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Found in Creationism:
I want to respond in-depth to this, not just in reaction to some things busterdog says which I think are wrong but also to some things which I have thought about before and I think he is right on (to some extent).
This post will specifically answer some points he raises in his post above, because I am impatient. The next post will be much more in the spirit of an OP and deal with realism as I conceive it and some issues with solipsism and why I think it reflects a wrong theology of God. The post (or two, or three) after that will be concerned firstly with solipsism as I see it in creationism, and then what the argument against deception is and what the argument against deception isn't.
So hang on tight!
=========
I continue to think that this use of Luke 10:21 is quite irresponsible. For again, look at the context:
At that time Jesus, full of joy through the Holy Spirit, said, "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure. All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, and no one knows who the Father is except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him." Then he turned to his disciples and said privately, "Blessed are the eyes that see what you see. For I tell you that many prophets and kings wanted to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it."
(Luke 10:21-24 NIV)
Firstly, the passage is quite clear. Jesus is talking specifically about the miracles the disciples have just performed in the towns of Israel. None of those things have been hidden from anyone who was alive at that time. The people from whom these things have been hidden are "prophets and kings", and they are only forbidden from seeing these things because of their place in history: namely, they are in the past relative to these events, and of course they cannot physically access the future.
Furthermore, the dynamic that busterdog often suggests (God making the scientists' measurements invalid because they aim to discredit the Bible with those measurements) is completely opposite to the dynamic suggested here. The kings and prophets from whom these things were hidden desired to see them! They were men of faith, writers of the Bible, people who looked forward to the Messiah (and how could they desire to see something, unless they had faith that it would happen?), and there is no wilful hiding of the truth from them - just the historical necessity of their place in history; they cannot help but be in the past relative to the Messiah, and thus can only see Him prophetically instead of physically.
This is worlds apart from the proposed deception / blinding of science that busterdog sees.
==========
"Could God make an earth that looks young?"
I think about that sometimes, especially in the context of cosmological ideas. We know what floods look like, and what places that aren't flooded look like, and so there is substantial room for geology to comment on the possibility and plausibility of a global flood. But we don't have any 6,000-year-old universes, solar systems, or planets to play around with. How could we know?
I think part of the TE response to this is that evidences for the Earth's age are most of the time found in features that are non-essential to the Earth's hability, to the best of our current knowledge. For example, two strong pieces of evidence for the Solar System's age are the radiometric dating of meteorites and the absence of (non-naturally generated) short-lived radioisotopes coupled with the presence of long-lived radioisotopes. Now, does Earth need meteorites to be habitable? Does the Earth need the absence of short-lived radioisotopes to be habitable - and if there is an issue with radiation, why should long-lived radioisotopes be present?
Or again think about tree rings. Tree rings are not necessary for a tree to be large or to bear fruit: some trees' rings are too light to discern growth rings properly, and trees that grow in tropical regions would not have discrete growth rings (IIRC) because the seasonal variation here is not that large. Furthermore, there is no necessity for those rings to correlate positively with radiocarbon dating: God could distribute C-14 throughout those rings so that rings that appear older are on the outside, or inside, or the middle, or simply not have any C-14 present at all.
So, no, I don't think order and habitability itself implies age, and I will elaborate more on this - I think the omphalos argument actually carries a bit of weight there, though not much. It is in the coincidental age-markers that we find problems with YECism, or at least a scientific formulation of it.
I think I mostly agree with you. This deception idea is a tender spot for me, because it leads to what I think are spurious TE claims. They say frequently that our theology makes God a liar because God would never leave a geological record that "lies" to the modern scientist (though he would lie to all mistaken scientists that preceded us.) There are a few truly frivolous arguments in this forum. That is one of them.
On one hand,
Num 23:19 God [is] not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do [it]? or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?1Sa 15:29 And also the Strength of Israel will not lie nor repent: for he [is] not a man, that he should repent.![]()
on the other hand,
Luk 10:21 In that hour Jesus rejoiced in spirit, and said, I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes: even so, Father; for so it seemed good in thy sight.
I am guessing that this leaves us in agreement. I would not use the word deception, personally. Does this sound right?
As for making the earth look old,
Could God make the earth look young?
What would a young earth look like?
How exactly could he construct a planet that would satisfy an evolutionist on this question? I have a hard time imaging that would be possible. Rock must appear to have cooled. Rock must be hard. Dirt must be aggregated in areas sufficient to plant. Planets must have achieved stationary orbits.
To an evolutionist order itself and habitability implies age. I think God is willing to allow someone to go that way if they choose to.
All of the foregoing ignore catastrophes that follow the fall, which also gives an appearance of age to some..
I want to respond in-depth to this, not just in reaction to some things busterdog says which I think are wrong but also to some things which I have thought about before and I think he is right on (to some extent).
This post will specifically answer some points he raises in his post above, because I am impatient. The next post will be much more in the spirit of an OP and deal with realism as I conceive it and some issues with solipsism and why I think it reflects a wrong theology of God. The post (or two, or three) after that will be concerned firstly with solipsism as I see it in creationism, and then what the argument against deception is and what the argument against deception isn't.
So hang on tight!
=========
I continue to think that this use of Luke 10:21 is quite irresponsible. For again, look at the context:
At that time Jesus, full of joy through the Holy Spirit, said, "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children. Yes, Father, for this was your good pleasure. All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows who the Son is except the Father, and no one knows who the Father is except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him." Then he turned to his disciples and said privately, "Blessed are the eyes that see what you see. For I tell you that many prophets and kings wanted to see what you see but did not see it, and to hear what you hear but did not hear it."
(Luke 10:21-24 NIV)
Firstly, the passage is quite clear. Jesus is talking specifically about the miracles the disciples have just performed in the towns of Israel. None of those things have been hidden from anyone who was alive at that time. The people from whom these things have been hidden are "prophets and kings", and they are only forbidden from seeing these things because of their place in history: namely, they are in the past relative to these events, and of course they cannot physically access the future.
Furthermore, the dynamic that busterdog often suggests (God making the scientists' measurements invalid because they aim to discredit the Bible with those measurements) is completely opposite to the dynamic suggested here. The kings and prophets from whom these things were hidden desired to see them! They were men of faith, writers of the Bible, people who looked forward to the Messiah (and how could they desire to see something, unless they had faith that it would happen?), and there is no wilful hiding of the truth from them - just the historical necessity of their place in history; they cannot help but be in the past relative to the Messiah, and thus can only see Him prophetically instead of physically.
This is worlds apart from the proposed deception / blinding of science that busterdog sees.
==========
"Could God make an earth that looks young?"
I think about that sometimes, especially in the context of cosmological ideas. We know what floods look like, and what places that aren't flooded look like, and so there is substantial room for geology to comment on the possibility and plausibility of a global flood. But we don't have any 6,000-year-old universes, solar systems, or planets to play around with. How could we know?
I think part of the TE response to this is that evidences for the Earth's age are most of the time found in features that are non-essential to the Earth's hability, to the best of our current knowledge. For example, two strong pieces of evidence for the Solar System's age are the radiometric dating of meteorites and the absence of (non-naturally generated) short-lived radioisotopes coupled with the presence of long-lived radioisotopes. Now, does Earth need meteorites to be habitable? Does the Earth need the absence of short-lived radioisotopes to be habitable - and if there is an issue with radiation, why should long-lived radioisotopes be present?
Or again think about tree rings. Tree rings are not necessary for a tree to be large or to bear fruit: some trees' rings are too light to discern growth rings properly, and trees that grow in tropical regions would not have discrete growth rings (IIRC) because the seasonal variation here is not that large. Furthermore, there is no necessity for those rings to correlate positively with radiocarbon dating: God could distribute C-14 throughout those rings so that rings that appear older are on the outside, or inside, or the middle, or simply not have any C-14 present at all.
So, no, I don't think order and habitability itself implies age, and I will elaborate more on this - I think the omphalos argument actually carries a bit of weight there, though not much. It is in the coincidental age-markers that we find problems with YECism, or at least a scientific formulation of it.