TheReasoner
Atheist. Former Christian.
- Mar 14, 2005
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- Atheist
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I would agree that at least much of the evidence for creationism is not of a scientific nature, although the flood record stands as a very convincing bit of evidence. However, I'm pretty sure that the folks on this forum aren't fans of the massive flood perspective. I don't need to 'prove' God in a scientific manner. He's shown Himself to me in ways that would not be provable. That's ok, I don't feel the need to try to prove it to anyone.
What evidence is there for a global flood?
Also, Ursie, He has shown Himself to me too. But that does not mean He created the world without the use of the nature He created. Yes God exists. I'm sure of that. And while I don't need to prove Him, science is not about that at all. It's about exploring that which He created and shedding the arrogant assumption that we already know all that from a poetic parable describing an extremely complex and beautiful process taking place over billions of years. In truth a symphony worthy of God.
Also, why do you think (if I understand you correctly) that proving something or understanding something somehow invalidates it's divine origin?
Does understanding Jesus' words somehow make Him less divine? No. Not at all. Does the ability to cure a plethora of diseases with medicine or understanding diseases of flesh and mind invalidate or diminish the divine nature of the healings described in the bible and experienced even today? No. WOuld it invalidate them if we understood how they happened? No, of course not. To me it would seem knowing this would only serve to glorify God even more. It could help us understand Him and the way He works in all aspects of our lives. I love God. Because I love Him I want to know more about Him. Just putting my fingers in my ears is not an option. I need to know more. I need to know Him more than I do now. And closing eyes and ears to His wonderful creation does not serve that goal at all. I could read the bible, and I do. I could pray, and I do. But I do not think ignoring science is the way to go. It can only serve to reveal more of Him anyway. And overturn my own ignorant assumptions. It already has, I am no longer a creationist, and I marvel much more at God's grandure now than I did then. The annoying thing is when people come up to me and say I'm anti-christian because I want to know God more. That is not exactly welcome.
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