bach90
Evangelical Catholic
I did miss this earlier, so I apologize. With that said, I struggle to understand what point you're trying to make and this only makes it harder. If I've missed it, please tell me again your position on how the universe came to be, it's age, and how that relates to current scientific theories.
They do? I've always thought the Genesis 1/2 thing is a phantom - something unbelievers pontificate about even though it has no substance. So you'll need to show me the alternate timeline laid out in Gen 2. I honestly don't see it. Consider the following 2 sentences:
When no zbush of the field1 was yet in the land2 and no small plant of the field had yet sprung upfor the Lord God had not caused it to rain on the land, and there was no man ato work the ground, 6 and a mist3 was going up from the land and was watering the whole face of the ground7 then the Lord God formed the man of bdust from the ground and cbreathed into his dnostrils the breath of life, and ethe man became a living creature. 8 And the Lord God planted a fgarden in Eden, in the east, and there he put the man whom he had formed. 9 And out of the ground the Lord God made to spring up every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food. gThe tree of life was in the midst of the garden, hand the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
It looks to me like this account is saying man was created before the animals. Gen 1 has man created after.
John built a house in May and hired a painter in June. And the painter John hired was named Steve, and John brought Steve to the house he had made to paint it.
Maybe my grammar isn't perfect in this case, but is there a contradiction in those sentences?
I'm quite familiar with different styles for presenting history. I had to study them for my history degree. It is a common feature of the Bible to use a repetitive style. It shows up in the poetry of the Psalms (as I mentioned earlier), and it shows up in the history books: Genesis 1/2 as well as Kings vs. Chronicles.
But here is the point I have tried to repeat several times. Style does not mean one account is true and the other is false; it does not mean a simple version of creation can be false simply because the hearer will understand better that way; it does not mean God would speak something false to Moses. The most basic, fundamental rule of logic is that if two statements contradict, they cannot both be true. This is not a matter of culture where Greeks adopted this rule of logic and Hebrews didn't. To think that is a misunderstanding of the "zen" idea contained in some eastern cultures. Further, as far as I know, the Hebrews never had an idea like that anyway.
Clause 1: No disagreement. Clause 2: I'm not sure I'm understanding you right, you can't make something wrong by telling it a certain way. The truth is objective, the way you tell it is subjective. I'm contending that Genesis is a document of it's time so it's inappropriate to say it either proves or disproves evolution. Evolution was not in the mindset of Moses and I see no way it could have been. I think that's what we're disagreeing on. Clause 3: Totally agree, God doesn't lie.
If (and I emphasize the "if") something like evolution or multi-billion year universe were true, God could simply say: I called the fish up out of the water and after a long time they became birds.
Wouldn't that be true to this "if" scenario? Are you saying Moses wouldn't have understood that?
Again, I don't get it. A "lowly" (i.e. lacking in social status) person can't be handsome or brave? And Samuel had no prophetic ability to declare what David would be? Your example doesn't work for me.
This reminds me of the controversy when the movie Country came out and people criticized the choice of Jessica Lange as the lead because farm wives aren't supposed to be pretty. Seriously? I don't understand why everyone keeps selling the Israelites short.
You are correct that I can't prove Moses was familiar with an idea similar to evolution. But neither can you prove he didn't know it. So, "if" (highlighting that again) a evolutionary or geological theory is actually true, God would have found a way to say it that Moses could understand and that wouldn't be contradictory.
I agree, but I qualify it by saying it's possible, though I don't think that's what was going on here. Like I said above, the Bible is at once the eternal unchangeable Word of God, on the other hand the Bible has many different voices (despite having one author) and it needs to be seen as a product of it's time. Not so much in the historical-critical sense, but definitely in the historical-grammatical, which I believe has contributed positively to the study of scripture.
If you disagree with the bolded statements, please explain why. If you agree, and yet think current biology or geology is correct, please explain to me why Genesis is not contradicting this. And, FYI, I am rejecting the idea that it is merely a stylistic difference or a matter of simplification.
I think that current biology is incomplete and that the theory of evolution as presently taught is definitely incorrect. I think that current geology is probably correct, albeit incomplete. For me Genesis doesn't contradict with an older earth for a couple of reasons. First, the language at the beginning of Gen 1:1 is vague (is it In the beginning God created or In the beginning when God created). Second, we don't know how long A&E were living before the fall, what the impact of such an event could have been. We simply can't look at what happened before the fall, original sin and all.
I wouldn't say it's simplification, that's too basic. I do however think there's a stylistic component, this I suppose, is another disagreement.
Upvote
0