• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

Evolution vs. The Bible

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
The fact remains that the only way to accept evolution as it is taught in our schools is to reject the word of God as it is taught in our Bibles. Theistic evolutionists will probably disagree and claim that both can be true, but the overwhelming evidence of Scripture is that the six day creation and the Great Flood are both historical events and essential doctrine because they reveal the nature of God and His plan for us on earth.


I would agree that Creation and the Flood both reveal the nature of God and his plan for us on earth, but I would not conclude from that that the biblical accounts are historical. The doctrinal points are clear enough whether or not the stories are history.

Nor do I see any evidence in Scripture itself that they are. Yes, there are many references to these stories, but references are not evidence that the event referred to is historical.


By rejecting essential doctrine they are missing out on part of the foundation of Scriptural teaching. Jesus revered the Scriptures and considered them the holy word of God. Why do they reject what Christ embraced?

But no essential doctrine is being rejected by TEs. TEs also revere the scriptures and consider them holy writ inspired by the Holy Spirit and the foundational support of Christian faith as it relates to salvation and the renewal of a right relationship with God and neighbour.

And he warned us over and over again never to trust in man, didn't he?

I am not talking about trusting in human fallibility. I am talking about trusting in God. God created the world. Which world? The world we live in, right?

God created us. He gave us our ability to perceive and to think and to understand, right?

God gave us a task in the world: to care for the creatures he put in this world around us--something we cannot do rightly unless we can perceive rightly and reason rightly about what we perceive. Can a farmer care for the corn in his field if he does not understand its need for good soil, nutrients, sunshine and rain and protection from pests? Can a veterinarian care for a dog if he does not understand its anatomy and biochemistry in order to make a correct diagnosis and recommend a good treatment for its ills?

Just so, wherever we look and take time to study, wherever we check out our findings against those of others who also study the same world, we can rely on God to guide us rightly to see, hear, understand and love the world he created. Each person alone may be mistaken--but not a great many people making independent observations. As Abraham Lincoln once said, "You can fool some people all the time and all people some of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all of the time."

Why can't you do that? Because God made the world, God made us, God made us to live in this world, love this world, understand this world, and care for this world. We can trust what creation says to us because creation itself is a revelation from God who created it and because God is faithful to give us a true record of the history of the creation in the created world itself.

It is one thing to appeal to human fallibility to reject evidence if it is only one person making a claim. But that just doesn't work when you find that over and over and over again, people come up independently with the same observations supporting the same conclusions. To hold that all of them are deceived is believing that God is committed to fooling all of the people all of the time.

And I just don't believe that the scriptures support that conclusion. The God they tell us about is a God who reveals truth to those who seek it. And scientists have been diligent in seeking out the truth about nature, indeed, in many cases, considering it to be their Christian vocation.



No, I wouldn't agree with this statment at all. An example might be the fact that it looks like the sun goes round the earth, even though the earth in fact goes round the sun. This is not a hallucination; it is based off of our direct experience; it's just that we didn't know enough for awhile to realize that the sun doesn't go round the earth.

And how did we get to know the truth? Did we read it in scripture? No, for during all the millennia prior to Galileo's discoveries, when people read the scriptural verses about the sun "running its course" across the sky or stopping when Joshua called on God to stop it, or the earth sitting firm on foundations and not moving---they understood these things to be just as they are written, for it agreed with their experience. Did an angel come to tell us the truth? No. So, how do we know the truth now? Because we gained a new way to observe and experience the skies. The invention of the telescope allowed us to see what could not be seen by natural sight alone.

But why should we rely on the sights we can only see via a telescope? Why not reject the telescope as an instrument that produces hallucinations at odds with the text of scripture? That would agree better with your appeal to human fallibility? Why should we trust men like Galileo or Hubble to tell us what they see in the heavens through telescopes?

If you consider it silly to doubt that they see what God created, then it is just as silly to doubt the same astronomers when they tell you they have found evidence of the age of the universe or of geologists when they tell you they have observed evidence of the age of the earth or of biologists and geneticists and palaeontologists when they tell you they have found evidence of the relationship of all living things to one another going back 3.8 billion years. They too are seeing what God created. And since creation is a mode of revelation--the general revelation as Calvin called it to all of humanity--as compared to the special revelation of scripture which was entrusted to the prophets of Israel and the evangelists of the gospel--we do as much injustice to God to reject that revelation as to reject scripture.

As for human fallibility in interpreting creation, remember that applies equally well to interpreting scripture. There is no guarantee that a literal reading is any more correct than a non-literal reading. Insisting on a literal reading that is not supported by ALL of God's revelation can be another form of human fallibility.

If this were a world created recently and affected by a global flood, it would be a very different world than the one we are living in now. When I declare "I believe in the Father Almighty, creator of heaven and earth and of all things, seen and unseen..." I believe that refers to the world we are actually living in. I do not believe that virtually every scientist in the last three centuries has been hallucinating what he or she observes. I don't believe that because I believe in Creation.
 
Upvote 0

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
I think that glaudys makes the argument for my understanding of just how damaging our accepting the 'truth' of man over the truth of God really is.

I want to start by saying that I have a lot of respect for you, Ted. I disagree with you profoundly, but I like the way you put your points forward with consistency, dignity and courtesy--never relying on insult or disparagement. I thank you for that.



He posted:
Actually, if you check the gender icon beside my name, you will see that should read "she posted".

gluadys said:
So, basically, since the hard evidence shows a world that evolved, while a literal interpretation of Genesis shows a very different creation, the Genesis creation must be literally fiction, since it is not the world we are actually living in. Who then, created the world we are actually living in?

Then he writes:

gluadys said:
But to insist that the Genesis account of creation is a literal, reportorial account of historical events means the world we encounter with sense and understanding cannot be the real world and God cannot be trusted to show us what he really created. Instead the world we know through experience is a mass hallucination unrelated to the real created world.

This is exactly why I feel that our understanding the purpose and scope of the created realm in which we live as possibly very important to God. If God is true and every man a liar, then those who follow this very understanding are, in affect, calling God a liar.

No, no, no, no, no, no. Not calling God a liar. But this is what a literal reading does. It forces one into the position of saying that either God is lying in the bible or God is lying in what he created In your adherence to the literal meaning of the scriptural text when it disagrees with the only conclusions possible given the reality of the creation, you must reject the testimony of God's work, and yes, even of God's Word, for Christ, the Word made flesh, was the agent of creation. Without him, nothing that was made was made. God made the world by the Word. A rejection of the world as it is, is just as much a rejection of the Word of God as any rejection of scripture.

It is to avoid calling God a liar that I take the stance I do. I will not be put in the position of saying that God must have lied in either the general or the special revelation God has given us. Both must be true.


Of course, he uses words as flaming arrows. He says that if the creation of the world really isn't what man has found it to be, then we must be hallucinating. Why must we be hallucinating. We just aren't using and understanding the data properly.

Why must we be hallucinating? Because it is simply not the case that we are not using and understanding the data properly. The evidence that the earth is much much older than a few thousand years was first discovered and understood over 300 years ago. It has been checked and rechecked by every possible means in every year since and the antiquity of the earth verified again and again and again. It is simply time to take it as a fact, just as we learned to take the orbit of the earth around the sun as a fact.

And as a fact about the earth, it must be a truth from God, not humans. Humans did not invent this fact; they discovered it. God has always known it, just as he always knew the earth moved, though the Psalmist told us it doesn't and never will. It is wishful thinking to hope that some other interpretation of this data is possible. It is not.

The same goes for the global reach of Noah's flood and the evolutionary ancestry of Adam and Eve, not to mention all the other creatures of the earth. These are realities and as realities, they are what God made.

That is the bedrock fact about the world we have to deal with when we acknowledge God as Creator--as Creator of this world, not an imaginary world. This is not a human account of what is, but a human discovery of what God really did.

But we also have an account in scripture. And we must work as diligently to understand that account as we have worked to understand the physical creation. I do not believe God has lied in scripture any more than I believe God has lied in the heavens or the earth. So I will reject, not God, not scripture, but any human understanding of scripture that makes God out to be a liar.
 
Upvote 0

Resha Caner

Expert Fool
Sep 16, 2010
9,171
1,398
✟163,100.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Lutheran
Marital Status
Married
No, no, no, no, no, no. Not calling God a liar. But this is what a literal reading does. It forces one into the position of saying that either God is lying in the bible or God is lying in what he created In your adherence to the literal meaning of the scriptural text when it disagrees with the only conclusions possible given the reality of the creation, you must reject the testimony of God's work, and yes, even of God's Word, for Christ, the Word made flesh, was the agent of creation. Without him, nothing that was made was made. God made the world by the Word. A rejection of the world as it is, is just as much a rejection of the Word of God as any rejection of scripture.

It is to avoid calling God a liar that I take the stance I do. I will not be put in the position of saying that God must have lied in either the general or the special revelation God has given us. Both must be true.

I wish there was another way to get at this. For example, I'd be curious to see what would happen if another text was chosen that neither of us was familiar with, and it were put in front of us and we were asked to comment on whether the text is historical, allegorical, or both. But I don't see any practical way to actually do that.

The intent would be to determine how much one relies on the veracity of the text, textual analysis, outside data, etc.

Because, I would bet ted could make exactly the same statement you did, "It is to avoid calling God a liar that I take the stance I do."

Even so, that statement bothers me. There is a sense in which I want to say: Well, if God is a liar, shouldn't we admit to it? I don't believe He is, but hopefully you get my point, because I would say the same of Science: Well, if Science is a liar, shouldn't we admit to it?

It sometimes sounds as if people are trying to paper over the conflict - pretend as if it doesn't exist. I'm sure it also seems to some that a conflict is being created where none exists. Is there a way to get past that? Probably not, but I can't help feeling I need to try. And for me, there are several keys to this conversation:

1) Can we get an indication of how the people to whom God first spoke this (Moses, et. al.) took it? I can't believe that God would speak a message he intended to be allegory and be OK that virtually everyone received it as literal. So, is there some indication that Moses or Aaron or Joshua or Abraham took this as allegory? I haven't found it. I fully admit my case is weak, but everything I see seems to indicate it was received as history.

2) In the history of science and in my own career the examples are legion of multiple possible interpretations of data. So is it possible to interpret biological & geological data in a different way? So far it appears to me biological data could be interpreted differently. That question is still open for me regarding geological data (and my thread on that seems to have died).

Regardless, at this point everything indicates to me that Genesis should be interpreted as history* (and allegory - Joseph, for example, is a very Christ-like figure). So, I'm open to exploring what personal traits in me may be biasing me to that view. I'm curious if other people are open to that.

[edit]*Note: One example would be this link, where a supposed Jewish reference calls Genesis "a historical work". http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/6580-genesis-the-book-of
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

ChetSinger

Well-Known Member
Apr 18, 2006
3,518
651
✟132,668.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Protestant
Marital Status
Married
...Regardless, at this point everything indicates to me that Genesis should be interpreted as history* (and allegory - Joseph, for example, is a very Christ-like figure). So, I'm open to exploring what personal traits in me may be biasing me to that view. I'm curious if other people are open to that.

[edit]*Note: One example would be this link, where a supposed Jewish reference calls Genesis "a historical work". GENESIS, THE BOOK OF - JewishEncyclopedia.com
I think Josephus writes of it as history. In Antiquities, he goes to great lengths to support the historicity of the pre- and post-Flood genealogies by tying them to histories written by non-Jewish authors.

I also think the authors of Luke 3 and Hebrews 11 considered all of the personages named in them as historical, because no distinctions are drawn between ancient and recent names.
 
Upvote 0

Resha Caner

Expert Fool
Sep 16, 2010
9,171
1,398
✟163,100.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Lutheran
Marital Status
Married
I think Josephus writes of it as history. In Antiquities, he goes to great lengths to support the historicity of the pre- and post-Flood genealogies by tying them to histories written by non-Jewish authors.

I also think the authors of Luke 3 and Hebrews 11 considered all of the personages named in them as historical, because no distinctions are drawn between ancient and recent names.

Right. Thanks for the additional examples. However I wonder if the case will not be convincing unless we had a verse like: Exodus 3:23 - And God said, "BTW Moses, Adam is historical." I'm making that up of course, but I wonder if that's what it would take.
 
Upvote 0

ChetSinger

Well-Known Member
Apr 18, 2006
3,518
651
✟132,668.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Protestant
Marital Status
Married
Right. Thanks for the additional examples. However I wonder if the case will not be convincing unless we had a verse like: Exodus 3:23 - And God said, "BTW Moses, Adam is historical." I'm making that up of course, but I wonder if that's what it would take.
For some of us, in this age when naturalism is so prevalent, I think it might take that.
 
Upvote 0

miamited

Ted
Site Supporter
Oct 4, 2010
13,243
6,313
Seneca SC
✟705,807.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Hi gluadys,

Sorry, for the mix up in gender pronouns. I didn't check and immediately after I sent the message I noticed it.

I would agree that Creation and the Flood both reveal the nature of God and his plan for us on earth, but I would not conclude from that that the biblical accounts are historical. The doctrinal points are clear enough whether or not the stories are history.

So, it is your understanding that God tells us of events that didn't happen to get us to 'understand' some deeper doctrinal point.

I have shared with others who have made this same claim and generally back it up by pointing out that Jesus spoke in parables. Yes, Jesus spoke in parables, but the Scriptures are quite clear to explain to us that Jesus is speaking in parables and gives the reason why. Others will say that because there are metaphorical statements in the Scriptures that these must also be metaphors. But metaphors have contextual clues that identify them as such. They are generally worded as being comparisons. I don't find that either of these 'rules' apply in these specific accounts. So sure, I can understand metaphors and I know the rules by which language uses metaphorical inference, but these aren't them.

Nor do I see any evidence in Scripture itself that they are. Yes, there are many references to these stories, but references are not evidence that the event referred to is historical.

Well, you are also making assumptions on facts not in evidence. Yes, one can say that a reference doesn't mean something is historical, but the opposite could also be just as true.

But no essential doctrine is being rejected by TEs. TEs also revere the scriptures and consider them holy writ inspired by the Holy Spirit and the foundational support of Christian faith as it relates to salvation and the renewal of a right relationship with God and neighbour.

Well, that would depend on whether you and God are in agreement as to what constitutes 'essential doctrine'. It surely may not seem so to you, but can you provide evidence that it is the same to God?

I am not talking about trusting in human fallibility. I am talking about trusting in God. God created the world. Which world? The world we live in, right?

Yes, of course.

God created us. He gave us our ability to perceive and to think and to understand, right?

While He did give us that ability, we don't always use our God given abilities in ways that are pleasing to Him.

God gave us a task in the world: to care for the creatures he put in this world around us--something we cannot do rightly unless we can perceive rightly and reason rightly about what we perceive. Can a farmer care for the corn in his field if he does not understand its need for good soil, nutrients, sunshine and rain and protection from pests? Can a veterinarian care for a dog if he does not understand its anatomy and biochemistry in order to make a correct diagnosis and recommend a good treatment for its ills?

I don't see why not. Farmers have cared for crops ever since the days of Cain and Able. Are you also saying that that must not be true since they didn't understand about how a plant actually uses the water and nutrients to grow. No, my friend, through science we are able to understand how plants work and then provide somewhat better for them, but famers have been farming for many, many centuries without having to know the actual processes by which plants grow. I'm not necessarily in agreement that our having greater knowledge of the 'mechanics' of how things work, makes us more godly. Remember that the desire for greater knowledge was what God was keeping Adam and Eve from in His command that they not eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. I disagree that God put us on this earth to gain knowledge. God put us on this earth to have a relationship with Him. To be satisfied with what He provided. Adam and Eve were not satisfied to rest in the knowledge that God had given them all that they needed.

Just so, wherever we look and take time to study, wherever we check out our findings against those of others who also study the same world, we can rely on God to guide us rightly to see, hear, understand and love the world he created. Each person alone may be mistaken--but not a great many people making independent observations. As Abraham Lincoln once said, "You can fool some people all the time and all people some of the time, but you cannot fool all the people all of the time."

Why can't you do that? Because God made the world, God made us, God made us to live in this world, love this world, understand this world, and care for this world. We can trust what creation says to us because creation itself is a revelation from God who created it and because God is faithful to give us a true record of the history of the creation in the created world itself.

It is one thing to appeal to human fallibility to reject evidence if it is only one person making a claim. But that just doesn't work when you find that over and over and over again, people come up independently with the same observations supporting the same conclusions. To hold that all of them are deceived is believing that God is committed to fooling all of the people all of the time.

And I just don't believe that the scriptures support that conclusion. The God they tell us about is a God who reveals truth to those who seek it. And scientists have been diligent in seeking out the truth about nature, indeed, in many cases, considering it to be their Christian vocation.

Well, I'm not in agreement with all of your conclusions in this. And I'm not sure that God agrees either. After all, it was Paul who warned us of adopting and accepting explanations based on the natural world.

And how did we get to know the truth? Did we read it in scripture? No, for during all the millennia prior to Galileo's discoveries, when people read the scriptural verses about the sun "running its course" across the sky or stopping when Joshua called on God to stop it, or the earth sitting firm on foundations and not moving---they understood these things to be just as they are written, for it agreed with their experience. Did an angel come to tell us the truth? No. So, how do we know the truth now? Because we gained a new way to observe and experience the skies. The invention of the telescope allowed us to see what could not be seen by natural sight alone.

But why should we rely on the sights we can only see via a telescope? Why not reject the telescope as an instrument that produces hallucinations at odds with the text of scripture? That would agree better with your appeal to human fallibility? Why should we trust men like Galileo or Hubble to tell us what they see in the heavens through telescopes

Because the telescope does not produce hallucinations. The telescope provides us with a view. That's all the telescope does. It allows us to look further into the universe than we can with our naked eye. It doesn't tell us that something that we see is or isn't what we think it is, it just allows us to look. The conclusions drawn by what we see through a telescope are the work of man. The telescope is not at fault, man is.

If you consider it silly to doubt that they see what God created, then it is just as silly to doubt the same astronomers when they tell you they have found evidence of the age of the universe or of geologists when they tell you they have observed evidence of the age of the earth or of biologists and geneticists and palaeontologists when they tell you they have found evidence of the relationship of all living things to one another going back 3.8 billion years. They too are seeing what God created. And since creation is a mode of revelation--the general revelation as Calvin called it to all of humanity--as compared to the special revelation of scripture which was entrusted to the prophets of Israel and the evangelists of the gospel--we do as much injustice to God to reject that revelation as to reject scripture.

Again, you are misinterpreting the data. No one denies that they see what they see, only the conclusions drawn from what they see.

As for human fallibility in interpreting creation, remember that applies equally well to interpreting scripture. There is no guarantee that a literal reading is any more correct than a non-literal reading. Insisting on a literal reading that is not supported by ALL of God's revelation can be another form of human fallibility.

Perhaps.

If this were a world created recently and affected by a global flood, it would be a very different world than the one we are living in now. When I declare "I believe in the Father Almighty, creator of heaven and earth and of all things, seen and unseen..." I believe that refers to the world we are actually living in. I do not believe that virtually every scientist in the last three centuries has been hallucinating what he or she observes. I don't believe that because I believe in Creation.

How do you think it would be different? I'm confident that it is young, and yet the physical appearance is the same to me as it is to you. Just your repeated use of 'hallucinating' infers to me that you don't have understanding of what you are talking about. No one is claiming that anyone is hallucinating. The claim is just that they are not coming to the correct conclusions about the data that they have. As I wrote earlier, why is it that those who don't seem to understand the truth must resort to name calling and mocking and reducing their arguments to nonsense in such a manner. Scientists of the last several hundred years are not hallucinating. They are looking at data and taking what they know about such data today, applying it as a constant that cannot be proved.

Here's a challenge for you if you think that God gave you, and desires you, to use your mental faculties to get answers to everything. How did Mary become pregnant? Now, I'm not asking for the biblical 'story'. Give me the science behind it.


God bless you.
In Christ, Ted
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Papias

Listening to TW4
Dec 22, 2005
3,967
988
59
✟64,806.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Achilles wrote:

Originally Posted by Papias
OK, help me out. I didn't see where it says that Ex 19:4 is a representation.
Here you go :D

"11 “Like an eagle that stirs up its nest,
That hovers over its young,
He spread His wings and caught them,
He carried them on His pinions.
." Deut. 32:10-12 (NASB)

Cool. Thanks for providing that. It does say "like", showing a representation. It can be useful to see how different parts of scripture work together. I agree that it says that Ex 19 is a representation.

In the same way, this verse (Job 10:10)

Remember that you molded me like clay.
Will you now turn me to dust again?
Did you not pour me out like milk
and curdle me like cheese,

Similarly states clearly that the Genesis story of God molding Adam literally is a representation. Since God didn't literally mold Adam, Genesis is shown by scripture to be a representation of another process, such as evolution.


Originally Posted by Papias
For Mk, it does say that the mustard seed represents the kingdom. However, that doesn't change the statement that the mustard seed is the smallest seed - which is not portrayed as a representation.
Right, it's the smallest seed in Palestine :D

First - it is up to you to provide support for your assertion, not to simply make it.
Secondly, it looks like it's not the smallest seed in Palestine. Is a Mustard Seed the Smallest Seed?
Thirdly, and most importantly, you are adding to Holy Scripture, since it doesn't say that.
Fourthly - the point here is the growth of the kingdom, not the narrow, literal reading of the text.



Originally Posted by Papias
as to whether or not the whole story is a parable - are you saying that parables are stated in the text as being parables, and if that is not stated, then they are not parables?
When Scripture uses parables it makes it plain, that's what I'm saying. It clearly indicates as such.

I'm not sure the scripture agrees with you. For instance, does it ever state that the good samaritan is a parable?



For example, we know that God did not literally bear anyone on eagles' wings because that is clearly not recorded in Exodus;

And similarly, the creation details are not written out anywhere in non-poetic form, so the same can be said of the creation.


Originally Posted by Papias
It's not just my idea - many Bible scholars, both Protestant and Catholic, have pointed out for years that Genesis is poetic text. It includes plays on words, clear symbolism, and most tellingly, a poetic reiterative structure. In fact, one would have a stronger case showing Genesis is poetic and symbolic than a lot of Jesus' parables.
Feel free to show some examples then if you'd like.

OK (and for KW as well, who asked for the same thing).

Chiastic verse is a common form of Hebrew poetry. Genesis is one of the clearest and best known Chiastic poems: Biblical Hebrew Poetry

Plays on words are well know, such as "Adam" being made from "Adama" ( = earth).

We both agree, I hope, that the serpent sympolizes satan (note that Genesis never says it is Satan), and that there are other symbols, like "he will strike at your heel" - is there any literal story in scripture of Satan attacking Adam's heel? I don't think so - because it is symbolic of satan's attacks on us.

This is all first year seminary stuff. Most of our pastors know it, and many of them have given sermons on it. To me, it shows the glory, depth, and power of His Holy word. It's so much more than just a story about literal magical fruit and literal talking animals.

In His name-

Papias
 
Upvote 0

Achilles6129

Veteran
Feb 19, 2006
4,504
367
Columbus, Ohio
✟44,682.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Non-Denom
Politics
US-Republican
Just to respond to a few points very briefly:

I am not talking about trusting in human fallibility. I am talking about trusting in God. God created the world. Which world? The world we live in, right?

God created us. He gave us our ability to perceive and to think and to understand, right?

Actually, God told you over and over and over in Scripture never to trust in man but to trust what he says. He warned you over and over that you would end up being deceived if you trust in man. Over and over in Scripture you are told (just to use one example) that the human race (outside of God) has no idea what is going on whatsoever: e.g., they worship the beast/Satan and think the two witnesses are evil.

So no, it is made abundantly clear in Scripture that mankind has no clue what is going on, outside of God, and is not to be trusted.

And I just don't believe that the scriptures support that conclusion.

They do. I can start posting Scriptures if you'd like, but I thought the point would be so obvious that it wouldn't be necessary.

The God they tell us about is a God who reveals truth to those who seek it. And scientists have been diligent in seeking out the truth about nature, indeed, in many cases, considering it to be their Christian vocation.

Ah, but truth is not to be found through human interpretations of nature! Only God is the true revealer of truth, not man!

And how did we get to know the truth? Did we read it in scripture? No, for during all the millennia prior to Galileo's discoveries, when people read the scriptural verses about the sun "running its course" across the sky or stopping when Joshua called on God to stop it, or the earth sitting firm on foundations and not moving---they understood these things to be just as they are written, for it agreed with their experience. Did an angel come to tell us the truth? No. So, how do we know the truth now? Because we gained a new way to observe and experience the skies. The invention of the telescope allowed us to see what could not be seen by natural sight alone.

Just a brief point here: Yes, we did get the truth by reading it in Scripture. Galileo's discoveries were not essential for any sort of understanding of theology and so were unnecessary for inclusion in Scripture.


Achilles wrote:
Cool. Thanks for providing that. It does say "like", showing a representation. It can be useful to see how different parts of scripture work together. I agree that it says that Ex 19 is a representation.

In the same way, this verse (Job 10:10)

....and?

Similarly states clearly that the Genesis story of God molding Adam literally is a representation. Since God didn't literally mold Adam, Genesis is shown by scripture to be a representation of another process, such as evolution.

That's quite a stretch.

First - it is up to you to provide support for your assertion, not to simply make it.
Secondly, it looks like it's not the smallest seed in Palestine. Is a Mustard Seed the Smallest Seed?

Well, if it's not the smallest seed in Palestine then we have a problem, because Christ said that it was.

I'm not sure the scripture agrees with you. For instance, does it ever state that the good samaritan is a parable?

Whether or not it does is irrelevant.

Chiastic verse is a common form of Hebrew poetry. Genesis is one of the clearest and best known Chiastic poems: Biblical Hebrew Poetry

Chiasms are all over Scripture.

Plays on words are well know, such as "Adam" being made from "Adama" ( = earth).

See above.
 
Upvote 0

KWCrazy

Newbie
Apr 13, 2009
7,229
1,993
Bowling Green, KY
✟90,577.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Once again we have people rejecting the clear writing of the Scriptures and subverting God's word to the opinions of man; all the while trying to make themselves sound like their argument is based on a greater understanding of Scripture rather then its obvious rejection.

Ever notice how, in all the things they post, they NEVER include Scriptural reference for what they believe?

If your argument cannot be supported by passages of Scripture, then your argument is false doctrine.

God said, "For in six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it." TE'S say "That did not happen." How is this NOT calling God a liar?
 
Upvote 0

KWCrazy

Newbie
Apr 13, 2009
7,229
1,993
Bowling Green, KY
✟90,577.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Republican
Well, if it's not the smallest seed in Palestine then we have a problem, because Christ said that it was.
For a good explanation of this parable untainted by the distortions of unbelievers, read this explanation.
 
Upvote 0

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
I wish there was another way to get at this. For example, I'd be curious to see what would happen if another text was chosen that neither of us was familiar with, and it were put in front of us and we were asked to comment on whether the text is historical, allegorical, or both. But I don't see any practical way to actually do that.

Actually, I think that has been done. We were unaware of the existence of the Enuma Elish or the Epic of Gilgamesh until they were unearthed by archeologists. Was there any hesitation about categorizing them as myth even though the characters in Gilgamesh were figures in history? We could say the same for the Mahabharata which holds much the same place in Indian history/legend as the bible does in ours--with much the same mixture of the doings of humans and gods. Or of many of the stories found among peoples of Africa, indigenous Americans and the South Pacific.

I think our hesitancy about recognizing the kinship of the bible with other such texts is two-fold. First, the bible is important to us in ways those other texts are not. Second, we have developed a concept of truth that excludes legend, and we don't know how modern that is. This is what distinguishes us most from the people of biblical times.



The intent would be to determine how much one relies on the veracity of the text, textual analysis, outside data, etc.


One of the recently developed differences in hermeneutics has been the appearance of the doctrine of solo (o not a) scriptura. Those who adhere to it still call it sola scriptura, but they have added an element that was not originally part of that belief: namely the exclusion of outside data altogether when considering the meaning of a text of scripture. It is well set out in the Answers in Genesis statement that nothing in science or history is admissible if it conflicts with the biblical text. Given this belief---which is far from being a historic Christian belief--one cannot argue from anything in nature itself against a literal reading of the bible.


Because, I would bet ted could make exactly the same statement you did, "It is to avoid calling God a liar that I take the stance I do."

No doubt. But his method is different. His is the solo scriptura method of excluding data that doesn't allow the conclusions from scripture he wants to make. Mine is to include all data and ask what sense we can make of this as Christians who believe in the authority of the bible?

Even so, that statement bothers me. There is a sense in which I want to say: Well, if God is a liar, shouldn't we admit to it? I don't believe He is, but hopefully you get my point, because I would say the same of Science: Well, if Science is a liar, shouldn't we admit to it?

Science, sometimes, is a liar, or at least fallible. When my uncle was a lad going to school in the 1920s there was serious scientific work being done that linked left-handedness with criminal mentality. So teachers were instructed to discourage children from writing with their left hand even if that was their natural inclination. My uncle was a victim of that policy. Science has been used and abused to support many unsavoury political views including racism, sexism, colonialism and so on. We need to be aware of this, especially when science is coming to conclusions we favour. Any single scientific paper is likely to be one-sided, because no single study can include all relevant data. That is why it is important to critique science constantly and from many different angles, to ask what data has not been included and why, and how that limits the application of any conclusions in this paper.

But at least we know this about science: that it is a human endeavour, a fallible endeavour, at all times an incomplete endeavour, and subject from time to time to human cheating. Yet, done properly, carefully scrutinized, they can and do lead us --I was about to say "to truth" but it would be more accurate to say "away from falsehood". While nothing in science is absolute truth, much is less wrong than earlier "scientific truths". Isaac Asimov once wrote a marvellous little essay on this topic: Asimov - The Relativity of Wrong

On that basis we have to say that although the current scientific measure of the age of the universe and of the earth may be wrong, it is much less wrong than an age of a few thousand years.

Now as to God being a liar, yes we could admit that. Gods who are tricksters or deceivers are not unknown in the panoply of gods people have acknowledged and even though we espouse monotheism, rejecting the existence of other gods, that would not rule out that the one God we do acknowledge is a liar. But it would rule out a basic Christian doctrine, so if we admit God is a liar, we cannot also claim to be Christian. A God who lies is not the God of Christian or biblical faith.


It sometimes sounds as if people are trying to paper over the conflict - pretend as if it doesn't exist. I'm sure it also seems to some that a conflict is being created where none exists. Is there a way to get past that? Probably not, but I can't help feeling I need to try. And for me, there are several keys to this conversation:

1) Can we get an indication of how the people to whom God first spoke this (Moses, et. al.) took it? I can't believe that God would speak a message he intended to be allegory and be OK that virtually everyone received it as literal. So, is there some indication that Moses or Aaron or Joshua or Abraham took this as allegory? I haven't found it. I fully admit my case is weak, but everything I see seems to indicate it was received as history.

I think we can, and it goes back to the modernity of our notion of "what is true". I am going to mention two of my Canadian compatriots, now sadly departed from us, but who were intellectual movers and shakers a few decades ago. One is Marshall McLuhan of "the medium is the message" fame. It is no surprise I think that the Protestant Reformation coincided with the invention of the printing press. For the first time, the common man could read the bible for himself and without a priest, bishop or pope to explain what it means. And one of the consequences of this was the development of the school of Common Sense in Scottish Presbyterianism. The idea here is that the interpretation of scripture should be that of a common man using common sense without the embellishment of allegorical interpretations--such as those dear to the medieval interpreters. Eventually this became the basis of the modern preference for literal interpretation.

Of course this was popular and helped spread the Reformation, but that doesn't make it the only or the best interpretative technique. And most certainly, it doesn't mean that the common sense of a reader in the 18th, 19th or 20th centuries was the common sense of Abraham or Moses or even Jesus. The very fact that we read scripture rather than hearing it makes a difference. A line of print has a different effect on our brains than an oral story.

So, on to the second person: Norththrop Frye, a professor of English at the University of Toronto during most of his career. But he originally studied at Emmanuel College with the intention of becoming ordained. In fact, if memory serves me well, he was ordained and held a pastorate for a short time. But he was drawn back to academic life, not in religious studies as you might expect, but in English literature. One of the things that concerned him as the 40s passed into the 50s and 60s was the growing biblical illiteracy of his students. An English professor could no longer count on students knowing, not just the more obscure references to the bible, but even such major icons as Samson and Delilah, David and Goliath etc. So he started a course on The Bible and English Literature. Note "and" not "as". It was not a study of the literature of the bible, but of the connections between English literature and the bible through imagery and allusion and other references. It became a very popular course and he eventually turned it into a book--actually two books: The Great Code and Words of Power. The first explains his approach based on the work of an earlier Italian scholar who did one of the first sociological studies of history.

What Vito, the Italian scholar, and Frye tell us is that different ages display different modes of thought with a different dominant mode of literature. Apart from business correspondence (contracts, bills of lading, inventories, wills, etc.) all early literature is poetry. Epic poetry recounting stories of gods and heroes in the days of legend. The dominant mode of thinking is metaphorical--not metaphor as a mere figure of speech, but as being real in and of itself. This is the mode in which most of the bible (except for a few passage of the New Testament) is written.

Beginning in late Greek times: the times of Plato, Aristotle and continuing through medieval times, the dominant mode of thinking is analogical and interpretation is a matter of seeking allegorical meanings or writing intentional allegories like The Romance of the Rose. We pass from metaphor to simile. And this becomes the principal way the bible is interpreted for 1500 years. What was seen as living metaphor is now seen as symbolism. And we see the beginnings of this in the way the New Testament writers handle the Old Testament. Matthew, for example, takes a reference to the Exodus "I called my son out of Egypt" as symbolizing the return of the Holy Family from Egypt.

Modern literature is dominated by the novel which tries to be "true-to-life" and tell things in an organized, often chronological manner, just as life happens. It tries to be descriptive rather than metaphorical or allegorical. Where a scene in medieval literature describes a garden of roses, the intention is likely to be an allegory. Where a scene in a modern novel describes a garden of roses, the intention is likely to be to describe a garden of roses.

Frye did not live to see or comment on post-modernism which is changing things again.

To see the practical applications of this consider Jesus' words at the last supper: "This bread is my body." The sentence is a metaphor. The modern mind would take this as a figure of speech and still keep the ideas of "bread" and "body" separate. The medieval mind takes this as an analogy "this bread is like my body". The ancient mind would take the metaphor as reality: "This bread is really my body."

It is interesting to see the Catholic/Protestant split as we entered modern times. Protestants mostly see the phrase as a figure of speech. Common sense tells us bread cannot be human flesh. So Protestant theology takes Jesus' meaning as "This bread is a symbol of my body". Catholics are just as much agreed that bread cannot be human flesh, but took a different way around it via the doctrine of transubstantiation (or consubstantiation in the Lutheran tradition) "this bread becomes my body--although it still appears to be bread, it is not."

But Jesus quite probably meant the phrase just as stated: "This bread is my body" for in the ancient mode of thinking metaphors were reality and reality is made up of metaphors. It was no contradiction to the common sense of the time to see bread and body as one reality.

Another interesting example is the age of the earth. It was set at about 6,000 years by Jewish theologians prior to the birth of Christ and that belief has been continued. But no one sought to give it grounding in a "scientific" way until Bishop Ussher provided his calculation of biblical genealogies. So why was the figure so well accepted earlier than that? Interestingly, it was not based on science at all, but on the biblical metaphor of "a day is like a thousand years". So long before geology came into the picture, biblical interpreters were using a Day-Age correlation to establish the age of the earth.



2) In the history of science and in my own career the examples are legion of multiple possible interpretations of data. So is it possible to interpret biological & geological data in a different way? So far it appears to me biological data could be interpreted differently. That question is still open for me regarding geological data (and my thread on that seems to have died).

Absolutely, it is possible to interpret data in different ways, but within the limits of the relativity of wrong. There are innumerable unanswered questions in biology, but that evolution happens and has happened is not one of them. Same in geology and the age of the earth. The only way one can come to different conclusions on these basics is to ignore much of the data or to attribute the existence of the data to miraculous actions--and even the latter does not really account for much of the data.
 
Upvote 0

Resha Caner

Expert Fool
Sep 16, 2010
9,171
1,398
✟163,100.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Lutheran
Marital Status
Married
Actually, I think that has been done. We were unaware of the existence of the Enuma Elish or the Epic of Gilgamesh until they were unearthed by archeologists. Was there any hesitation about categorizing them as myth even though the characters in Gilgamesh were figures in history?

I don't think ancient texts are quite as uniform as you seem to suggest. From my study some are obviously allegory or metaphor. Some are obviously an attempt at political manipulation. But yes, some make miraculous claims about historical people. My point was that our opinions are probably too established to back up and try such an approach. Regardless, we can use Gilgamesh if you want. What do you think? Was Gilgamesh the historical king of Uruk or is he a myth?

From previous conversations, I believe our approaches to be very different. As best I know, God works in all parts of the world across the span of all time. As such, I would expect miracles to be recorded from all parts of the world across all time. I have no reason to reject that there was some king named Gilgamesh and something miraculous happened to him. The conflict only occurs if said text denies the Gospel in some way. When that happens, then I will conclude it has been corrupted in some way. That is, however, a theological conclusion and not a historical one.

As such, I don't think I have the hesitancy you speak of.

One of the recently developed differences in hermeneutics has been the appearance of the doctrine of solo (o not a) scriptura. Those who adhere to it still call it sola scriptura, but they have added an element that was not originally part of that belief: namely the exclusion of outside data altogether when considering the meaning of a text of scripture. It is well set out in the Answers in Genesis statement that nothing in science or history is admissible if it conflicts with the biblical text. Given this belief---which is far from being a historic Christian belief--one cannot argue from anything in nature itself against a literal reading of the bible.

The Lutheran view of sola scriptura is not as restrictive as you describe. One reason people go to that extreme (I think) is because it's an easy position to defend. Once one steps away from the extreme, the door is open. I will say that I think you take too much liberty with the opening that door provides for considering external data. In fact, you give the impression of preferring external data to the Bible - whether you mean to or not. (In past discussions when I've pressed you on this, it further appears you retreat to a "you don't understand" position that for me turns into a frustrating "whack-a-mole" thing). Anyway ...

Science, sometimes, is a liar, or at least fallible.

Umm. OK. My intent is not to bash science, so to me it appears you only addressed half the issue. The questions basically begin from: Does God communicate with us? If so, how? Can those communications be corrupted?

Now as to God being a liar, yes we could admit that. Gods who are tricksters or deceivers are not unknown in the panoply of gods people have acknowledged and even though we espouse monotheism, rejecting the existence of other gods, that would not rule out that the one God we do acknowledge is a liar. But it would rule out a basic Christian doctrine, so if we admit God is a liar, we cannot also claim to be Christian. A God who lies is not the God of Christian or biblical faith.

And? If Christianity is a lie ... (1 Cor 15:19).

What I was poking at was an attitude of: I want to stay Christian, so I'll just change how the Bible is interpreted to fit human wisdom. I'm sure you'll object to that, but let me point out that I was not specifically poking at that issue. My whole post was a set up for the final question.

The ancient mind would take the metaphor as reality: "This bread is really my body."

This was a long section, and I had trouble putting my finger on what you were trying to say. I'll repeat that I think Genesis is history and allegory, so I agree on the allegory part, but I think we disagree on the history part.

What confuses me is that you seem to be saying the same thing - that when Moses first heard this message from God he took it as history. Given that God was speaking to Moses, and knew how he would receive it, why should we assume anything different?

I'm not trying to snip a quote and trap you. I'm saying I'm confused. It sounds as if you're agreeing that Moses would have taken Genesis as history, but then you also seem to disagree that it is history.

As far as Jews using numbers in thousands of years before Ussher, I'm not sure that's too relevant. I'll agree with you that Jewish conceptions of time equated "thousands of years" with "something really big". So, they might just as easily have said millions as thousands. But that's not the point. I don't agree with YEC anyway. Rather, it just seems to me people try to make too much of that. For example, I might say, "Wow! That is the best apple pie I've ever tasted!" That is not a scientific statement. What I mean is, "This pie is good," and I'm using hyperbole to convey my great pleasure. However, when I deliver an engineering presentation and I state, "This is the optimal design," it would be erroneous for someone to conclude that since I exaggerated about the pie, I always exaggerate and therefore it is an exaggeration to say the design is optimal.

Absolutely, it is possible to interpret data in different ways, but within the limits of the relativity of wrong. There are innumerable unanswered questions in biology, but that evolution happens and has happened is not one of them. Same in geology and the age of the earth. The only way one can come to different conclusions on these basics is to ignore much of the data or to attribute the existence of the data to miraculous actions--and even the latter does not really account for much of the data.

I disagree. That's why I spent so much time asking questions in the science forum about "Does this fit with biology?" If people didn't realize that I was asking them if an alternative interpretation of the data is valid, they were naive. I doubt I'm the guy to make much come of it, but the alternative interpretation is there is someone decides to dig into it.

Regardless, I'll say again my motivation for posting in this thread was not another rip at evolution. It was to look at the thought processes people go through as they're considering the issue ... which, I guess, is a diversion from the OP, so I can step aside if no one's interested.
 
Upvote 0

miamited

Ted
Site Supporter
Oct 4, 2010
13,243
6,313
Seneca SC
✟705,807.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Hi all,

Well, apparently I'm not going to get an answer to my question. Let me take a minute to connect some dots.

The claim has been made that we have 3-4 hundred years of scientific evidence that has been proven to show that the earth is old. The claim has also been made that if the earth is not old and yet the scientific evidence shows that it is, then God is a liar or the scientists are hallucinating. I responded to these claims, with what I believe to be logical answers, but in the end I asked for the scientific claims of Mary being pregnant.

The reasons I did that is because these two issues are exactly identical as far as these claims go. We have at least 3-4 hundred years of scientific 'facts' that explain to us how a female becomes pregnant. There is absolutely not a single shred of evidence to support the biblical account that Mary, a virgin, could possibly have become pregnant according to all that we know from our 3-4 hundred years of science. We have study after study after study. We have zeroed in with microscopes and found just exactly how a woman becomes pregnant. We know so much about the process now that we can actually bring about human egg fertilization outside of the womb. Something that was impossible 2,000 years ago because the equipment needed to do it wasn't available. One can open up any of thousands of books on the subject of human egg fertilization and they will never find an entry or test whereby a woman has ever become pregnant without the sperm of a man entering the egg of the woman. It is impossible as far as we know for a woman's egg to just 'become' fertilized and result in a pregnancy all by itself.

Now, does that mean that God is a liar? Mary could not possibly have been a virgin and come up pregnant. The science of man has proven that the account of Mary's birth must be a lie. So, there are, just as has been posted on this thread, only two possibilities. God is a liar and science is right or science is wrong and God is true.

So, for those who want to make the claim that the earth cannot have been created the way God says it was created because science has proven that false, then I'm sorry, but you must also deny that Mary was a virgin giving birth to the Savior. For science has just as well disproven that possibility. I challenge any one to produce a study on human reproduction that explains that there is another tried and proven method whereby a woman can become pregnant and carry to term a healthy baby without ever having sperm introduced into the female egg.

Now, I know that those who struggle to support this 'scientific' notion that it explains the work of God will cry out that my example is not the same. Yes it is!

God said that He created the universe this way. The science of man says that's impossible. Therefore, let's go with the science of man and just claim that we don't understand what God was telling us. We can't be sure what He meant.

God said that He impregnated Mary through the Holy Spirit. The science of man says that's impossible. Therefore, let's go with the science of man and just claim that we don't understand what God was telling us. We can't be sure what He meant.

Now, most will respond, "Oh, I can see how God impregnated Mary and science won't be able to explain it because it was a miracle of God." But wait, 3-4 hundred years of science says otherwise. Science has given you a perfectly sound and reasonable and tested and repeated explanation for human female pregnancy. Why are we willing to throw out the tried and true science of men when it comes to the pregnancy of Mary, but then unwilling to do the same thing in order to accept God's explanation of the creation?

God bless you all.
In Christ, Ted
 
Upvote 0

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
Hi gluadys,


So, it is your understanding that God tells us of events that didn't happen to get us to 'understand' some deeper doctrinal point.

If you are asking if I believe God told stories to convey important information to people about himself, about human nature, about his intentions for humanity and the rest of creation, sure, why not? Story-telling was the form of instruction humans first developed and was most natural in a predominantly oral culture. There are a lot of advantages in conveying truth through storytelling and I know of no reason why God would not use it.

Yes, Jesus spoke in parables, but the Scriptures are quite clear to explain to us that Jesus is speaking in parables and gives the reason why.

Not always. In fact, there are debates sometimes as to whether the parables are really fictional. Another point is that while the evangelists sometimes tell their readers that a story is a parable, there is no indication that Jesus informed his listeners that the story is a parable. Did Jesus tell the lawyer that the parable of the Good Samaritan was fictional?

Or take an Old Testament parable. When Nathan presented the case of the rich man who stole the poor man's lamb to feed a guest, he did not tell David it was fictional. Nor did David think it was fictional. That was only revealed to him after he had pronounced judgement on the rich man.

So the notion that the scriptures make clear what is and is not parable is simply not always true. Is the Song of Solomon history or parable?


Others will say that because there are metaphorical statements in the Scriptures that these must also be metaphors. But metaphors have contextual clues that identify them as such.

Unlike similes, which have the distinctive "like" or "as" metaphors often don't have contextual clues. Further, when Biblical scholars refer to these accounts as metaphorical. They don't mean it is a text chock-full of metaphors, but that the whole text taken as a unity is a metaphor.

Well, you are also making assumptions on facts not in evidence. Yes, one can say that a reference doesn't mean something is historical, but the opposite could also be just as true.

And that, of course, cannot be determined by further study of the text in question, but by other means.

Well, that would depend on whether you and God are in agreement as to what constitutes 'essential doctrine'.

Well, to clarify, I follow Christian Forums definition of essential doctrine, namely that set out in the Nicene Creed. If it is not in the Nicene Creed, I don't consider it essential. Does God agree? Who knows?

While He did give us that ability [rational understanding], we don't always use our God given abilities in ways that are pleasing to Him.

Indeed we don't, but we don't always use them in ways displeasing to him either, so that is not a solid basis for rejecting any or all knowledge discovered through these abilities.

gluadys said:
Can a farmer care for the corn in his field if he does not understand its need for good soil, nutrients, sunshine and rain and protection from pests?

I don't see why not. Farmers have cared for crops ever since the days of Cain and Able. Are you also saying that that must not be true since they didn't understand about how a plant actually uses the water and nutrients to grow.

Even Cain would understand that plants need water and sun and that they grow better when mulched with manure. His knowledge was real if incomplete and the modern farmer still uses Cain's knowledge along with more detail as to why these things benefit plants. Jacob didn't have modern knowledge about the way genes determine character traits and how heredity works, but he had sufficient knowledge to mate animals in a way that profited him. That comes from study of nature. It is not only modern knowledge that comes from observation and reason. People have been using their eyes and ears and other senses in conjunction with their brains for millennia. It is a way of learning that works, and it works because God provided us with these means of learning about the rest of creation.


I'm not necessarily in agreement that our having greater knowledge of the 'mechanics' of how things work, makes us more godly.

Neither am I. Please don't attribute that notion to me. Increase of information is certainly not correlated with an increase in holiness. One can be very knowledgeable, and still be very foolish, for wisdom and knowledge are not the same thing.

However, the point about knowledge is not whether it makes us good, but whether it is accurate.



Remember that the desire for greater knowledge was what God was keeping Adam and Eve from in His command that they not eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. I disagree that God put us on this earth to gain knowledge. God put us on this earth to have a relationship with Him. To be satisfied with what He provided. Adam and Eve were not satisfied to rest in the knowledge that God had given them all that they needed.

There was a bit more to it than that. First the tree was not simply a tree of knowledge, but of a specific kind of knowledge: the knowledge of good and evil. So the disobedience in relation to this tree is not a condemnation of factual knowledge per se or of increasing our knowledge of nature. Second, the serpent did not offer knowledge, but wisdom. And that is more appropriate to the nature of the tree. Knowledge of facts does not lead to knowledge of the wise use of what we know; it does not automatically lead to understanding of what is good to do and what is not. Finally, and probably definitively, the serpent promised they would be like God--having the wisdom of God to know good from evil, right from wrong.

So this story is really a moral story with the emphasis on human moral knowledge and not really about descriptive knowledge about the world around us at all. That sort of knowledge is never condemned in scripture---though becoming puffed up in pride because one has learned much is.

Well, I'm not in agreement with all of your conclusions in this. And I'm not sure that God agrees either. After all, it was Paul who warned us of adopting and accepting explanations based on the natural world.

Did he? I would like a citation on that.

Because the telescope does not produce hallucinations.

How do you know they don't? That would be a good explanation for why the information gleaned through telescopes gives us an age of the universe in billions of years when the earth is (according to some people's reading of scripture) only a few thousand years old


The conclusions drawn by what we see through a telescope are the work of man. The telescope is not at fault, man is.

How do you know the conclusions are wrong? Are you not just saying they are in conflict with what you understand scripture to say? Have you ever studied astronomy? Have you ever looked at the data yourself? Have you ever found a flaw in the logic that leads from the data, through the mathematics to the conclusion about the age of the universe? I expect the answer to all of these questions is "no". But that is what it would take to convince astronomers that their conclusions are erroneous.

One more thing to add here. Ever since the days of the Sumerians, astronomers have studied the stars in order to be able to make predictions. At first, the significant predictions, in their minds, were astrological predictions of future events. But however misguided their motives, they needed accurate information of the movements of the stars; they needed to be able to predict when Sirius would rise or Jupiter would align with Leo. That factual base is still the basis of astronomy, and it is now used to do things like guide the path of rockets through space. I do not see how one can claim that conclusions that accurately guide a manufactured vehicle through the solar system or track a comet's path suddenly become inaccurate when they determine the age of the solar system or the universe. Until you can show that the measurements and the mathematics are inaccurate or that the measurements and mathematics do not lead to that conclusion and why they don't, the claim that the data is being misinterpreted is nothing but wishful hope that you are not misinterpreting the nature of the scriptural accounts.

It is simply not enough IMO to believe the astronomers have come to erroneous conclusions because I want the conclusions to match up with the way I read the bible.

Again, you are misinterpreting the data. No one denies that they see what they see, only the conclusions drawn from what they see.

This is your claim and it needs to be substantiated. You cannot simply keep claiming that other interpretations of the data are possible. You have to show how other interpretations can be logically drawn from the data.

I am not a scientist. I don't examine the data personally or directly. But I have certainly read enough about what has been discovered and why the astronomers, physicists, geologists, palaeontologists, geneticists, biochemists and ecologists have come to the conclusions they have. Given the physical evidence, I really don't think they can come to any other conclusions.

And given that creation is made by God through the Word, and is recognized in our theology as a revelation from God--a revelation Paul appeals to--I think we Christians need to take this revelation in that spirit, let the chips fall where they may so far as the interpretation of scripture is concerned.



How do you think [nature] would be different? I'm confident that it is young, and yet the physical appearance is the same to me as it is to you.

Only because you are neglecting or possibly ignorant of some factual information about nature which has implications for how old the earth and life on earth is. For example, if there had been a global flood within the last few thousand years in which most terrestrial life was destroyed, it would show up as a genetic bottleneck in all terrestrial species, both plant and animal, and including our own human species, all pointing to the same time in history. There is no such simultaneous genetic bottleneck. There was a quite recent genetic bottleneck in cheetahs, only a thousand or so years ago I believe. There was a genetic bottleneck in our own lineage about 10,000 years ago when the human population was reduced to a population of only 30 thousand or so. Some other species show genetic bottlenecks at other times, but the data to support a recent universal reduction in all terrestrial species is just not there.

Here is another for you. In some deep lakes we find millions of varves, traces left of annual events, each varve representing one year. At what point can we say the years denoted by these varves become fictitious? Why would God create varves of years that never were since they preceded creation?

So, yes, a young but mature earth would have significant differences in physical appearance from an old earth and these are just two of many of those differences.

Just your repeated use of 'hallucinating' infers to me that you don't have understanding of what you are talking about. No one is claiming that anyone is hallucinating. The claim is just that they are not coming to the correct conclusions about the data that they have.

And until you provide evidence that the conclusions are incorrect, that claim does amount to a claim that the scientists are subject to mass hallucination.

Here's a challenge for you if you think that God gave you, and desires you, to use your mental faculties to get answers to everything.


I didn't make that claim. I don't think science can tell us everything. I do think science does very well at telling us about the physical world--although it hasn't told us everything about that yet either.

And I do think that when we take adequate care to defend ourselves against our own fallibility by requiring more than one or a few witnesses, and repeatable testing of hypotheses, (which is what the methods of science are all about) we can rely on sense and rational analysis of data to give us an accurate understanding of the physical world and its operations. Indeed, we all depend every day on information discovered in just this way. So we depend on this as reliable, accurate information.



How did Mary become pregnant? Now, I'm not asking for the biblical 'story'. Give me the science behind it.

There is no science behind miracles. That is one of the ways that miracles are identified. Science can only explain what happens in nature when it is not modified by miracles.

That, by the way , was the origin of the rule called Occam's Razor. William of Ockham was a 13th century monk trying to figure out if there was a way to distinguish miracles from non-miracles. He concluded that if we assume any natural event (such as seeing an apple in a bowl on your kitchen table) can be mimicked by a miracle (the apple was directly placed there by God, not picked from a tree), the answer is "no". So, if we are to make any headway in understanding nature, we must provisionally assume that God has not acted miraculously in this instance.

Ockham, of course, was not suggesting that miracles don't happen. He was just suggesting that we not assume they are happening all the time as a methodology. It is the approach to investigationg nature we now call methodological (as opposed to philosophical) naturalism and is practiced by all scientists of all flavours of belief and unbelief.

You can basically take any scientific conclusion and phrase it as "this is the best conclusion we can come to on the basis of this data, unless the nature of the data was distorted by a miracle." But since that is a given applicable to all scientific conclusions, it is not normally stated. Just assumed.

So as to Mary's conception of Jesus, given the data of normal human gestation, scientists would come to the conclusion that Mary was not a virgin when she conceived. And Christians believe that this data is not applicable to this event, because it was a miraculous conception.
 
Upvote 0

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
Just a brief point here: Yes, we did get the truth by reading it in Scripture. Galileo's discoveries were not essential for any sort of understanding of theology and so were unnecessary for inclusion in Scripture.

Show me one document written by a Christian preceding the lifetime of Galileo which interprets scripture to mean the earth moves around the sun rather than vice versa.


IMO that is the only sort of evidence which would show that the contribution of Galileo to our knowledge of the solar system was unnecessary to our modern interpretation of scripture in this regard.

It is easy to read knowledge one accepts back into scripture, but that is illegitimate as a way of understanding what the biblical writer intended to convey.
 
Upvote 0

miamited

Ted
Site Supporter
Oct 4, 2010
13,243
6,313
Seneca SC
✟705,807.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
You can basically take any scientific conclusion and phrase it as "this is the best conclusion we can come to on the basis of this data, unless the nature of the data was distorted by a miracle." But since that is a given applicable to all scientific conclusions, it is not normally stated. Just assumed.

So as to Mary's conception of Jesus, given the data of normal human gestation, scientists would come to the conclusion that Mary was not a virgin when she conceived. And Christians believe that this data is not applicable to this event, because it was a miraculous conception.

Hi gluadys,

Exactly my point. I'm glad you were able to put into words what I was trying to explain about the conception of Jesus. Now put in the new variables.

So, as the earth's existence, given the data of normal geological and other physical evidence, scientists would come to the conclusion that the earth was not created as God has explained. Christians believe that this data is not applicable to the event, because it was a miraculous event.

God spoke, and this realm became. Perfect and complete.

BTW you asked for a citation for my statement:

After all, it was Paul who warned us of adopting and accepting explanations based on the natural world.

See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy,http://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-14 which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this worldhttp://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-15 rather than on Christ.

God bless you,
In Christ, Ted
 
Upvote 0

gluadys

Legend
Mar 2, 2004
12,958
682
Toronto
✟39,020.00
Faith
Protestant
Politics
CA-NDP
Hi gluadys,

Exactly my point. I'm glad you were able to put into words what I was trying to explain about the conception of Jesus. Now put in the new variables.

So, as the earth's existence, given the data of normal geological and other physical evidence, scientists would come to the conclusion that the earth was not created as God has explained. Christians believe that this data is not applicable to the event, because it was a miraculous event.


Well, this contradicts your earlier statements that scientists are misinterpreting the data. Now you claim that they are reading the data quite correctly--but the data itself is deceptive because it was placed there miraculously.

Now, I think it debatable that creation is a miracle, or at least the same sort of miracle as the Virgin Birth. In any case, since scientists are reading the data correctly, I would still conclude that the miracle took place, or rather began taking place, 13.7 billion years ago. Even given a miraculous origin, there is no reason to consider the history of the universe to be illusory.



BTW you asked for a citation for my statement:

After all, it was Paul who warned us of adopting and accepting explanations based on the natural world.

See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy,http://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-14 which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this worldhttp://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-15 rather than on Christ.

God bless you,
In Christ, Ted

I don't know how you translate a warning against deceptive human philosophy and human tradition into a warning against nature. Is the natural world created by God in and of itself deceptive?
 
Upvote 0

Smidlee

Veteran
May 21, 2004
7,076
749
NC, USA
✟21,162.00
Gender
Male
Faith
Baptist
Marital Status
Married
I personally believe the Bible is greater than the science book. I believe the scripture tells us exactly how the world came into existence. God spoke this world into existence just the same as man speaks to a computer through a keyboard and create his universe called "World of Warcraft". You will never understand how WOW was created by playing the game but has to have access to the hidden code. Anyone who have access to this code could easily walk on water, turn water into wine, raise the dead, feed 5 thousand, etc. I have no problem with God creating his universe with "built-in" history (which points toward God being ancient) just as man does in his created worlds.

ToE is all about man origins as the result of the laws of matter and energy only reacting on a mythological animal creating new complex information which somehow gave rise to our brains/minds which in turn created computers, cars, art, music, etc. It's matter over mind while creation is more mind over matter worldview.
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0