If the Bible tells one story, and nature tells another story, it's partly our job to reconcile Scripture with science.
That sounds an awful lot like making the Bible say something it doesn't already say. If the Bible is inerrant it requires no additional data. Additional data only
repeats the truth of the Bible, it doesn't
add to it!
I am really liking the Belshazzar example lately. If we didn't have
external data to the contrary and all we had was your beloved KJV we would never know the truth that Belshazzar was Nebuchadnezzar's
grandson and not son.
[bible]Daniel 5:2[/bible]
But I don't mind that we need
external evidence to explain the Bible. Because the Bible isn't inerrant, and it
is open to interpretation. It is open to linquistic interpretation, it is open to
allegorical interpretation, it is open to understanding as part-myth.
It is, and always has been for me, a debate against
Literalism. Literalism is internally inconsistent.
You can't have it both ways.
Scientists, in my opinion, are a gift from God.
That's why the Literal Bible treats them the way it does.
(PICTURE DELETED, it was rude of me, sorry.)
"All you have to do is believe what I say! You can still do yer thing, but make sure it never disagrees with what I say. Is that so hard? Here, have some flowers..."