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Didaskomenos said:No doubt creation is a miracle, if you by "miracle" you mean a wondrous display of God's power and wisdom. But if you mean "divine intervention into nature that supercedes or bypasses normal natural laws," I disagree. However, I don't dispute that by His word the heavens and the earth were created. You must realize at some point in your life that God did not intend to leave us a scientific record of creation in the Bible, and that's why He let His followers testify to the truth of His creating.
I see creation as a supernatural event that where we will not find naturalistic explanations for how everything was created. To look for a natural cause is to deny the supernatural cause, hence the rationalist and the mythical approach.
Didaskomenos said:Science doesn't say either. You see, science is not a person. I'm surprised you didn't realize that. Science is a tool used either by Christians who say that we are studying God's methods or non-Christians who say that we are studying the methods of the universe's formation without a Mind's sovereign purpose behind them.
Science would not exist without people - scientists. The methods were designed and created by people - scientists. Science is an embodiement of scientists who as a whole do not give the Creator credit for creating.
Before the enlightenment, science use to give credit to God. Not anymore. A te here said they would hate for science to go back to those days; the days where God was allowed to receive credit from man within science.
You know, creation is to show a Creator, but science denies a Creator by default. Creation is to be a testamony of God, but science will not speak of God. When you agree that this is how science should be, you agree that God's name should not be proclaimed everywhere. God can be spoken of else where, just not in science.
If you agree that God's name shouldn't be in science, that He should be on the receiving end of the credit of creating, what would you say to God who asks, why shouldn't My Name be proclaimed even within science?
Is science where a Christian should be ashamed of God? Where a Christian will not rightfully say God is the creator, within a scientific paper? Is that too much to ask, is it too much to say, too much credit to give, to the One who does so much for all?
I just want to know why you feel science should be silent on God. I think God should be proclaimed everywhere, in every place. Science is not the exception and has only been the exception since the enlightenment. Some enlightenment!
Didaskomenos said:That's just goofy. Here again we have creationists who must find some way to insuate that TE's aren't as good Christians as they are, that we don't want God as much as creationists. They're God's rules, and He can circumvent them if He likes! And if my point was to distinguish the suspension vs. the regular workings of the laws of nature, tell me a good way to form a sentence with "intervene" and "with the laws of nature". "God intervenes with the laws of nature"? This is because "intervene" is a much more intransitive verb than "interfere". Feel better?
I just asked the question of your choice of words; why you see God as interfering rather than intervening.
Now, I have never said here that any te is less than a Christian. Why is it that you want to create this strawman? I have said nothing about your relationship with God. I just asked why you chose that word.
Seriously, I do not know your heart nor do I claim to. So please, don't try and create some psuedo-argument about me saying something I never said.
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