Ah, but if a man uses a saw to cut a piece of wood, don't we say that the man cut the wood? We don't say, "The man caused to saw to cut the wood."
it is perfectly reasonable to say, "X did such-a-thing" even if we mean, "X used a tool to produce a particular outcome."
Doesn't matter if X is a man and the tool is a saw and the outcome is a cut piece of wood, or if X is God, the tool is evolution by natural selection and the outcome is life.
So, biblically, when it says that the Earth brought forth the grasses and the tree and all the other plants, I choose to take that as meaning that God set into motion the process of biological evolution and he used that as a tool (if I had to take the Bible as an accurate account, that is).
And I don't see how you can say otherwise. After all, the King James Bible is perfectly capable of stating when God is making something himself, as it does in Genesis 1:16 when it says that God himself made the two lights.
Now, shouldn't you read that and ask why it describes the creation of living things one way, and the creation of non-living things another way? There must be a reason, yes? Maybe because the Bible is trying to tell you that God created the non-living things directly, and yet created the living things using a process.
I think this satisfies amply your request for a Biblical justification for evolution.
And I don't see how you can say otherwise. After all, the King James Bible is perfectly capable of stating when God is making something himself, as it does in Genesis 1:16 when it says that God himself made the two lights.
As long as your satisfied, thats all that matters. But please dont misquote the Word of God as read in the King James Bible as reads Gen 1:16 And God made two great lights; the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night: he made the stars also.
Its always God!
Upvote
0


