Buho
Regular Member
Immediately, this is flawed. Disproof by analogy: The "easy road" interpretation of which road to take to get over the mountain is only possible if there is only one plausible road to take. Obviously, if there is more than one road, then it is "impossible" to discern which road is "easiest!" That's the straw man you set up.Shern said:Thesis (from #55): For any communication, a fully "face value" interpretation is only possible if there is only one plausible framework within which it can be read.
Obviously there are multiple possible interpretations of Genesis 1, otherwise TEs wouldn't have a hope to stand on. Just as there are multiple roads over the mountain. Some roads take the "north face", some are easier by taking switchbacks, one might tunnel straight through. Of the three, the tunnel is obviously the "easiest" road.
Suppose there's a toll booth on the other side that charges $100. Now the picture changed. How does one define "easiest?" Easiest physically, easiest on the pocketbook, or an ecconomic analysis of the dot product of both?
This is a double-standard. If you want an example of how, talk to some atheists who used to claim the label "Christian." They apply an alternative interpretive framework for the ressurection. For further example, talk to a Jew on the subject of Isaiah 53. Christians claim a single valid interpretation. Jews claim a single valid interpretation (one that's different from the Christian).Shern said:Now, I agree that to a certain extent this may be true of part of the Bible. I think it is certainly true of God's core revelation - the Crucifixion and Resurrection within the larger context of Jesus' life, ascension, and promise of return (though I believe that the Gospel is reflected back at us within the overtly Christian matrix of Western culture, so that in encountering the Gospel we are really encountering something very, very familiar).
This is a poor analogy to universal common ancestry and a Creationist PRATT. The spherocity of the Earth can be empirically determined. It is fact. It is evidence. Universal common ancestry, to which TEs believe, cannot be empirically determined. It is theory. It is an interpretation of evidence.Shern said:...flat-earth...
Universal common ancestry has become intellectually popular. Why hasn't creationism dissipated? For two reasons: (1) universal common ancestry comprimises a dozen core doctrines of Christianity (and Judaism), and (2) universal common ancestry, unlike geocentricism, is not emprical fact but a theoretical interpretation of evidence.Shern said:When heliocentrism became intellectually popular, the Bible's unequivocal support for geocentrism strangely dissipated.
200 years ago, yes, I'd agree that YECs believed in a fixity of species, mainly because of lack of evidence and the Bible makes no mention of natural selection, adaption, or speciation. However, YECs believe in speciation now because (1) it is empirical fact and (2) it does not contradict the Bible. Do you see the difference?Shern said:Fixity of species was formerly a Christian concept; but few YECs would admit believing in it today.
That's a straw man. There are multiple interpretations. One is clearly "easiest," though. See above.Shern said:How, then, can it be argued that there is only one possible interpretation of Genesis?
Aah, here you affirm that, aside from the tunnel (YECs claim this is their interpretation, which you concede through inadmission is theologically sound), there is at least one more road over the mountain that arrives at the same destination and does not end up elsewhere (you claim this interpretation is theologically sound as well). What's more, the TE road may also be a tunnel, perhaps even shorter than the YEC tunnel. In fact, since there are two roads, we cannot quickly discern the "obvious" easy road, which supports your thesis and destroys the YEC claim that the "natural" reading of Genesis is the best interpretation.Shern said:I believe that the TE interpretation is one such interpretation. The fact that this interpretation exists, therefore, disproves the claim that Scripture can be read "at face value": there are multiple possible self-consistent frameworks within which one can read the Bible, and therefore one must choose one of those frameworks before reading the Bible, thus necessitating that much interpretation prior to the text.
Two things: (1) Your claim that the TE road goes to the same destination as the YEC road remains to be proven. It is one thing to say that the TE interpretation of Genesis is 100% theologically sound. It is quite another to work out the implications of the interpretation, inspect every joist, test every girder, watch for "cheater jumps" in logic along the way, survey the net soundness of the Bible afterwards, and compare that with the YEC interpretation (which I assume you agree is already 100% theologically sound).
(2) You must show that the TE road is better than the YEC road. I didn't say "easier" because that's what YECs claim about their interpretation, not TEs. But how can one decide which road to take if both are 100% sound? YECs claim science agrees with their road and some parts of science makes the TE road difficult (if not impossible). TEs claim science agrees with their road and some parts (or bigotedly all science) makes the YEC road difficult. Since YECs claim the "easier" interpretation in scripture, they already have an advantage.
Both (1) and (2) must be shown, and (2) is dependent upon (1) because it's pointless to travel the "better" TE road if it doesn't reach the correct destination.
+ + + + +
Very preceptive. I'll add to this: Creationists "raise hue and cry" about historicity because they view the importance of history is equal to the importance of meaning. You highlighted a distinction between TEs and YECs that I had not noticed before.Shern said:[In #56] We establish that the importance of historicity is secondary to the importance of meaning. Why is it, then, that many creationists raise hue and cry about historicity?
Here is Christianity with 0% history (my speculation): The Bible drops out of the sky fully-written by the finger of God. (For extra "glitter" the material upon which the Bible is written is a material composed of a previously undiscovered element and the composition is light-years beyond our ability -- if not impossible -- to synthesize.) The Bible contains "stories" about our past, "stories" about a savior of the human race, and "stories" about our future. Heck, let's adjust the contents of the Bible and say the stories are about some other people, not us, but like us. What we now have is a book of morals upon which we can shape and guide our lives. This does not negate the facts of God's existence, Jesus's existence, their righteousness, and our sin.
However, it does effect Jesus's substitutionary work of atonement. Why? Because Christ took upon him real sin, suffered real wrath, died a real death, and was really resurrected. Read the horrible implications of belief in a non-real resurrection in 1 Cor 15. That is scripture! Paul was addressing an early form of Gnosticism which, a few centuries later, was decreed heresy!
My point: History is essential to our salvation. YECs have the right of it when they object to Christians who lessen the importantce of history -- they attack the very core and foundational doctrines of Christianity!
I, as a YEC, have been accused of being subscribing to naturalism before. You lost me here. On one end, Creation Science is being criticised because it is so easy to expose the theological foundation (Genesis, 6 days) which secular science abhores a priori. At the other end, creationists are being criticised by TEs for their naturalistic worldview (i.e., nature is all there is and nothing more)? Maybe I misread you here.Shern said:I've talked about the creationist worldview, which emphasises objectivity, historicity as truth, and naturalism as an affront to God's work (which seem to contradict each other).
Shern: "The basic form of the mapping is that historicity maps to truth, and fiction maps to falsehood." I've said this before. I'm learning (slowly) the error of this. Parables, case in point.
Shern: "Historically, of course, there is absolutely no conflict whatsoever between the bare fact of evolution and the bare fact of the Resurrection." When you say "evolution" do you mean variation, natural selection, and speciation or do you mean the greater sense of the word: universal common ancestry? The former is "bare fact." The latter is hypothesis at best. Can we prove or disprove the Holocaust happened? Neither are possible. The best we can do is amass evidence. The evidence (millions of eyewitnesses, archeological, etc.) give us a very high degree of confidence that we then take a leap of faith in saying the Holocaust actually happened in fact. (The same goes with Jesus's life.) The evidence amassed for universal common ancestry gives us contradictary answers: some evidence (interpreted) shouts it, other evidence (interpreted) says it couldn't have happened, sometimes the same evidence (interpreted by two camps) says it did happen and couldn't happen simultaneously! The verdict thus far is a confidence nowhere near to 100% as proponents of evolution would have you believe. Please elaborate on what you mean by "evolution" in the future -- it's too nebulous a word.
Shern: "If man had indeed evolved from monkeys it would in no way disprove that a certain carpenter was not actually crucified circa 30 AD and was resurrected." I agree. Same with the others you cite. However, theological problems are introduced when you introduce death and suffering before Adam, in a creation God deemed "good," in a creation that God will wipe out and create anew, but without death and suffering, the creation the world was supposed to be. I have yet to hear a TE response to these objections.
Now, had Genesis said creation was "almost good" or "created flawed", or that sin was created originally in the first humans, then I don't think anybody would have any problems with universal common ancestry -- nay, the world secular science sees in history confirms this re-written Genesis account! The problem is that TE interpretation fails on both accounts: historically and morally. TEs seek to turn Genesis into a moral account because it clashes with their worldview on the historical front, but it doesn't even work on a moral front because God specifically said creation was "very good" and without sin!
Shern: "...[Creationists] are either completely unaware of their worldview preferences, or stubbornly stuck in them." In my experience, informed Creationists are the only ones (excepting you, I'm happy to say) who are aware of how everybody has a worldview and how worldviews effect how people view and interpret things.
This is insightful for creationists, and provokes further thought. Thanks for sharing.Shern said:Evolution is not the story of nature without God, but nature which God has given the freedom to become organized all on its own. Man's evolving from australopithecus is not a story of how man remains animal behind the technological and cultural trappings, but a story of how God reached down and elevated mere dust into God-knowing creatures made to love Him. By constructing a different worldview, where evolution no longer maps to anti-Christian concepts but instead to universal truths beloved to Christianity, the origins debate can be instantly vaporized and we can, to use the words of Kenneth Miller, "find Darwin's God."
See my response to Christianity without history.
See my response on how TE interpretation doesn't even work morally. These "universal truths" (the mantra of the Unitarian) you proclaim are not found in the TE interpretation of Genesis 1. God's word refuses to budge.
If this is your thesis to show how the "TE road" (mentioned above) is coherent and arrives at the correct destination, you haven't shown it yet. I encourage you to try harder, because I really would like to hear the best of what theistic evolutionists have to offer, so that I can better understand things. I would really like to see how one can separate universal common ancestry from atheism and still weave it into God's Word.
"Darwin's God" was one or more of the following: himself, humanity, homo sapien, life, nature, Science, or atheistic "none." You can decide for yourself which one fits best by reading his more philosophical writings. I'll give you a caution, though: each of those in the Bible are condemned as objects of worship.
+ + + + +
As I've praised you before, I am very impressed with your cool of both sides, Shernren. You are very articulate, and posess great clarity of thought and logic. As before, it's a treat to discuss these things with you! I only hope that I have been shown to be equally courtious to you in the heat of the discussion as you have been with me.
Grace and peace to you, brother in Christ.
Upvote
0