Are you saying miracles don't happen without scientific evidence? The miracles of the Bible left evidence, but certainly not anything that today would be called scientific. So what scientific process did God use to create? It would appear that if there isn't a verifiable process, in your mind, the event didn't happen. I must admit this whole discussion is a bit surreal for me.
It depends on what you mean by "scientific". If you mean labs and accelerators and microscopes and all, then certainly not, and that's not what I mean either. What I mean by "scientific" is simply anything that is publicly accessible because it is part of the physical universe.
If I have a cold, anyone around me will see me sniffling and coughing and spewing mucus, even if that person doesn't believe in the existence of colds and has to resort to something else to explain it. And then if a microbiologist takes samples of my cells and puts them under the right kind of microscope s/he will be able to point out the viruses in me, and anyone who looks into the microscope will be able to see those things even if they don't know what to call them or don't even believe they exist. The microscope is just an extension of the eye, and because my cold and my cold viruses are real things, anyone can see them even if they don't believe in the cold - and even though seeing cold viruses is a lot harder than seeing the cold. That's what I mean by "scientific".
So suppose I was there and a skeptic was there right after Jesus fed the five thousand. We'll both see the same twelve baskets left over. (We can't access those twelve baskets today, of course, and that's part of the issue with comparing Jesus' miracles to creation: none of them left traces on the scale that we can observe today.) I'll say "Hey, Jesus multiplied the bread and fish!" And the skeptic might say "No, miracles don't happen, so everybody must have taken out their lunches and shared, inspired by the little boy." And whichever person is right, we will both agree that
the baskets are there and need to be explained. There won't be a third person who comes along and says "What baskets? I don't see any baskets. The miracle mustn't have happened."
A miracle on the scale of the rapid recent creation of the universe or the global flood must leave some kind of evidence that we can access. It should leave
something to explain away even for those who categorically deny the existence of miracles, just as the skeptic who looks in the Tomb should find it empty even if s/he doesn't believe in resurrections. Miracles don't clean up behind themselves.
Well I don't know any hard line atheists other than those I've met here in CF. Now they may believe as you so state, but I haven't come across it yet. Even if that is so, what am I to make of it? How does it apply to our conversation, I don't understand the relevance? Their common sense or more accurately, their conscience, has been probably been dulled and seared to the point that they no longer display any common sense. Now I've most certainly come across this in my daily walk more often than I'd care to say.
Of course our common sense apart from God's Word and our consciences would permit us many sins. Yet combined with it we can usually see clear enough to dicipher the Truth. Of course even that wouldn't be possible most of the time without the Holy Spirit's intervention. You're right that it is missing from my signature line, and if your purpose is to acknowledge His role in this process then I say 'Amen'.
I'm just rehashing Hume's old arguments against miracles (which I don't accept, by the by). According to his reasoning, since a miracle has zero probability of occurring, one needs a witness of infinite reliability to attest to one, and since there are no such witnesses, miracles cannot be attested to accurately. If that doesn't make sense to you, think of what would happen if someone came up to you and said 9/11 was staged. You'd immediately look and see what hidden agenda s/he has, what organizations they support, etc. And that makes sense: tall claims require reliable witnesses.
But the main point I'm trying to make is that "common sense" is a weasel word. Whose common sense? Is common sense really common? Not "common" as in "easily found" but "common" as in "shared": do we really all have the same common sense? For someone who works in a biology lab evolution is common sense. Does that mean that it's right for him or her to use evolution to interpret the Bible, and then that it's not right for Ken Ham to use evolution to interpret the Bible because evolution isn't common sense to him?
What decides common sense? How do you know that "if God was good, He wouldn't have hell waiting for sinners" isn't common sense? Who's the International Deciding Body For Common Sense, and what has it decided about the Documentary Hypothesis and the Jesus Seminar and all those other things? Doesn't it, in the end, reduce to you using
your common sense? And isn't that a peculiarly individualistic way to do things?
I disagree, the Word of God is first and foremost the common ground we have. It is what ties all of us directly to Him. So in simple terms, you would never know who God is without His Word pointing it out to you.
And you wouldn't know how to read the Bible without your English dictionary and your kindergarten teachers.
I see where you are coming from but I would submit that neither interpretation is diametrically different. They both, in a sense, are saying the same thing. Both are difficult, they just go about relating to it differently. It is here where context and the rest of the Bible, with the Holy Spirit's help, will help provide an answer suitable to the reader. Will that answer always be exactly the same, probably not, but it will always be consistent.
How "same" is "same"? One thinks Jesus is just making a hyperbolic comment. The other thinks Jesus is, at least on the surface of it, making an obvious command.
In my theology I believe that (as I told mark)
there was a first man, a first contact with God, a first sin that spread throughout subsequent humanity, and the desperate need for a Savior that arose from that. It may be different from yours in shades, but at its core it is still the same as yours, is it not?
Quite a fascinating approach you take young shernren. I must commend you on the depth of analysis that you seem to take concerning most everything. I'm afraid that sometimes you allow that depth to get you so deep into the weeds that you lose sight of the bigger picture. Either that or you're too far over my head, probably the latter.
The higher you climb the harder you fall.
You too work under a priori that states today's scientific understanding is complete. That it is a known fact and true. So true as if to bet one's life on, because in effect that is what many do. Of course you'll never admit to that but the evidence certainly backs up this assertion. The difference between my priori and yours is that mine stays centered on God's Word while yours is centered on man's understand of the physical world around him. This then allows you to take the physical world, as you understand it, to form how the text is to be interpreted. My priori works almost exclusively within the realm of the Word of God, outside sources are minimized or eliminated whenever possible so as to keep the only known Truth as pure and unadulterated as possible. Does this always work, certainly not, but I believe it to be a far better starting point.
Then I would ask: why should you consider science to be an "outside source"? Any physical detail we learn to be true about nature is true only because God intended it to be true. And after all, you need the physical universe to define your language.
I wouldn't know what "chaff" is until I saw some. Indeed, in Malaysia we eat mostly rice and don't have much contact with the agriculture of wheat, so I only learned what "chaff" was relatively late on, in a children's book on Psalm 1. I learned there that chaff is what you shuck off a grain of wheat and that it is blown to the wind to be lost forever. That informed my interpretation of Psalm 1 immensely. Later on, though, I learned that scientists look hard at the things inside chaff, and inside humans like me, and inside rocks to find bones and inside many other animals, and discovered many facts about nature which they lumped together under a theory called "evolution", and that has informed my interpretation of Genesis 1 immensely.
When I looked at chaff, it informed my interpretation of Psalm 1; when I looked inside chaff, it informed my interpretation of Genesis 1. Where do you draw the line? When did I start using an "external source"? Was it because of the microscope? Or maybe I should have stayed with chaff and not looked at the rest of life extant on Planet Earth. Maybe I don't even need to know what chaff is to understand Psalm 1. (But what is a "scoffer"? And what's the point in walking, then standing, then sitting?)
As for thinking today's scientific understanding is complete: by no means! (I'd be out of a job!) But I do believe that the scientific understanding I have today is, well, the scientific understanding I have today. I'm not smart enough to predict what our scientific understanding is going to be 20 or 40 or 60 years from now and use that today in my interpretation of the Bible, and I don't see what the point would be in sticking with a scientific understanding 20 or 40 or 60 years old to be used today. Today is all I need today; tomorrow can worry about itself.
Might evolution be replaced? Certainly, and I'd bet that whatever replaces it will have ten times less room for creationists to maneuver around in than what we have today. But interestingly, when I have allowed my knowledge of science to affect my understandings of Scripture, I've come away thinking that my theological truths are actually
separate from my scientific truths. Isn't that peculiar?
When I see that the Israelites had a scientific view of the universe utterly different from mine and yet held to the same theology -
a first man, a first contact with God, a first sin that spread throughout subsequent humanity, and the desperate need for a Savior that arose from that - I have confidence that I don't need their scientific view to hold my theology; I don't even need
my current scientific view to hold my theology, and I am persuaded that my theology will certainly adapt to anything that comes my way in the future without really needing to change much at all.
So to me the best science and the best theology will always walk hand in hand. God has not regretted creating His creation or writing His Bible, and I am fully persuaded that I will gain the most studying them together.