Originally Posted by
Papias
The text clearly says that Joseph was the son of Heli. .
...The punctuation should include Joseph, and then it becomes a true additional statement. Taking it out and the text would read Jesus, son of Heli, which would mean Jesus literally descended from Heli.
Well, that's why the parenthetical statement it is in there at all - to clarify that Jesus is not the actual son of Joseph, who is then used for the geneology. I've read your points over again, and I think you are wriggling around to avoid the clear meaning of the text and have no basis for your points - in addition to repeating points that seemed to me to be refuted earlier. However, I suspect you may think similarly of my points, so I think we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one.
You're right about that. I got 14/16/13
Yeah. Maybe that last 13 is a case of copying error as you mentioned.
David is counted in his section, but he is only counted once. ..... If you do the second way, then Jesus wouldn't be counted because His life just begun.
My point was that each "cap" in Mt's geneology is counted once and only once. Those "caps" are David, (the Jew's greatest king), Jeconiah (the ruler during the Jews greatest disaster) and Jesus (the Messiah) - each counted once and only once.
Originally Posted by
Papias
Why is the history most important? Do we complain that if the Good Samaritan didn't actually happen, then you don't learn anything ..?
Well it's clear that Jesus used that story (Good Samaritan) to illustrate a point concerning the love of God. ... So it has real meaning for us. What real meaning are we learning in Genesis?
The point is that God is the ultimate creator of everything, just as referred to in John 1.
After all, an explanation of the details of the actual creation method, describing DNA, mutations, natural selection, and geologic time, would have been boring, long, incomprehensible to the listener, and useless in conveying the overall message that God is the creator of everything. Just as in the Good Samaritan, details are not mentioned, the details of how the creation was done are not mentioned. They would distract from the overall message, and are unimportant compared to it.
The fact that God is the ultimate creator is much more important than whether He did so mainly through Larmarckian evolution, natural selection, poofing things into existance, genetic drift, or however many other ways could have been used.
I'll tell the main point of Genesis. ......The whole point was to tell us where we came from, an accurate telling or else, you eliminate the whole point.
I disagree, because it fails to do that, even if God made things by poofing them into existance. For instance, we know that making a clay dummy and blowing into it doesn't do anything.
So what kind of process, then, did God actually use? Where there other quantum aspects to the magical process of blowing? The text doesn't say. Was heat needed to supply energy? What about the fact that clay has far fewer carbon atoms than flesh? Did God's blowing split silicon atoms into carbon atoms? If so, that would require ginormous amounts of energy, and so Adam's temperature would have been near absolute zero - an adamsicle. And so on. We could go on and on for any given verse like that, because if Genesis is expected to lay out "an accurate telling", then it fails terribly.
The name itself means "beginnings" I believe. Why tell us a fake beginning, or give us a false origin?
Why tell us a fake story of the Good Samaritan, without even telling us the details of how much money he had or what his injuries were?
You're saying that God is in control, by using death. Yet this would mean death is a simple result that came about.
No, it woud mean that death is a logical way to make a functioning world that need not be constantly tinkered with to keep working.
Why can't God create the world as He wants, without having results come about that He has to control and use later? Why can't He create a world exactly how He wants? This tells me He is not in absolute control.
God can create any world he wants, of course. Being a logical God, he'll create one where logic applies. If logic applies, then consistent natural laws are a result, allowing God to create a world that can be understood by humans. I think that an incomprehensible world, where whole people popped into and out of existence, where God had to continually tinker and intervene, breaking his own natural laws, to allow it to continue working, would reflect a poorer, not a grander, creator.
You and I may differ on that. You may see the tinkering, intervening, naturally lawless God a a greater god. Being that the world isn't like that, I think that's evidence that regardless of what you and I may think, God has made the naturally lawful, logical, comprehensible world, showing that he's that kind of God.
There's plenty of room for children to be born. God did make more planets, most scientists even say there are earth like planets out there, many statistically. If we ran out of room here, we can start on another planet.
Oh great - so God's plan is that we just exterminate the native inhabitants, steal their planet, and then go on to be a cosmic invasive species to planet after planet? I would think that God sees us as better than that.
(If we want to get pratical with this, man has already shown an ability to go into space. .... very pratical stuff)
Pardon my frankness, but I think you are clueless about space travel. Please compare the distances and problems involved - I'll not list them here and now because it's off topic.
The death of cells by the way is a different thing if you ask me. Also plants aren't alive as we are. The scientific definition for life is different from the Biblical definition.
Having read several of the Bibles, I'm not aware of any verse that gives a "Biblical definition of life", or even says that there is a different, "biblical" definition. Please cite the verse if you know of one.
The genocide of the Canaanite tribes were a part of God's judgment on those tribes. ....If it were not for the wickedness of the people in those lands, things would have been different to say the least. Again, death is not needed.
So if they were not wicked, you are saying that God would have made land available somewhere else, or caused new land to appear?
If he could have done that, then why not do that anyway - since of course every single Caananite couldn't have been wicked (so this plan had to have killed countless innocent Caananites, babies,etc, plus the thousands of Israelites who died fighting them). If God was averse to death, then that seems like a simple and easy solution.
Finally, the reference to Isaiah. The things being spoken of there is God judging the people for their wickedness. ...... What is meant here is God's judgment on the people. Think Sodom and Gomorrah, the flood, etc. So it's not saying anything about death here.
And there wasn't any death in the instances of Sodom, Gomorrah, the flood, etc?
Let me ask you a question. If God decided after everything is said and done, and we are with Him in the end, that He wants to fill us with excruciating pain for no reason, would you be okay with that?
.... Are you cool with that as well?
No, I'm not. I agree that I would have serious questions as to whether or not God was good. In fact, those same questions can be raised as to the eternal torture of the unsaved in Hell (would a good and just God torture someone eternally for the comparatively minor and finite sins on earth?).
That's a big question, however, and it is often discussed. Maybe you'd like to start a thread in the General Theology section? I'm sure it's been discussed there before, and that there are people desiring to discuss it again.
If we are learning something good here on this earth, experiencing death and so on, shouldn't it also be expected in the next age, a deeper level of it?
I have a hard time imagining what an afterlife would be like, so I don't know either way.
Originally Posted by
Papias
THe world doesn't "operate around" death and decay, but rather death and decay are natural parts of the real world.
Contrary to popular belief, science also rules out Jesus did any miracle whatsoever. Science rules out the miracles, just as much as it rules out Genesis. Yet you accept what science says in one, but not completely in the other. Why is that so?
Well, first of all, I'll point out that your response here (about science and miracles) is unrelated to my point (that death and decay are natural parts of God's creation). As such, I guess you don't have a response about the death, and want to talk about this instead. I can give my answer, but since you want to talk about that, maybe start a separate thread on it too?
Science does not rule out Jesus's miracles because there isn't any evidence from that time to compare. I accept that the findings seen by studying God's creation can help inform our interpretation of scripture - which is something practically all Christians accept - you as well. This can be seen by the fact that few Christians today reject heliocentrism.
There are literally millions of gods and religions out there, what seperates our God from the others? I know there definitely unique qualities about Christianity, but other religions and beliefs have unique things as well. There are a lot of common things also.
I suspect that you'll find different answers from different Christians. For some, it might be the relationship, for others, a historical event, such as were Jesus saves them from alcoholism, may be the case, and others I'm sure. You might want to start a thread on why Christianity is better than other religions, since it is off topic on this thread.
Originally Posted by
Papias
So you are saying that you expect us modern day Christians to perform miracles at will like the early apostles? Sounds like a pretty high bar.
Somebody should.

...Does it make sense for God to completely take the power He gave away from us? It is more needed in this day, than it ever was in the past.
......
Yet we are being questioned in this day and age, up and down the board, and being put to shame in most cases. Our answers seems like tap dancing, and we repeat mantras without reason. The only thing that would confirm what we are saying would be the miracles. Yet they are now gone? ....
Well, I have to admit I don't have a good answer for you on this one. I agree that miracles would settle a lot of questions, and they sure would come in handy in refuting atheists and those of other religions. I certainly agree that there were a lot of miracles in both the old and new testaments used to prove Christianity/Judaism. The fire sacrifice contest in 1 Kings 18 comes to mind, much of the book of Acts, etc.
I don't know God's plan. Maybe He has a reason to deny us miracles today? As with some other points above, this could be the good topic of the whole thread, perhaps in the evangelism section.
Again, Jesus silenced all those who tried to trip Him up, even His naysayers were afraid to dispute with Him.
On a side note, recognize also that even if the Gospels are free of any scribal changes over the years (which they aren't), they still only record some of the history. It seems quite possible that there were times when naysayers were not afraid to dispute him, and it would be unsurprising if these incidents were not chosen to be recorded in the Gospels, which were, after all, written to gain followers (they even say that's why they were written, see John 20:31 ).
Originally Posted by
Papias
As pointed out before, many, many experiments have been done, and they all show that a literal reading of Genesis and Exodus simply doesn't match the results of those experiments. ....then you have over a billion experiments that have already answered what you asked in your OP.
And all those things are based on sight, observations of the world today.
Well, sure - but so is all the information you have anyway, including Genesis itself. After all, you read Genesis by sight, today. You can only use the tools of logic and deduction to conclude that Genesis itself wasn't made up wholecloth a few years ago, or 1,500 years ago, or whenever. Or that you are a human, not a space alien, that your parents raised you, that water boils at 100 degrees - literally everything you know.
Unless God is personally sending you visions in your mind today, all your information is based on observations of the world.
And if you are claiming new revelation, then that's a whole other topic.
There are things that once were observable, but are no longer. This is true no matter what viewpoint you're coming from. I believe that lost observation is the key to finding our true origins. I also believe the lost observation, is written in Genesis. That is why I'm going to combine science with the lost observation, and see where that experimentation leads me.
Do you seriously think that you are the first Christian to look at the origins question in light of all current evidence available today - including measurements, predictions, and the various bibles and scriptures in the various religions?
As pointed out above, this is well trodden ground. Maybe you'd be interested in the many Christians who have investigated this, reading from many different view points? THere is a lot out there, including "evolutionary creationism" by Lamaroux, "Darwin's Cathedral" by miller, and many more.
In Jesus' name-
Papias