For those who do not accept evolution, if you became convinced God did not exist, would you still think evolution is wrong?
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For those who do not accept evolution, if you became convinced God did not exist, would you still think evolution is wrong?
For those who do not accept evolution, if you became convinced God did not exist, would you still think evolution is wrong?
If I were convinced that God did not exist, then I would accept that about anything man came up with as far as 'how we got here' was possible.
However, God does exist and He has given us His testimony of 'how we got here'.
I see. Would you say the topic would be less important to you?
No, not less important. Just that the topic has already been researched and decided in my heart.
Sure.
Yes. I'm assuming that was a question and not a statement.
I think the origin of life would remain a conundrum for me. For I see no way that life could have originated without outside help. Moving that outside help to the stars, as in the movie Prometheus, begs the question of how they themselves originated.For those who do not accept evolution, if you became convinced God did not exist, would you still think evolution is wrong?
I think the origin of life would remain a conundrum for me. For I see no way that life could have originated without outside help.
Sometimes it takes me awhile to determine how I want to formulate my question. This might be such a case. I suppose I was wondering what would motivate someone to seek a scientific alternative to evolution. I'm beginning to think there isn't much motivation from either side of the question.
Science cannot prove the things that God does. So, for a believer to be looking for some 'scientific proof' of the things that God does is a work of futility.
So, science is very good if one wants to work to disprove the things that God does, but not so much for proving such things. I choose to believe on faith that God has done all the things that Scriptures claim He has done and leave science out of it.
The problem with trying to find such solutions is that they don't exist. Miracles, by definition, are things that happen outside of the realm of what we know to be possible.
A few questions:
1) On what Biblical passages are you basing your definition of miracle?
2) Is everything God does a miracle?
3) If not, how do you tell the difference?
Well, the Scriptures are not a dictionary so I think there are a lot of words in it that we have to know what the standard definition of the world is to understand what God is saying.
Take turning back the course of the sun. Or Mary being pregnant. Or the water standing as wall a in the Exodus account. All of these things, according to the natural properties of the world, are impossible to do, prove, or repeat.
Yes, I believe that everything that God actually does, as in making physical objects on the earth or the universe to act, is a miracle.
Sometimes it takes me awhile to determine how I want to formulate my question. This might be such a case. I suppose I was wondering what would motivate someone to seek a scientific alternative to evolution. I'm beginning to think there isn't much motivation from either side of the question.
The past, or past events, can be imagined using evidence obtained
in the most scientific and repeatable manner possible, but evidence
is never proof of the past.
Except that the definition I use is different from yours ... and it's not a definition I made up, but one that quite a few Christians use.
I don't know why you keep repeating these same examples. We've had this discussion before. For example, it's not impossible for a virgin to give birth. It's called parthenogenesis, and it's been observed.
Could you forward me the evidence and give me the name of the child that was so born? Why did you stop with just that one example? Do you also have examples of water standing as a wall several dozen feet tall or the sun turning back?
I view the virgin birth of Jesus as a miracle, just as you do. But apparently that means different things to you and me.
So, when Jesus spoke to the disciples that was a miracle? When he ate and slept that was a miracle?
Could you forward me the evidence and give me the name of the child that was so born? Why did you stop with just that one example? Do you also have examples of water standing as a wall several dozen feet tall or the sun turning back?
As soon as you answer my question, I'll reply.
No. What I said was that when God acts upon the physical processes of the earth it is a miracle. Jesus being conceived was such a process. The day to day life of Jesus then living upon the earth was not. It was not God acting upon the physical processes of the earth. It was merely the Son of God living upon the earth. Jesus resurrection was God's hand acting on the earth. Just as Jesus said that his Father would raise him up. That was an act of God acting upon the earth.
Could you forward me the evidence and give me the name of the child that was so born? Why did you stop with just that one example? Do you also have examples of water standing as a wall several dozen feet tall or the sun turning back?