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can someone please explain to me the difference between OEC and TE?

itisdeliciouscake

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Or I guess it might be more helpful to explain my own views and have someone tell me whether I am an old earth creationist or a theistic evolutionist.


I believe that the earth is around 4.5 billion years old
That evolution and natural selection (guided/ordained by God) is responsible for the variation of species
That Adam was an historical figure and the garden account is historical
That Adam and Eve were the first human man and woman and that Adam is the ancestor of all mankind
That the flood was a literal world-wide flood
That the first humans were around 6-20ish thousand years ago (I'm okay with gaps in genealogies)
 

Sum1sGruj

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Or I guess it might be more helpful to explain my own views and have someone tell me whether I am an old earth creationist or a theistic evolutionist.

OEC is a general term for all the theologies relating God and scientific approach.

In other words, it's any middle ground between scientific observation and YEC.
 
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Papias

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itsdeliciouscake wrote:

http://www.christianforums.com/t7568880/
http://www.christianforums.com/t7568880/

TE is basically in agreement with the scientific view, except that God is supporting and causing the entire process. TE may or may not include a literal Adam as the first transitional ape to cross the line to being human (a common Catholic view).

OEC most commonly agrees with the 4.55 billion year age of the earth, but that God miraculously created animals over that time, in different creation events, thus forming the fossil record. OEC denies evolution, but not the age of the earth nor the geolgic column. OEC was a common position in the late 1800s, but is actually quite rare now. Today, if one is to accept scientifi evidence, they are TE. If they are to deny evidence, then why bother going half way? They more often just deny all the evidence and be YEC.




Or I guess it might be more helpful to explain my own views and have someone tell me whether I am an old earth creationist or a theistic evolutionist.


I believe that the earth is around 4.5 billion years old
That evolution and natural selection (guided/ordained by God) is responsible for the variation of species

This part is Theistic Evolution

That Adam was an historical figure and the garden account is historical
That Adam and Eve were the first human man and woman and that Adam is the ancestor of all mankind

If seen as the transitional ape, the first to cross the line to human as is common among many Catholics (and myself), then this is TE. Otherwise, it is YEC.

That the flood was a literal world-wide flood
That the first humans were around 6-20ish thousand years ago (I'm okay with gaps in genealogies)

This part is YEC,

Overall, it looks like you hold a TE view of geologic history, and a YEC view of human history. An interersting mix that I'm not sure I saw before.

In the love of Christ-

Papias
 
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sfs

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If seen as the transitional ape, the first to cross the line to human as is common among many Catholics (and myself), then this is TE. Otherwise, it is YEC.
OEC, not YEC, since he or she believes in an old earth -- even if the timeline for humans is like that of a YEC. And yes, it's an unusual combination.
 
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gluadys

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Or I guess it might be more helpful to explain my own views and have someone tell me whether I am an old earth creationist or a theistic evolutionist.


I believe that the earth is around 4.5 billion years old
That evolution and natural selection (guided/ordained by God) is responsible for the variation of species
That Adam was an historical figure and the garden account is historical
That Adam and Eve were the first human man and woman and that Adam is the ancestor of all mankind

This far is theistic evolution.







That the flood was a literal world-wide flood
That the first humans were around 6-20ish thousand years ago (I'm okay with gaps in genealogies)

Neither of these has much to do with evolution.

A literal world-wide flood is contradicted by the same geology that affirms a 4.5 billion-year old earth. If you accept the geology for the age of the earth, why reject it in regard to the extent of the flood?

The text of scripture is consistent with a major regional flood.

As for when the first humans were around, it depends on what criteria you use for "human". The oldest discovered fossil skeletons of H. sapiens are reliably dated to nearly 200,000 years old. OTOH, there is little evidence of human CULTURE until around 35-40,000 years ago--when we begin to see cave paintings and decorative art on tools. Is this an indication of some change in H. sapiens that cannot be preserved in bones? One that would make a difference between H. sapiens who are "human" and earlier H. sapiens who were not?

Normally, biologically, we would treat all members of a species the same, but if being "human" implies something over and above a biological definition, maybe we need to consider that something occurred in the H. sapiens lineage after the physical characters of humanity were established through biological evolution.

Still that is much earlier than 6,000 years and I don't see enough archeological difference to justify separating the cave painters from the first city-builders and writers. Once you have art, you soon have the use of pictures to communicate, then pictographs and writing. So I would definitely lean to 20-40,000 years at a minimum for the first "humans" and then only if one makes a distinction between those who were fully human culturally and those who were fully human physically. And since these were the same species, I am extremely dubious about making any such distinction.

Without that distinction, humanity goes back to at least 200,000 years if "human" is identified with "H. sapiens". And if, like some people, one includes other species of Homo (e.g. neanderthalensis, heidelburgensis, erectus, ergaster) within the realm of the human, then we have a fossil record of humanity of about two million years or more.

So, basically, you need to clarify what you mean by "human" and what, if anything, distinguishes a "human" from a creature that is very similar, even identical, physically but not "human".

It's a bit like trying to decide if Data is a person or a machine.
 
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