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***Everyone Only*** - Vossler's Theory on Evolution

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Markus6

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Vossler said:
***Creationists Only*** - Theory on Evolution


I'm posting this here in an effort to test my theory with other creationists, so please if you are not a creationist pleas do not post on this thread. Thank you! Obviously you're more than welcome to start your own thread in OT.

As most of you here know TEs are all over the map on their theology and doctrine. As a group it’s actually rather difficult to pin them down on much. This got me to thinking (to the point I couldn't sleep, hence this thread :yawn: ) what single thing, theologically speaking, binds them together.

Where is the link or thread that provides the fabric of the TE belief? This is something I've given a lot of thought to over the past few years and my theory came together while studying Genesis and reading a commentary. I came to the realization that almost without exception everything that is visible or scientifically explainable has more value to a TE than what is not. If there is any chance of something being scientifically explainable or viable, they as a general rule believe it. In other words, for the TE, seeing is believing.
This way of thinking works quite well within their belief system. Jesus, who isn't easily proven or disproven scientifically, is much easier to ascent to and ‘believe in' because His deity and claims cannot be scientifically challenged. At least not without stepping out into an area where science doesn't play well, therefore their faith in Him cannot be easily empirically contested. However, God’s own Word, wherever possible is open to scientific interpretation and validation.

With that as my introduction, Genesis 3:6 becomes the basis for my theory on evolution.
And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.
Here we have the first humans, Adam and Eve, failing their test of faith. They trusted in what they "saw" rather than believing what God said—His words—and became the first example of man choosing to walk by sight rather than by faith.

Humanity has had no problem since then following their example, thereby proving that Adam and Eve's faithlessness was not an aberration but a trait of every human heart, including ours. We’re constantly, each and every one of us, looking for ways or things that either put us in control or promote the idea we are knowledgeable. Rather than submitting ourselves to our Creator and putting our faith in Him, we’re always looking for ways to gain ‘control’ over our lives and our surroundings. I myself can attest to that.

So Adam and Eve chose to follow the faithless Satan rather than the faithful God. Satan was able to persuade them to focus on what they could see rather than what God said. This strategy was so successful that Satan has consistently used it on humanity ever since, with evolution being one of his best examples.

The problem TEs have however is what to do with Adam and Eve. If they were created as God said then everything else they believe about Genesis falls apart. So by making these first humans mythological figures or allegorical TEs are then able to side step this obvious problem and justify their disobedience.

What do other creationists think about this theory?
As the motives of theistic evolutionists are being questionned in the creationist subforum I think it's fair that we get a chance to present our own opinion.

A few of my comments. Vossler is assuming that the scientific case for evolution isn't convincing enough so we therefore must have ulterior motives or a fundamentally different perception of reality to accept it (e.g. justifying our disobedience or going from what we see more than faith). I think all theistic evolutionists would disagree with this assumption, we accept evolution because we think the scientific evidence is convincing.

All though I think faith is important when it comes to following God I don't think using your eyes will mislead you. For example, even though Jesus said to Thomas "Blessed are those who believe and have not seen" Thomas' eyes still showed him that Jesus had been nailed to the cross. We are not asked to believe Jesus has a hole in his side even though our eyes and touch would tell us otherwise.
 

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For example, even though Jesus said to Thomas "Blessed are those who believe and have not seen" Thomas' eyes still showed him that Jesus had been nailed to the cross. We are not asked to believe Jesus has a hole in his side even though our eyes and touch would tell us otherwise.

True. There is a big difference in believing without evidence and believing against the evidence.
 
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Melethiel

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Replying to vossler here, since I can't do it there:
The problem TEs have however is what to do with Adam and Eve. If they were created as God said then everything else they believe about Genesis falls apart. So by making these first humans mythological figures or allegorical TEs are then able to side step this obvious problem and justify their disobedience.

You are forgetting the significant portion of TE's who accept a literal, historical Adam and Eve.

And, way to tell TEs that we're all nominal Christians, at best.
 
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vossler

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Replying to vossler here, since I can't do it there:

You are forgetting the significant portion of TE's who accept a literal, historical Adam and Eve.
Are you saying you believe Adam was literal but that he wasn't literally created from the dust of the ground as the Bible says?
And, way to tell TEs that we're all nominal Christians, at best.
No more nominal than Adam and Eve.
 
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shernren

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Having seen far better from vossler over the years, I find it hard to reconcile his recent post with his older ones. I will criticize the beliefs and try my best to avoid the motives: that's all I should say.

As most of you here know TEs are all over the map on their theology and doctrine. As a group it’s actually rather difficult to pin them down on much. This got me to thinking (to the point I couldn't sleep, hence this thread :yawn: ) what single thing, theologically speaking, binds them together.

Where is the link or thread that provides the fabric of the TE belief? This is something I've given a lot of thought to over the past few years and my theory came together while studying Genesis and reading a commentary.

You make it sound like diversity is a bad thing, vossler. If you come to my church (or any other healthy church) you will find people all over the map on their theology and doctrine. Some are hardboiled Calvinists, some are Arminian, some don't quite know and don't quite care. Some think it's alright to go to pubs and drink, socializing with non-Christians, and even think it's a little good; some say avoid beer like the devil (and not just because it tastes awful). Just two weeks ago my pastor preached a sermon on how Jesus was identifyable with us to the point where he said "Jesus was just an ordinary man like any of us." He was only saying something that has been in the Chalcedonian creed since the 4th century AD (sans, of course, a tremendous amount of clarification, for which I'd take him to task), but he said it in a very provocative way which would have left many scratching their heads.

Our church is diverse. As a group it's hard to pin them down on much. What could possibly be holding us together? What have all of us gotten so fundamentally wrong that we can't agree together on other stuff?

Hmm. I daresay perhaps, perchance, maybe, there's a one in a million possibility that Christians are held together by Christ?

As you ruminate about the epistemological foundations of TEism (and I don't doubt that what you've said should provoke self-examination, as always), I hope you'll have the grace to leave room for thinking of us as fellow Christians. Our common faith is Christ-ianity, not creationianity, and I hope you will recognize that we forcefully hold on to the centrality of Christ as God incarnate and Christ as our Lord and Savior crucified for our sins. Maybe that's what holds us together as TEs; it's certainly what holds me together with you, despite our frequent, strident criticisms of each other's beliefs.

I came to the realization that almost without exception everything that is visible or scientifically explainable has more value to a TE than what is not. If there is any chance of something being scientifically explainable or viable, they as a general rule believe it. In other words, for the TE, seeing is believing.

This way of thinking works quite well within their belief system. Jesus, who isn't easily proven or disproven scientifically, is much easier to ascent to and ‘believe in' because His deity and claims cannot be scientifically challenged. At least not without stepping out into an area where science doesn't play well, therefore their faith in Him cannot be easily empirically contested. However, God’s own Word, wherever possible is open to scientific interpretation and validation.

Consider carefully what you are saying. You say in the former paragraph that:

- "everything that is visible or scientifically explainable has more value to a TE than not"

and in the latter that:

- "Jesus, who isn't easily proven or disproven scientifically, is much easier to assent to and 'believe in' because His deity and claims can't be scientifically challenged"

But I think you may have misunderstood the nature of scientifically explicable things. Things that are scientifically explicable come with falsifiable explanations; if Jesus can't be easily proven or disproven scientifically, then He is not scientifically explicable. Your theories disembowel themselves. Why do we bother believing in Jesus, then? If our game is really all about keeping to the straight road of the scientific and falsifiable, what on earth are we doing on the Christian detour? Paul said that Christ crucified is a stumbling block to Greek and Jew alike - to both scientific and superstitious, both the intellectual and the mystical.

If science is not our reason for believing in Jesus (and should, indeed, work against us believing in Jesus), then what is? There are a few alternatives for you:

- We are simply "cultural Christians" or "second-generation Christians": we participate in the cultural trappings of Christianity but are not fundamentally convinced that Christ, God incarnate, died and rose from the dead for our sins and will return to judge us.
- We believe Jesus Christ for non-scientific reasons. In which case the most important and pivotal decision of our lives has been one conducted on entirely non-scientific reasons, and your thesis is in quite a bad shape of disrepair.
- We don't actually believe in Jesus Christ; we're just merciless pretenders who have countless hours free every day and choose to use them to masquerade as theologically complex TEs on CF.com to bedevil helpless Christians.

You do, of course, seem to grasp a little of the TE position, or else you wouldn't be employing the logical structure you employ. But still - have a think about what you think we believe, and maybe when you're convinced that you aren't quite sure you're right, I'll help correct things.

With that as my introduction, Genesis 3:6 becomes the basis for my theory on evolution.
And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.
Here we have the first humans, Adam and Eve, failing their test of faith. They trusted in what they "saw" rather than believing what God said—His words—and became the first example of man choosing to walk by sight rather than by faith.

Humanity has had no problem since then following their example, thereby proving that Adam and Eve's faithlessness was not an aberration but a trait of every human heart, including ours. We’re constantly, each and every one of us, looking for ways or things that either put us in control or promote the idea we are knowledgeable. Rather than submitting ourselves to our Creator and putting our faith in Him, we’re always looking for ways to gain ‘control’ over our lives and our surroundings. I myself can attest to that.

So Adam and Eve chose to follow the faithless Satan rather than the faithful God. Satan was able to persuade them to focus on what they could see rather than what God said. This strategy was so successful that Satan has consistently used it on humanity ever since, with evolution being one of his best examples.

The problem TEs have however is what to do with Adam and Eve. If they were created as God said then everything else they believe about Genesis falls apart. So by making these first humans mythological figures or allegorical TEs are then able to side step this obvious problem and justify their disobedience.

I hope you had at least some qualms about postulating that the fundamental motivation of TEism is essentially the desire to dodge God's laws; I dare not speculate about your own motives. I can only answer: If TEism is a logical system constructed to justify sin, why do so many TEs here remain utterly convinced of their thorough sinfulness?

Meet a few TEs, shake their hands, listen to what they have to say instead of declaring their beliefs for them. Again and again we have insisted, in relation to the issue of original sin, that "We don't need a literal Adam and Eve to know that we are sinful". In other words, TEs do not do away with Adam and Eve to expunge their guilt; TEs feel justified to do away with Adam and Eve (wherever they feel compelled to) because it is unnecessary for their guilt. And even if allegorizing or mythologizing Adam and Eve seems, in your view, to marginalize them, it doesn't to us. If you truly are trying to understand our motivations, then you need to try to see things through our eyes. Time and time again TEs have said that an allegorical, mythical or non-literal Adam and Eve are more real to us, not less: and if we're really trying to marginalize Adam and Eve, why on earth would we do it by making them more, not less real, to us? I hope you don't actually think us so hopelessly deluded!

vossler tries in some way to equate the seeing of Eve with the human quest for knowledge - "We’re constantly, each and every one of us, looking for ways or things that either put us in control or promote the idea we are knowledgeable." seems to equate the two, to identify the quest for knowledge with the hubristic desire for control. But is this really what the text states? The text merely tells us that Eve "saw that the tree was good for food, and pleasant to the eyes" - that's hardly a scientific judgment. Why, that seems like an aesthetic judgment to me. It's like going down to the supermarket and choosing fruit: if you systematically draw up a list of possible things to measure about a fruit (firmness, size, color, texture, etc.) and over months of shopping build up a set of correlations between those measurements and the ripeness of a fruit, that's scientific. But that's certainly not what Eve did, and that's certainly not what I do: I go down to the store and look at a piece of fruit and think "hmm, that looks ok" based entirely on some silly internal standard of ok-ness for a fruit, and go back, and do whatever I want with it, and promptly forget all about how it turned out the next time I go down. (For Eve, of course, there wasn't a next time.)

But within the creationist belief matrix one has to ask: why was the fruit "good for food and pleasant to the eyes"? After all, all things in the garden were very good, were they not? Why did the fruit stand out to Eve? Did it really look better than all the others? The text does not say that the fruit actually was good, merely that the woman saw it as such; and we are given the key when we are told that she saw that it was "desired to make one wise". Now, how could she possibly know that? She'd never eaten of it before, and God hadn't told her that about it before. She'd been told it by the serpent. This is not, in other words, a conflict between science and faith. It is a conflict between faith in false authority and faith in true authority. Eve believed the serpent that it was wise to possess the knowledge of good and evil, and she believed the serpent that eating this fruit would grant her this knowledge: none of these were things she could scientifically know, but only believe if she had faith in the serpent instead of God.

And is the scientific quest for knowledge really nothing but this Promethean desire for control? Is the passion to know the universe really nothing more than a mission to overthrow God? Anyone who believes this has thrown his lot in with Dawkins and the rest of the militant atheists, and I have no sympathy for such epistemological sloppiness. What am I doing then, on my path to becoming a scientist: am I interested in unraveling the mysteries of chemistry only because I want to exorcise God?

For heavens' sake (quite literally), no! The God of Christianity is bigger than that! If God created a good universe: and if God created the human mind to be capable of physically comprehending the physical universe: then utilizing the human mind to physically comprehend the physical universe is nothing more than doing what God intended for us all along. Indeed we see Scriptural indication that God intended that humans (with the guidance and aid of His special revelation) should be capable of discerning something of Him from creation; and if creation is qualified to say something of God "Creator of the rolling spheres / ineffably sublime", how can it not be infinitely more qualified to say something about itself?

You have welcomed dialogue with me in the past; I hope you will consider my input.
 
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Assyrian

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Are you saying you believe Adam was literal but that he wasn't literally created from the dust of the ground as the Bible says?
Why would you even need to ask such a question? I presume you believe David was literal, but not that he was literally woven together in the depths of the earth. Psalm 139:15 My frame was not hidden from you, when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the earth.

Could you you believe Job and Elihu were literal even if they weren't literally made from a lump of clay? Job 33:6 Behold, I am toward God as you are; I too was pinched off from a piece of clay.

Were Isaiah and the nation of Israel real even if God did not literally make them from clay like a potter building a vast terracotta army? Isaiah 29:16 You turn things upside down! Shall the potter be regarded as the clay, that the thing made should say of its maker, "He did not make me"; or the thing formed say of him who formed it, "He has no understanding"?
Isaiah 45:9 "Woe to him who strives with him who formed him, a pot among earthen pots! Does the clay say to him who forms it, 'What are you making?' or 'Your work has no handles'?
Isaiah 64:8 But now, O LORD, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are our potter; we are all the work of your hand.

Were we literally made from dust? This is an internet conversation and I suppose I cannot know for certain that you are real, but I know I am real, and I presume you are just as certain you are literal too. Do you believe you are made from dust?
Eccles 3:20 All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return.
Eccles 12:7 and the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.
Psalm 90:3 You return man to dust and say, "Return, O children of man!"
Psalm 103:14 For he knows our frame; he remembers that we are dust. 1Cor 15:48 As was the man of dust, so also are those who are of the dust, and as is the man of heaven, so also are those who are of heaven.

Describing Adam being made from dust, God forming him from clay like a potter, is a very common biblical metaphor. Everywhere else this metaphor is used creationists have no difficulty accepting the people described as literal while taking the description of making them out of clay figuratively.
 
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Willtor

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Did I miss something? How was that a potshot? :confused:

A lot of TE's argue that YEC's have a weak interpretation of Scripture and that they are ignorant in matters of science. A lot of YEC's argue these two things about TE's but they add the charge that TE's have weak faith. I won't speculate on motives for _why_ they do this.

You've founded your whole exposition on singling out theistic evolution as an analogy to the unfaith that started the fall. Clearly, it looks to TE's like you've called us all fundamentally unfaithful -- on account of being TE's. When you're called on it, and asked whether you're calling us all nominal Christians (at best), you don't bother to clarify; you reiterate your comparison. No substance. Just a comparison.

That's called a potshot. And one would like to think better of one's YEC brothers.
 
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Markus6

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TE's are united by two things, acceptance of the theory of evolution and belief in God. They could be Hindu, Muslim, Deist or anything else. I guess Vossler meant what theology or doctrine unites Christian evolutionists. Well again belief in the theory of evolution. Beyond that, as most of you know (except perhaps Vossler) Christians are all over the map on their theology and doctrine. Christian evolutionists are just a reflection of that. One would hope that we are united by Christ, but if we truly were I don't think the church would look like it does now.
 
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juvenissun

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I can't speak for other evolutionary creationists, but I don't believe in the ToE. I believe in Christ. I accept the ToE as a logical scientific theory, the same way I accept the Theory of Gravity.
If you are really 18 years old, I admire your wisdom.
 
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vossler

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Having seen far better from vossler over the years, I find it hard to reconcile his recent post with his older ones. I will criticize the beliefs and try my best to avoid the motives: that's all I should say.
The motives really are not that hard to understand, why are my brothers in Christ not believing the Word of God?

You make it sound like diversity is a bad thing, vossler. If you come to my church (or any other healthy church) you will find people all over the map on their theology and doctrine.
Diversity is good when it comes to peoples gifts, talents and abiliities. It is not good when it comes to theology and doctrine. There is only one Truth, not many.
As you ruminate about the epistemological foundations of TEism (and I don't doubt that what you've said should provoke self-examination, as always), I hope you'll have the grace to leave room for thinking of us as fellow Christians. Our common faith is Christ-ianity, not creationianity, and I hope you will recognize that we forcefully hold on to the centrality of Christ as God incarnate and Christ as our Lord and Savior crucified for our sins. Maybe that's what holds us together as TEs; it's certainly what holds me together with you, despite our frequent, strident criticisms of each other's beliefs.
Of course I leave room, lots of it, to see you and other TEs as fellow Christians. Contrary to what you may think I don't doubt your Christianity, just your unbiblical belief and the effect it has on others.
But I think you may have misunderstood the nature of scientifically explicable things. Things that are scientifically explicable come with falsifiable explanations; if Jesus can't be easily proven or disproven scientifically, then He is not scientifically explicable. Your theories disembowel themselves. Why do we bother believing in Jesus, then? If our game is really all about keeping to the straight road of the scientific and falsifiable, what on earth are we doing on the Christian detour? Paul said that Christ crucified is a stumbling block to Greek and Jew alike - to both scientific and superstitious, both the intellectual and the mystical.

If science is not our reason for believing in Jesus (and should, indeed, work against us believing in Jesus), then what is? There are a few alternatives for you:

- We are simply "cultural Christians" or "second-generation Christians": we participate in the cultural trappings of Christianity but are not fundamentally convinced that Christ, God incarnate, died and rose from the dead for our sins and will return to judge us.
- We believe Jesus Christ for non-scientific reasons. In which case the most important and pivotal decision of our lives has been one conducted on entirely non-scientific reasons, and your thesis is in quite a bad shape of disrepair.
- We don't actually believe in Jesus Christ; we're just merciless pretenders who have countless hours free every day and choose to use them to masquerade as theologically complex TEs on CF.com to bedevil helpless Christians.

You do, of course, seem to grasp a little of the TE position, or else you wouldn't be employing the logical structure you employ. But still - have a think about what you think we believe, and maybe when you're convinced that you aren't quite sure you're right, I'll help correct things.
I will probably forever be misunderstanding TEs. When your theology and doctrine is so completely different than my own its quite natural to have misunderstandings like this. My point in this area was just to say that believing in Jesus is something that requires pure faith, nothing else. It really cannot be challenged scientifically and therefore isn't questioned by TEs. That's why I'm also quite confident to say that a fair number of TEs, ones like yourself, probably fall into the second category of those you described. Contrary to what you and others may think, I have no issues with that whatsoever.
I hope you had at least some qualms about postulating that the fundamental motivation of TEism is essentially the desire to dodge God's laws; I dare not speculate about your own motives. I can only answer: If TEism is a logical system constructed to justify sin, why do so many TEs here remain utterly convinced of their thorough sinfulness?
I truly have no idea what the fundamental motivation of TEism is, I haven't gotten there yet. ;) All I was trying to do in that thread was determine where the wrong turn was made, not necessarily why.
Meet a few TEs, shake their hands, listen to what they have to say instead of declaring their beliefs for them. Again and again we have insisted, in relation to the issue of original sin, that "We don't need a literal Adam and Eve to know that we are sinful". In other words, TEs do not do away with Adam and Eve to expunge their guilt; TEs feel justified to do away with Adam and Eve (wherever they feel compelled to) because it is unnecessary for their guilt. And even if allegorizing or mythologizing Adam and Eve seems, in your view, to marginalize them, it doesn't to us.
I understand you see things this way and appear to understand your guilt before a holy and righteous God. My problem is when you try to teach your understanding of Adam and Eve to others. It is the effect of this teaching on huldah153 and others like him that really concern me.
If you truly are trying to understand our motivations, then you need to try to see things through our eyes. Time and time again TEs have said that an allegorical, mythical or non-literal Adam and Eve are more real to us, not less: and if we're really trying to marginalize Adam and Eve, why on earth would we do it by making them more, not less real, to us? I hope you don't actually think us so hopelessly deluded!
Because I don't understand, I then posit theories so that I can better understand, hence that thread. All I truly see is the Bible continually being conformed by TEs to a human understanding based on scientific conjecture and speculation. I must admit, I don't for the life of me understand how you can make someone more real who wasn't real to begin with.

vossler tries in some way to equate the seeing of Eve with the human quest for knowledge - "We’re constantly, each and every one of us, looking for ways or things that either put us in control or promote the idea we are knowledgeable." seems to equate the two, to identify the quest for knowledge with the hubristic desire for control. But is this really what the text states? The text merely tells us that Eve "saw that the tree was good for food, and pleasant to the eyes" - that's hardly a scientific judgment.
This is no different that evolution, people see that it is pleasant to the eyes. It allows non-believers to believe that possibly there is no God and I'm not accountable to anyone. Then, in an effort to legitimize or associate their own worldy teachings upon which the technical knowledge is built (which btw isn't biblically sound), TEs twist the biblical text to comply with the world's scientific 'knowledge'.
Why, that seems like an aesthetic judgment to me. It's like going down to the supermarket and choosing fruit: if you systematically draw up a list of possible things to measure about a fruit (firmness, size, color, texture, etc.) and over months of shopping build up a set of correlations between those measurements and the ripeness of a fruit, that's scientific. But that's certainly not what Eve did, and that's certainly not what I do: I go down to the store and look at a piece of fruit and think "hmm, that looks ok" based entirely on some silly internal standard of ok-ness for a fruit, and go back, and do whatever I want with it, and promptly forget all about how it turned out the next time I go down. (For Eve, of course, there wasn't a next time.)

This is not, in other words, a conflict between science and faith. It is a conflict between faith in false authority and faith in true authority.
On this point you are most certainly right. This is a conflict between faith in false authority(man's knowledge) vs. faith in true authority (God's Word).
Eve believed the serpent that it was wise to possess the knowledge of good and evil, and she believed the serpent that eating this fruit would grant her this knowledge: none of these were things she could scientifically know, but only believe if she had faith in the serpent instead of God.
She believed even though she knew exactly what God said. Sounds familiar.
What am I doing then, on my path to becoming a scientist: am I interested in unraveling the mysteries of chemistry only because I want to exorcise God?

For heavens' sake (quite literally), no! The God of Christianity is bigger than that! If God created a good universe: and if God created the human mind to be capable of physically comprehending the physical universe: then utilizing the human mind to physically comprehend the physical universe is nothing more than doing what God intended for us all along. Indeed we see Scriptural indication that God intended that humans (with the guidance and aid of His special revelation) should be capable of discerning something of Him from creation; and if creation is qualified to say something of God "Creator of the rolling spheres / ineffably sublime", how can it not be infinitely more qualified to say something about itself?
I can't answer what your motivations are, I would hope they are pure. The thing is if you dismiss elements of the only pure source of knowledge we have then you run the risk of polluting the rest.
You have welcomed dialogue with me in the past; I hope you will consider my input.
I continue to welcome dialog with you today and appreciate the input. However please remember my day job requires much more of me now than in the past and I don't have time during the week for extended dialog.
You've founded your whole exposition on singling out theistic evolution as an analogy to the unfaith that started the fall. Clearly, it looks to TE's like you've called us all fundamentally unfaithful -- on account of being TE's. When you're called on it, and asked whether you're calling us all nominal Christians (at best), you don't bother to clarify; you reiterate your comparison. No substance. Just a comparison.
Well to be perfectly honest nothing even remotely as sinister as this came to my mind. I do believe that TEs are not as faithful in believing God and His Word. I myself would welcome criticism to this effect from a TE. I want my brothers and sisters to point out to me when my beliefs are contrary to the Word of God.

The comparison between the TE and Adam and Eve could just as well have been made between the Creationist them. The point was they didn't believe God, just as TEs don't believe God. So no one is offended, Creationists also, at times don't believe God.
That's called a potshot. And one would like to think better of one's YEC brothers.
If that's a potshot, I invite you to please take one aimed in my direction if you should see an appropriate topic.
 
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shernren

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- We believe Jesus Christ for non-scientific reasons. In which case the most important and pivotal decision of our lives has been one conducted on entirely non-scientific reasons, and your thesis is in quite a bad shape of disrepair.
My point in this area was just to say that believing in Jesus is something that requires pure faith, nothing else. It really cannot be challenged scientifically and therefore isn't questioned by TEs. That's why I'm also quite confident to say that a fair number of TEs, ones like yourself, probably fall into the second category of those you described.

It's not just "pure faith" for me; the simple fact is that the historical method demonstrates that the Gospels are as close as anyone can ever get to a good historical description of who Jesus was and what He did, and based on the accuracy of their description Jesus was and is God and He ought to be worshiped. I put my faith in that, and the faith I put in that reinforces my conviction that it is true - but as I've said before and have said again, if anyone could demonstrate that the Gospels are historically unreliable, I would drop Christianity in a flash. Believe me, I've questioned the veracity of the Gospels before, and every time the Gospels come through as historical documents. By the same reckoning, Genesis is not remotely historical as a document.

I understand you see things this way and appear to understand your guilt before a holy and righteous God. My problem is when you try to teach your understanding of Adam and Eve to others. It is the effect of this teaching on huldah153 and others like him that really concern me.

Well then I would say that your concern is with TE wrongly preached, not TE per se. This reminds me of what a well-known evangelical (whose name escapes my memory right now) once said: something along the lines of "Anyone who truly teaches that grace is free will attract the false charge of teaching that grace is cheap." Every truth invites distortion.

Just because bad and wrong things are said and done in the name of TE doesn't mean that TE is fundamentally bad and wrong. That is demonstrated precisely by the fact that there are TEs who are clearly, painfully aware of their own sin, for whom the realignment of Adam and Eve does nothing whatsoever to assuage or falsely excuse that gift. Indeed, I would venture to say that most TEs feel that way; I'm certain that most TEs on this board do.

In which case you need to ask yourself, again: If TEism is really all about the individual trying to expunge his own sin without God's intervention, why on earth are so many TEs still looking to God for forgiveness?

Because I don't understand, I then posit theories so that I can better understand, hence that thread. All I truly see is the Bible continually being conformed by TEs to a human understanding based on scientific conjecture and speculation. I must admit, I don't for the life of me understand how you can make someone more real who wasn't real to begin with.

"The Bible continually being conformed by TEs" - to what end? For what purpose? You make TEism out to be this monstrous deception when TEs accept as many fundamental creeds of the faith as you do (if not more), believe in Christ as God Incarnate who died for our sins and rose for our justification, believe acutely that they have sinned and are incapable of independently expunging their guilt, and believe even in the eschatological redemption of creation, looking forward to a future world where there will be neither sin nor death.

How different is that set of beliefs from yours, vossler? If we really are conforming the Bible to our own understanding then we are pitifully incompetent at it. We haven't managed to get over the divinity of Jesus, the total depravity of man, and all of those other doctrines that are stumbling blocks both to Jews and Greeks. Some militant atheists actually classify us as creationists along with you - we certainly haven't stopped believing that God created the heavens and the earth, even if we quibble over details. Do we really have some kind of agenda that we are pushing onto the Bible? If we do, why do our results look eerily like your own faith?

This is no different that evolution, people see that it is pleasant to the eyes. It allows non-believers to believe that possibly there is no God and I'm not accountable to anyone. Then, in an effort to legitimize or associate their own worldy teachings upon which the technical knowledge is built (which btw isn't biblically sound), TEs twist the biblical text to comply with the world's scientific 'knowledge'.

Firstly, non-believers have been believing that there is no God and no moral accountability long before Darwin, and they will continue to do so even if Darwin is ever deposed. Atheists never needed evolution; and if it has helped them, I daresay it has only because fundamentalism handed it to them on a silver platter.

Secondly, what "own worldly teachings" do TEs have? I certainly haven't managed to get rid of the divinity of Jesus or my own utter sinfulness by accepting evolution; I must be missing something somewhere!

Thirdly, there is a key difference between Eve believing that the tree was pleasant to the eyes and us accepting that evolution is true. Eve's belief that the tree was pleasant to the eyes was not reflected in reality. The tree wasn't really pleasant; it wasn't really desirable for gaining knowledge. Eve ate and found that those were all lies - precisely because those beliefs had no correspondence whatsoever with reality.

However, evolution does have correspondence with reality. Why else would it work so well? Where does evolution's predictive power come from? Why does life look like it has evolved? Why is evolution applicable across the entire spectrum of biology? The test of whether a statement is true, after all, is whether it is consistent with reality. Eve's beliefs weren't consistent with reality; evolution is. That makes all the difference.
 
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Willtor

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Well to be perfectly honest nothing even remotely as sinister as this came to my mind. I do believe that TEs are not as faithful in believing God and His Word. I myself would welcome criticism to this effect from a TE. I want my brothers and sisters to point out to me when my beliefs are contrary to the Word of God.

The comparison between the TE and Adam and Eve could just as well have been made between the Creationist them. The point was they didn't believe God, just as TEs don't believe God. So no one is offended, Creationists also, at times don't believe God.
If that's a potshot, I invite you to please take one aimed in my direction if you should see an appropriate topic.

If you are still under the impression that those of us who post here disbelieve Genesis then you haven't listened to a thing that's been said. All of the creationist organizations want to paint a picture that shows TEs disbelieving the Bible. They do this by saying that the proper interpretation of Genesis is clear and that we clearly don't accept the proper interpretation. Now, it may be that it _is_ the proper interpretation and we certainly don't accept it. But it is by no means clear to us. And it has by no means been clear to the Church throughout the world throughout history.

TEs would be in just as good a position to argue that YECs disbelieve Scripture as the other way around - that is: they would be in a very bad position.

Vossler, you may be able to persuade me on one thing or another. But if the arguments stem from the position that I (or other TEs) disbelieve Genesis you'll never persuade me on anything because you clearly don't have any sort of grasp on what I think. Arguing that TEs disbelieve Scripture may be chicken soup for the YEC soul, but but it isn't so and so it could never be chicken soup for ours.
 
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Theistic evolutionists exist because blind faith can only go so far. Seriously, if it clearly said in the bible that there are no oceans or that things fall up and not down, could you believe that? I suspect that a lot of mental acrobatics would be utilized to reinterpret those passages since they would clearly contradict observable facts. This is the case now, only to a lesser extent...

Evolution is an observable fact. Even if the Darwinian mechanism for evolution turned out to be wrong or (more realistically) incomplete, common descent would still be undeniable science. No matter what your religious convictions may be, none of us have the luxury of denying reality...
 
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Willtor

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Theistic evolutionists exist because blind faith can only go so far. Seriously, if it clearly said in the bible that there are no oceans or that things fall up and not down, could you believe that? I suspect that a lot of mental acrobatics would be utilized to reinterpret those passages since they would clearly contradict observable facts. This is the case now, only to a lesser extent...

Evolution is an observable fact. Even if the Darwinian mechanism for evolution turned out to be wrong or (more realistically) incomplete, common descent would still be undeniable science. No matter what your religious convictions may be, none of us have the luxury of denying reality...

Or perhaps blind faith is not helpful to begin with. The regular kind will do, methinks.
 
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Mallon

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As most of you here know TEs are all over the map on their theology and doctrine. As a group it’s actually rather difficult to pin them down on much.
Imagine that. It's pretty hard to pin down the theology Christians as a group who believe in gravity, too.
That's probably because our acceptance of evolution is based on science, not theology. It's silly, if not just plain foolish, to think that everyone who accepts the same science will accept the same theology.

This got me to thinking (to the point I couldn't sleep, hence this thread :yawn: ) what single thing, theologically speaking, binds them together.
Christ. What more do you need?
 
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Of course I leave room, lots of it, to see you and other TEs as fellow Christians. Contrary to what you may think I don't doubt your Christianity, just your unbiblical belief and the effect it has on others.
I understand you see things this way and appear to understand your guilt before a holy and righteous God. My problem is when you try to teach your understanding of Adam and Eve to others. It is the effect of this teaching on huldah153 and others like him that really concern me.
This is no different that evolution, people see that it is pleasant to the eyes. It allows non-believers to believe that possibly there is no God and I'm not accountable to anyone. Then, in an effort to legitimize or associate their own worldy teachings upon which the technical knowledge is built (which btw isn't biblically sound), TEs twist the biblical text to comply with the world's scientific 'knowledge'.
It sounds like you're more concerned with the effects of evolution rather than whether it is factually or even scientifically true. Do you think this is a fair characterization?

For instance, if we knew for a fact that knowledge of cigarettes caused some people to smoke then would you advocate we censor all knowledge of their existence? Do you think we should try to discredit the existence of cigarettes?

Because I don't understand, I then posit theories so that I can better understand, hence that thread. All I truly see is the Bible continually being conformed by TEs to a human understanding based on scientific conjecture and speculation. I must admit, I don't for the life of me understand how you can make someone more real who wasn't real to begin with.
Perhaps this is the problem. You think evolution is scientific conjecture and speculation? If I can show you that evolution is, in fact, irrefutably good science, would your opinion change on the matter?

I can't answer what your motivations are, I would hope they are pure. The thing is if you dismiss elements of the only pure source of knowledge we have then you run the risk of polluting the rest.
Do you eat pork? Maybe I'm slow on the uptake but we already interpret the Bible as a document written by and for a people 2000 years ago. I don't think this is "dismissing" it...

If that's a potshot, I invite you to please take one aimed in my direction if you should see an appropriate topic.
Umm... you call yourself a Christian and, when you are caught making a transgression, you suggest that one be made against you? ...as an act of revenge, maybe? I don't know what you're thinking, here. Do you think he's not a Christian?
 
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