past. there is nothing in those fossils that can prove the evolutionary process or natural selection were responsible.

same with DNA testing. all science can do is show a similarity of dna molecules among species but at no time can dna prove evolution or natural selection was responsible. there is no evidence of evolution at work.

so like the dating systems, it is all built upon assumptions or conjecture and not hard evidence or fact. there isn't much there to inspire the placing of one's soul on for all eternity.

people throw God in the mix so they can feel good, be secure and think they are spiritual but again that is a compromise and having one's cake and eating it to--- which God does not do.
 
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crawfish

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one has to remember that those scientists who do not believe have no light in them--1 John so why would you accept their work and theories when God is not there?

Will you take doctor-prescribed medicine invented by a non-believing scientist?

Will you go into buildings designed by non-believing architects?

Will you ride in a vehicle designed by non-believing engineers?

Will you use an internet designed by non-believing programmers?

You accept the work and theories of unbelievers every.single.day.of.your.life. God was known to work through unbelievers. He worked through the Philistines. He worked through the Babylonians. He worked through the Assyrians. He worked through the Persians. He worked through the Romans.

Sorry, but your answer is simply not good enough.
 
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crawfish

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sorry tha i haven't gotten back to your previous posts, i have not had the time.
I do understand it's difficult to answer every single question when you've been piled on. Don't worry, I'm patient and understanding. :)
 
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Mallon

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I would be interested what a "great percentage" is if you can provide it?
40% is the commonly cited number. You can google it if you wish.

In addition, I find this a moot point anyhow because if they subscribe to TE, then they have adopted secular sciences theory on our origin which, as I've come to learn, doesn't necessarily exclude God, but it definitely doesn't require him.
Bingo! No science "requires" God, and you're just as guilty as any of us for holding to theories that do not squeeze God into the equation. For example, when you have an infection, do you simply leave it to God to cure you with a miracle, or do you cave to agnostic science and take anti-biotics? Careful how you answer -- Jesus hated hypocrisy! ;)
Then, we look at our real world findings, and if they conflict with that, then surely it makes sense to stick with what God recorded?
You're still being circular. You would make a great spokesperson for Answers in Genesis, because it seems to me that you agree with their circular reasoning:

"No apparent, perceived or claimed evidence in any field, including history and chronology, can be valid if it contradicts the Scriptural record."

"When properly understood, the “evidence” confirms the biblical account."

The Bible is God's Word. It isn't inspired by God, it's God Breathed.
Ultimately, this is the dividing line between evolutionary creationists and YECs. The former hold that the Bible is inspired by God. The latter hold that it is dictated by God. And if we can't agree on this very fundamental understanding of what "God-breathed" means, we simply aren't going to see eye-to-eye on anything else.
 
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gluadys

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It seems a lot of this rests on the dating methods used and those themselves rely on some assumptions, neither of which are concrete methods to deduce it.

Digit

Of course, you have to be careful in using the term "assumption". As we saw in this post:
http://www.christianforums.com/showpost.php?p=35479413&postcount=51

AiG began with the statement:
"For example, it is assumed that radioactive decay rates have not changed in the past."

whereas scientists have actually concluded from the data that decay rates have not changed in the past.

The substitution of "assumption" for "conclusion" is an unfortunate commonality in much creationist source material.

The second problem is that typically "assumption" is given a negative connotation as if it were an inherent quality of assumptions to be unwarranted and unexamined. Neither is the case.

The most basic assumption on which all science is grounded, for example, is that the physical world is a reality. That is not a provable statement.

Does that make it untrue, unwarranted, and worthless?

Assumptions have a proper place in science, and indeed in all reason and logic. The proper attitude is not "this is an assumption so we can choose to ignore it." The proper attitude is to examine the merits of the assumption to determine whether it is warranted and whether or not the evidence is still consistent with the assumption.

I think if you study more on radiometric dating you will find 1) that some ideas you have been told are assumptions are actually evidenced-based conclusions and 2) most remaining assumptions are not sheer guesses out of the blue, but warranted in the circumstances and continuously re-examined for relevance and accuracy.

Assumptions do not necessarily deserve to be swept away like rubbish. They need to be studied and evaluated on their merits.
 
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gluadys

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I think the point is that the actions of God are qualitatively different at different times -- loaves and fishes are multiplied, fig trees are cursed and die.

In short, sometimes God works miracles and this is what you mean by "active intervention". I have some trouble with describing only miracles as "active". Why assume God is inactive between one miracle and the next? But let that pass for now.

The pertinent question is why this insistence on making miracles part of science?

Have you read much in medieval philosophy? I find it fascinating. And there is a parallel in the 13th century to what we are discussing here. A key factor in prompting discussion was two formal condemnations of certain ideas as heresy. All were ideas taken from Aristotle and made current in Europe via Muslim philosophy. The condemned ideas referred to the eternal existence of the universe (contra creation), the sufficiency of natural causes (contra miracles), the unity of substance and accidents (contra transubstantiation) and that the soul is the form of a living body (contra the immortality of the soul). As these condemnations were absorbed and the philosophical consequences explored, we find a rise in skepticism. Not about church doctrine to be sure, but about the limits of human reason.

Consider this situation. You are sitting at a table, in good light,looking directly at a tangerine. You are awake and alert, not under the influence of drugs or anything else that might distort your senses. Would you say that you know you are looking at a tangerine on the table in front of you?

Can you know this? Can you be certain your experience of the tangerine is due to its physical presence? Could it not be due to God's "active intervention" affecting your optic nerve so that you experience the sight of the tangerine without the physical presence of a tangerine?

A scientist conducts a chemical experiment which requires burning a small amount of material. Does it burn because he puts it in the flame of his bunsen burner or because God "actively intervenes" to cause it to burn? How is the scientist to know if the material burns sometimes or never or always because God "actively intervenes"?

If God regularly and predictably actively intervenes such that a given process always produces a given result, how does this active intervention differ from natural process? For all we know it is natural process. In describing the natural process, the scientist is describing the regular and predictable intervention that God always makes in this situation. For all we know, the only difference between a normal experience and a miracle is not a difference in how active God is, but that normally God intervenes in a regular and predictable pattern and in a miracle he acts in an exceptional and unpredictable way.

Now let's play this out a bit more. What is it that science studies if not those active interventions of God that fall into a regular and predictable pattern? What else is it possible to study in a scientific manner? Can one predict an exception to habitual behaviour? What does one learn from God's exceptional behaviour about God's habitual behaviour? If, in any sense, a series of miracles conformed to a pattern, they would no longer be exceptional cases and would be included in science as one pattern of regularity among others. But the whole point of a miracle is that it is precisely what one cannot expect, cannot predict and from which no insight into future action can be inferred. It is a wholly free act of a sovereign God. It is for this reason that it is not and cannot be included in science.

Of course, we don't have to subscribe to the thesis that every ordinary sensory experience is actually due to God actively manipulating the material world and/or our sensory apparatus. The point is that even if that were the case, science would still be restricted to studying those interventions which occur in a regular predictable pattern.

How do you go from an observation (or even a series) to "always"?

"Always" within the framework of the observation. So long as the observation continues in the same pattern, the causal factor is always there. If God is a causal factor, God is always there. When the causal factor is absent the observation changes in character.


As an infinite quantity, in terms of mercy and love and possibility, speaking those things that are not as if they were. Not always in my time, in what expect, but with certainty.

Very romantic. But until it is quantifiable it is not science.

Really, I don't mean to be flippant. What you allude to is actually far more important than science. But that is not a reason to make it science or include it in science.

I get this feeling of creationist ambiguity about science that I noted in a post to laptoppop. You seem to long to enlarge science to include these very important things as if that would give a cachet of respectability to them they would not otherwise have. You seem to have trouble with science not being able to grasp important things like mercy and love and infinite possibilities.

Why can these things not be honoured and respected in themselves without the addition of science's seal of approval? Why is it so difficult to accept that science is limited in the range of knowledge it can give us?

There are any number of examples of scientists who were gifted professionally because of their faith and reliance upon God.

I have no doubt some gifted scientists had faith in and relied on God, but to say their professional success was a result of their faith cannot be established as certain, or even highly probable, knowledge.

Of what benefit is their testimony to secular science? Many simply won't accept them.

It is not a matter of not accepting their testimony. It is that there is no means of verifying a causal nexus between their faith and their success. That is why their testimony is testimony and not data. And why we may choose to believe or disbelieve it. If it were data, it could not be ignored.

How one regards your "variable" is of course a very interesting problem. It causes huge fights in churches, since if you put forth some kind of equation or hypothesis and you don't get the blessing, someone has to get blamed apparently, whether it is God or the person praying with no results. Again, we come to a moral problem that is like the tail wagging the dog. But, once again, the reality of a God of infinite love remains and no amount of worry about who gets blamed if He doesn't do a trick will suffice to remove infinite love and infinite power as something potential or available or hidden or whatever. No equation can contain it.

Exactly, so why do you object to science not including it? Science can only deal with what can be contained in an equation. That is the nature of the beast.

Personally, I think the problem that science has with God is often a problem of bad scientists.

Personally, I don't think it is science that has the problem with God.

Science wants to determine what is real or what is possible.

Within its field, yes. But that field is a slice of reality, not all of it. And even then, science looks at what is regular, patterned and predictable, not potential invasions from other aspects of reality.
 
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busterdog

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Very romantic. But until it is quantifiable it is not science.

Really, I don't mean to be flippant. What you allude to is actually far more important than science. But that is not a reason to make it science or include it in science.

I get this feeling of creationist ambiguity about science that I noted in a post to laptoppop. You seem to long to enlarge science to include these very important things as if that would give a cachet of respectability to them they would not otherwise have. You seem to have trouble with science not being able to grasp important things like mercy and love and infinite possibilities.

Why can these things not be honoured and respected in themselves without the addition of science's seal of approval? Why is it so difficult to accept that science is limited in the range of knowledge it can give us? .

As for the romance, I thought the same thing when I wrote it. But, there isn't really any way to express it that isn't schmaltzy, theologically stiff or mathematically bizarre. Every theology that tries to reduce it to a rule does not succeed, in my estimation, whether it is reform or name it/claim it.

So, that's the problem.

Why bother? Well, there is this collision between YEC and TE. It is an intractible problem for science, and theology for that matter.

Some guy told me one time that if I really decided to find golf balls and resolved to notice them wherever they were, I found find tons. That's true enough. If one wants to find this irresolvable problem in science, or medicine, or politics, you will end up finding it everywhere.

Let's simply assume for the sake of argument that Israel remains the chosen nation and that it is God's special province to deal with them, either in judgment or blessing. That means that every diplomatic effort and every study by intelligence analysts must have an asterix next to it which says, "*Our best analysis, which cannot account for radical change in the event of the intervention of God Almighty." You needn't buy the theology to undestand the illustration.

In a medical diagnoses, the possibilities are of course pretty much wide open, where the intervention of God remains possible.

This is a problem that just doesn't go away.

And, lots of good science will get done in spite of it.
 
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archaeologist

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those of you who believe in alternatives of the genesis account, why do you go to science to determine what God did?

He was quite clear when he said 'my ways are not your ways..." doyou think God created the way secular scientists decree? do you really think God is limited to what science says took place?

why is science right and God wrong? who or what is science that those who adhere to it think that they have the only insight into what God did and are theonly ones who can determine the truth?

God has already told us How He did it, God has already told us when he did it, so why are you running to science (secular at that) trying to determine what God did and when?

creation is like heaven and hell, it is outside the scope of science to prove or determine the reality. it was done by God His way not man's. removing God from the equation and looking to the natural to explain the supernatural, means you are looking in the wrong place.
 
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crawfish

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those of you who believe in alternatives of the genesis account, why do you go to science to determine what God did?

He was quite clear when he said 'my ways are not your ways..." doyou think God created the way secular scientists decree? do you really think God is limited to what science says took place?

why is science right and God wrong? who or what is science that those who adhere to it think that they have the only insight into what God did and are theonly ones who can determine the truth?

God has already told us How He did it, God has already told us when he did it, so why are you running to science (secular at that) trying to determine what God did and when?

creation is like heaven and hell, it is outside the scope of science to prove or determine the reality. it was done by God His way not man's. removing God from the equation and looking to the natural to explain the supernatural, means you are looking in the wrong place.

How many times are you going to ask the same question? Are you expecting us to give a different answer each time?

If you will, there is no "simple answer" to why I find Genesis impossible to accept in a literal sense. It is a combination of science, ancient studies, language, all mixed together with prayer and petition during my studies. Note that it only requires ONE FACT to disagree with it to prevent taking the ENTIRE thing literally - the speed of light proof is all we need to discount it.

I don't think you grasp most of the arguments put forth by TE's here. I really don't mind if you do or not. I do not believe that your salvation has anything to do with how you view creation. However, DO NOT DARE say I am not a Christian, or have faith any less than you. That is incredibly arrogant. God can make that call, but you do not have the perspective to know the difference.
 
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gluadys

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As for the romance, I thought the same thing when I wrote it. But, there isn't really any way to express it that isn't schmaltzy, theologically stiff or mathematically bizarre. Every theology that tries to reduce it to a rule does not succeed, in my estimation, whether it is reform or name it/claim it.

I agree. When you start speaking of the character of God and of the working of grace, I have often found my self not only nodding in agreement but appreciating the beauty of how you express it.


Let's simply assume for the sake of argument that Israel remains the chosen nation and that it is God's special province to deal with them, either in judgment or blessing. That means that every diplomatic effort and every study by intelligence analysts must have an asterix next to it which says, "*Our best analysis, which cannot account for radical change in the event of the intervention of God Almighty." You needn't buy the theology to undestand the illustration.

Every theistic analysis of science I have seen says the same of science. Perhaps much of the difference between TEs and others is that we automatically assume the asterisk as a given, but YECs somehow need to see it and the accompanying footnote in print.

Two of the foundational assumptions behind all scientific endeavour are the unprovable propositions that:
1. the physical world is real, and
2. the physical world is knowable to us.

But taken as givens, do they need to be restated in every scientific report?

As for the theistic asterisk, obviously not every scientist is a theist. Some would hold that we cannot and should not add it in even mentally.

But does that automatically mean that not printing it signals this rejection? Or does it leave the matter to personal philosophy and faith, where, in my estimation, it properly belongs.
 
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ForumMonk

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I'm trying to find a suitable place to jump into this conversation, as I have been lurking but silent. I personally take a view that science is free to discover the great things that God has created, bearing in mind this discovery takes place after the fact. The act of creation, however, remains outside of the scope of science as it was a purely miraculous act. As such, science has no more hope of explaining or understanding it than it does any of the miracles performed by our Lord. These events occur in a realm unique to God.

Understanding this simple fact, in my opinion, allows us maintain the integrity of the Genesis 1 & 2 account of creation without reinterpreting the text and allows science to discover the results of God's miracle to the glory of God and the betterment of life on earth. Just as we have no idea what happened while Jesus laid in the tomb, we have no idea what took place in the first days as God fashioned a universe, but in both cases, we can rejoice in the result.

Regards,
FM
 
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archaeologist

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How many times are you going to ask the same question?

until you grasp the reality that : if you say you believe in God yet deny or change what He says, you do more harm to the cause of Christ because you are telling the world you do not believe what you say you do. so why should they.

If you will, there is no "simple answer" to why I find Genesis impossible to accept in a literal sense. It is a combination of science, ancient studies, language, all mixed together with prayer and petition during my studies. Note that it only requires ONE FACT to disagree with it to prevent taking the ENTIRE thing literally - the speed of light proof is all we need to discount it.

maybe there is no simple answer for you in reaching your conclusions but that doesn't change the simple facts.

you are giving 'the speed of light' as an example, yet where did that theory come from? certainly there is no indication about speed in the bible so obviously scientists, mostly secular, came up with the concept given modern measurements of light.

yet God never said He followed man's measurements. He said He created the stars, which means He put everything into place in the beginning.

you are looking at things from a human understanding, a human point of view, now you need to look at it as God doing it God's way.

you won't find the answers following secular answers and thinking.

Note that it only requires ONE FACT to disagree with it to prevent taking the ENTIRE thing literally

the problem here is, you are judging the act of creation via human facts based in natural investigation. you are trying to fit the supernatural into a model which excludes the supernatural. won't work.

God is very clear that His way is not our way so stop trying to make creation fit man's way. you will be lost if you do.

I don't think you grasp most of the arguments put forth by TE's here

Please... TE is a 'i want my cake and eat it' mentality. it is so far from the truth that it is heretical at best. basically you are doing what the progressive creationists do, call God a liar. exodus cannot be clearer--God created everything in 6 days and there was no process.

by the way, that insulting remark just convinced me not to review your posts i did not answer. i do not accept being insulted.

However, DO NOT DARE say I am not a Christian, or have faith any less than you

i am not talking about faith or salvation, i am talking about what you believe. if you disagree with genesis then you disagree with God because God said 6 days not ages, no evolution, no big bang etc. your beef is with HIm not me.

That is incredibly arrogant. God can make that call, but you do not have the perspective to know the difference.

not at all, you do not know what God has revealed to me or what i have gone through to learn what i know. just let it suffice that God did it in a manner that left no doubt He is God and that there is no other and that act did not follow man's requirements or way of doing things.
 
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Digit

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Note that it only requires ONE FACT to disagree with it to prevent taking the ENTIRE thing literally - the speed of light proof is all we need to discount it.
This is commonly called a magic-bullet theory, that is, something which when proved completely disproves all following things. Atheists like to find these to help convince themselves there is no God, there is a whole list of them and they are all completely false. The speed of light is no exception and it is based off of assumptions, not facts. It also conveniently omits that God created light before he gave it a source, the sun.

Digit
 
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archaeologist

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i know it looks like i come on strong but i see the ramifications od deviating from what scripture says and i see the impact that it has on the unchurched world.

it should be noted thatevidence is evidence, niether secular nor christian and what one does with that evidence does not fall under the category of objectivity but is influenced by one's beliefs. perspective and comfort level.

in reading many secular books i see many secular scientists, researchers discover great evidence that would support the Biblical accounts only to have them make a sharp turn into some fanciful, popular, secular theory that has no vasis in reality or actuality.

this is quite a problem as it deonstrates the side-stepping of an opportunity to consider more than just an evolutionary model. ryan and pittman do this quite well in their book, 'noah's flood'. they go from flood evidence right around the corner to the ice age theory.

yet there is nothing to verify that an actual ice age took place. (unless the glaciers of north america are the result of noah's flood) there is so much evidence out there pointing to the truthfulness of the biblical accounts but all of them are usually used to give credit to some other source which is not biblical.

evolution in any form does not have its roots in the Bible, darwin never credited God for his theory or work nor mentioned how He was led by God thus we know his thinking and all subsequent forms of his thinking are not divinely inspired nor of God.

evolution came from one man's mind and it should not be adopted by any believer for it does not direct the person back to God but to some other source which is wrong.

now the progressive creationists and theistic evolutions throw God's name in the mix but they basically follow the secular evolutionary model--God could not have done it in 6 24 hour days and the scientific evidence states.

but they forget that, we are not told to follow scientific evidence as believers, Jesus said, 'ye believe in God, believe also in me'. He also said, ' I am the way'... notice, He did not say follow science or archaeology or history.

there is a reason for that, those fields do not have the answers, only God and Jesus do. sure those fields, if used according to God's criteria, can fill in a lot of detail, provide a lot of information BUT they cannot be elevated to a position God did not intend them to occupy.

basing conclusions on assumptions, inferrences, hypothesis is not of God. He is truth not conjecture and there is a vast difference in the way the secular world approaches a problem or mystery and the way God says to do it.

christians need to follow God when they are involved with these fields of investigation or they are of little use for the kingdom of God and they do nmore damage than good.

there is more to this issue than deciding when God created and a believer cannot afford to walk around with blinders on ignoring the impact their beliefs make on the unchurched world.

by the way, we already know when the world was created and we already know how, time to stop being distracted and shun that which is not of God.
 
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Digit

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I'm trying to find a suitable place to jump into this conversation, as I have been lurking but silent. I personally take a view that science is free to discover the great things that God has created, bearing in mind this discovery takes place after the fact. The act of creation, however, remains outside of the scope of science as it was a purely miraculous act. As such, science has no more hope of explaining or understanding it than it does any of the miracles performed by our Lord. These events occur in a realm unique to God.

Understanding this simple fact, in my opinion, allows us maintain the integrity of the Genesis 1 & 2 account of creation without reinterpreting the text and allows science to discover the results of God's miracle to the glory of God and the betterment of life on earth. Just as we have no idea what happened while Jesus laid in the tomb, we have no idea what took place in the first days as God fashioned a universe, but in both cases, we can rejoice in the result.

Regards,
FM
Hey ForumMonk,

I think that's something which we understand, however evolution speaks about the mechanics that God used to create, and it's more about how responsible evolution is in our creation. TEs think God flipped the switch to start the evolution machine up, YECs think that God created everything unique and whole, and from there, creatures have evolved within their species and non-believers think it all occured by chance. ;)

Cheers,
Digit
 
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gluadys

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This is commonly called a magic-bullet theory, that is, something which when proved completely disproves all following things. Atheists like to find these to help convince themselves there is no God, there is a whole list of them and they are all completely false. The speed of light is no exception and it is based off of assumptions, not facts. It also conveniently omits that God created light before he gave it a source, the sun.

Digit

Speaking of "magic bullets" is that not exactly how you are using the word "assumptions"? You treat it as a sure-fire way to counter all proposals.

Let's unpack that. What are the assumptions? Are they really assumptions? If yes, are they bad assumptions or are they logical, common sense assumptions? If they are bad assumptions, where do they err?

btw, science has no problem with the proposition that light existed before the sun. The sun is a relative johnny-come-lately among the stars of the galaxy.

And in a sense, light existed even before the stars, for photons existed from the beginning while it took some time before matter could collect in sufficient masses for stars to ignite.
 
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Digit

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Speaking of "magic bullets" is that not exactly how you are using the word "assumptions"? You treat it as a sure-fire way to counter all proposals.
Well yes and no. Yes, I do not consider many things as they are based off of assumptions but they also conflict with scripture. So there is more too it than that. The magic bullet idea speaks of blatant conflicts, which often non-believers use to say, "Well if that's not right, it's all in doubt." and so on. I prefer to take scripture as it is written, eg Genesis as a historical narrative, and choose carefully how I view the evidence and information around us, in light of this. That some things are based off of assumption and slotted into a secular theory, makes me wary.

Digit
 
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