Mark wrote:
I agree that clear definitions are essential to a good discussion, so I've moved this to the front to clarify first. So, for the purposes of this discussion, I'll try these definitions in reference to members of the United States.
A person for whom Jesus is centrally important to their religion. I generally avoid the "I'm Christianer than thou" approach, because that judgement is up to God, not me.
A change in allele frequency in a population over time. Note that this includes a change from an initial frequency of 0.
In modern times, person with all of the following:
- A Ph.D or equivalent degree from an accredited University
- years of research in either industry or academia
- publications of said original research in peer-reviewed scientific journals
In common usage, one who accepts the evolution of humans from earlier, chimp-like primates. I think this definition is more useful than just whether or not they deny evolution (see above), because a minority of YEC creationists also accept speciation, mistakenly calling it microevolution.
Mark wrote:
Originally Posted by
Papias
Right. Statistics have shown this again and again. In fact, the majority of evolution supporters are not just theists, but Christians. Interestingly, Mark himself gave the statistics showing that in his post #7, here:
http://www.christianforums.com/t7521063/
Sure did, since I was the one to actually introduce statistics that you ignored, I'll offer more then a pusillanimous link?
Mark, I didn't ignore them. I showed that they supported my statement that the majority of evolution supporters in the US are Christian. In fact because not only most of the founders of the field were Christian, and because most of the evolution supporters in the US are Christian today, it seems that Evolution is mainly a Christian idea.
Mark
Originally Posted by
Papias
Someone doesn't understand basic math. There are around 100 million Christians who support theistic evolution in the United States. There are only a few thousand academic positions where anyone would care what one's evolutionary understanding was. I, for instance, could be a raving creationist and my career would not be hurt at all (perhaps helped, in fact). For nearly everyone, saying that they as TE because they want to help their "academic reputation" - as if they had one, is demonstrably wrong.
Mark, again, as I've shown, using your numbers over and over, the majority of those who support evolution are Christian. Do you still disagree that the majority of those who support evolution are Chrisitan? If so, on what basis, since your own statistics show it?
"By one count there are some 700 scientists with ....
So who cares? Academics are a tiny minority of the population, no matter what they believe.
Creationist view: God created man pretty much in his present form at one time within the last 10,000 years.
- 1982- 44%
- 1993- 47%
- 1997- 44%
- 1999- 47%
- 2001- 45%
- 2004- 45%
OK, since there are around 300 million Americans, that comes to around 300 * 0.45 ~ roughly 140 million. Why is that relevant to the statement that the majority of those who support evolution are Christian?
Theistic Evolution: Man has developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life, but God guided this process, including man's creation.
- 1982- 38%
- 1993- 35%
- 1997- 39%
- 1999- 40%
- 2001- 37%
- 2004- 38%
OK, that comes to around 115 million.
Man has developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life. God had no part in this process.
- 1982- 9%
- 1993- 11%
- 1997- 10%
- 1999- 9%
- 2001- 12%
- 2004- 13%
OK, so that comes to around 39 million (300*.13).
OK, I will again for people like Mark who need the details spelled out for them. Of those who support evolution, we have 39+115=155 million.
Of those, 115 million are theistic evolutionists, Christians.
So of those who support evolution, 115/155 = over 70% are Christians. See how clear it is that the majority of those who support evolution are Christian? It's not even close, 70 is much more than 50%. If that were an election, we'd call it a landslide.
It gets even worse when you ask people about Darwinism:
What get's even worse? I don't see any way those statistics help you, Mark. Maybe be more clear about how you think they help you?
History of humans and other species: whether they "...have existed in their present form since the beginning of time," or have evolved over time."
- Existed in present form only: 42% (Creationist); cf. 45% for Gallup.
- Evolved via natural processes: 26% (Naturalistic evolution); cf. Gallup's 13%
- Evolved via God's guidance:: 18% (Theistic evolution); cf. Gallup's 38% for
- Don't know: 14%
(2005-JUL-7 and 17, Pew Research)
THis shows my point made above that the majority of creationists deny all evolution, even the specieation that some YEC's incorrectly call microevolution.
You are undermining the historicity of Genesis and 'faith' itself while affirming neither:
Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. This is what the ancients were commended for. By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. (Hebrews 1:1-3)
Theistic Evolution fully agrees with Hebrews 1:1-3 (and the rest of one's chosen Bible as well, for that matter). We do understand that the universe was formed at God's command. Are you saying that God's command is not powerful enough to have used evolution as that formation mechanism in the case of life?
You simply ignore the Scriptures and whatever doesn't fit into you rhetorical rants.
says the person who ignores the Gospels of Mt and Lk in claiming that they say one gives the geneology of Mary, when they both say Joseph, and who further ignores the clear text of 1 Cr, which gives additional generations as compared to the geneology in the Gospel of Mt.
I noticed the Scriptural authority for the creation of Adam and the explicit link of Adam's sin to the sin of mankind were not worth even a passing comment. Typical TE rhetoric, devoid of canonical authority but zealously ranting about what it means to be a Christian.
OK, to be clear I will affirm that Adam as a single, real individual, who was the first human, transitional between ancient ape and human, and that it was his sin that brought about the need for Jesus' sacrifice. It fully agrees with Christian doctrine, as well as reality, right Mark?
Rest assured if you continue to ignore the Scriptures and fail to define your terms you will be seeing this challenge again.
Ignoring scripture, like you ignore the Gospels of Mt, Luke and 1st Chronicles?
Have a nice day
Papias