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Creationism and the clarity of the Scriptures

How clear is the Bible regarding disputed doctrines? (see post)

  • YEC - the Bible is absolutely clear about most of these topics

  • YEC - the Bible is only partially clear about most of these topics

  • YEC - the Bible is generally unclear about most of these topics

  • TE - the Bible is absolutely clear about most of these topics

  • TE - the Bible is only partially clear about most of these topics

  • TE - the Bible is generally unclear about most of these topics


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mark kennedy

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So what about the marks of, say, fable (Gen. 2 et al), or poetry (Gen. Chap 1)?

Poetic prose to be sure, certainly better then the secularist drival everyone is so enthralled with. So tell me since you obviously have some interest in this as philosophy. What's your take on Genesis, another Mediteranian mythology or what?

I don't suppose you would impressed that Jesus, Peter and Paul affirmed Genesis as history?

Once again, I fail to see what is wrong with the use of fictional devices in a narrative. It seems to me that the failure to see metaphor is exactly what sufferers from autism have a problem with.

Now that was subtle, didn't you just say I would have to be retrarded to take Genesis literally?

Yet another bait and switch when I thought we were going to get into something remotely philosophical...silly me, I should know better by now.



narry a truer word hast thou spoken...

Oh let me guess, JEPD right? Man! after a hundred years that tired old ghost is still rattling it's chains.
 
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mark kennedy

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Galileo was here nearly 400 years ago.

With regard to this argument, I think in the first place that it is very pious to say and prudent to affirm that the holy Bible can never speak untruth-whenever its true meaning is understood. But I believe nobody will deny that it is often very abstruse, and may say things which are quite different from what its bare words signify. Hence in expounding the Bible if one were always to confine oneself to the unadorned grammatical meaning, one might; fall into error. Not only contradictions and propositions far from true might thus be made to appear in the Bible, but even grave heresies and follies. Thus it would be necessary to assign to God feet, hands and eyes, as well as corporeal and human affections, such as anger, repentance, hatred, and sometimes even the forgetting of` things past and ignorance of those to come. These propositions uttered by the Holy Ghost were set down in that manner by the sacred scribes in order to accommodate them to the capacities, Of the common people, who are rude and unlearned. For the sake of those who deserve to be separated from the herd, it is necessary that wise expositors should produce the true senses of such passages, together with the special reasons for which they were set down in these words. This doctrine is so widespread and so definite with all theologians that it would be superfluous to adduce evidence for it.

(emphasis added)

He was not talking about Genesis now was he? You seem to have a real problem finding specific points to address. Visions, parable, metaphors, figures and the like are used from one end of Scripture, in fact Revelations has them by the score. Do you really think that Christians just mindlessly take everything in the Bible literally?
 
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shernren

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I was addressing your specific point.

The thing is, the main purpose of Genesis is not chronological it's theological. The theological themata of Genesis one is clear enough, the elemental world is subordinate to the Word of God. Nature left to it's own devices resulted in the earth being emersed in dark, deep, lifeless waters and clouds. Then God spoke, I see no reason for understanding this as being anything other then a literal event.

Moses didn't write that it was as if God spoke, he says, And the Lord spoke.

(emphasis added)

Galileo was here nearly 400 years ago.

With regard to this argument, I think in the first place that it is very pious to say and prudent to affirm that the holy Bible can never speak untruth-whenever its true meaning is understood. But I believe nobody will deny that it is often very abstruse, and may say things which are quite different from what its bare words signify. Hence in expounding the Bible if one were always to confine oneself to the unadorned grammatical meaning, one might; fall into error. Not only contradictions and propositions far from true might thus be made to appear in the Bible, but even grave heresies and follies. Thus it would be necessary to assign to God feet, hands and eyes, as well as corporeal and human affections, such as anger, repentance, hatred, and sometimes even the forgetting of` things past and ignorance of those to come. These propositions uttered by the Holy Ghost were set down in that manner by the sacred scribes in order to accommodate them to the capacities, Of the common people, who are rude and unlearned. For the sake of those who deserve to be separated from the herd, it is necessary that wise expositors should produce the true senses of such passages, together with the special reasons for which they were set down in these words. This doctrine is so widespread and so definite with all theologians that it would be superfluous to adduce evidence for it.

(emphasis added)

He was not talking about Genesis now was he? You seem to have a real problem finding specific points to address. Visions, parable, metaphors, figures and the like are used from one end of Scripture, in fact Revelations has them by the score. Do you really think that Christians just mindlessly take everything in the Bible literally?

Well, I wasn't the one who said "mindlessly", you did ... but I don't see good reason to think that God literally opened His vocal cords and created a modulated sound wave that ... etc. I hope you get what I mean. One might as well say that God literally has arms and feet, literally forgets, and repents, and remembers, etc.

And it is obvious that Galileo, as he explicitly states a number of times, is speaking of the whole Bible. I'm quite sure Genesis is in my Bible.
 
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artybloke

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Poetic prose to be sure, certainly better then the secularist drival everyone is so enthralled with. So tell me since you obviously have some interest in this as philosophy. What's your take on Genesis, another Mediteranian mythology or what?

It's both a version of (based on) and a critique/parody of Mediteranian mythology. That's what they were concerned with. They had no interest in scientific accuracy, but they were aware of the myths that surrounded them and wanted to provide an alternative that actually made God seperate from rather than part of the creation. The Genesis myth is both a radical simplification and a radical desacralisation of the world: suddenly there aren't loads of gods round every corner, in every tree and rock, there is just one God who made it all. That's the big insight of the 1st millenium BC - one can see it in Budhism and Zoroastrianism at the same time so it's not just confined to the Hebrews. It very nearly took hold of Egypt too.

As for what Jesus, Paul and Peter thought, they would know as much science as the next 1st century educated man - which is preciselly zero. Their understanding of science is irrelevant.
 
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mark kennedy

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It's both a version of (based on) and a critique/parody of Mediteranian mythology. That's what they were concerned with. They had no interest in scientific accuracy, but they were aware of the myths that surrounded them and wanted to provide an alternative that actually made God seperate from rather than part of the creation. The Genesis myth is both a radical simplification and a radical desacralisation of the world: suddenly there aren't loads of gods round every corner, in every tree and rock, there is just one God who made it all. That's the big insight of the 1st millenium BC - one can see it in Budhism and Zoroastrianism at the same time so it's not just confined to the Hebrews. It very nearly took hold of Egypt too.

I happen to read that sort of thing on a regular basis and pagan mythologies, particularly the Mediteranian variety attribute the emergence of life and even the gods to primordial elementals. Even the ancient Greeks sought the ubiquitous elemental so you might want to take a closer look at the things you are saying here. Budhism doesn't have a mythology about origins that I am aware of, Zen budhism in fact is virtually atheistic. Most eastern mysticism is exclusivly naturalistic, including Budhism because as Hinduism reformed it made it's way across mainland China. In so doing it was exposed to every natural religion imaginable.

As for what Jesus, Paul and Peter thought, they would know as much science as the next 1st century educated man - which is preciselly zero. Their understanding of science is irrelevant.

Tell me something, who invented science and why were the ancients unable to have modern science? You seem to think that science has brought us into some superenlightened state of consciousness that was unavailable to ancient scholars. It's not true and this mark one of at least a half a dozen misconceptions people have about the history and epistomology of science.
 
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artybloke

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Tell me something, who invented science and why were the ancients unable to have modern science?

To answer the second question first, how are you able to do science if you don't have scientific instrumentation? The ancient world did not even have something as necessary to measuring stuff as clear lead crystal glass (it wasn't invented till the middle ages). Without glass you can't watch the results of your experiments because not only does it have a refractive index close to zero, it is also the least reactive substance that was known then.

So no test-tubes, retorts, beakers

You also can't have lens for spectacles, telescopes and microscopes for correcting faulty eyesight, seeing the very large and the very small.

If you can't have accurate measurement, you can't have science. You can have "natural philosophy", which is speculating on the nature of things from what can be observed using the naked eye and using what limited maths you have.

The ancient world didn't have a seperate system of numbers (the Arabs, c8th century), algebra (again, the Arabs), and calculus (Newton, among others).

Despite lacking the most basic elements necessary to do scientific research, the ancient world achieved astonishing things in the realms of technology and architecture. But that's not the same as science. What science there was is hardly of much use now: who now goes to Galen for medical advice?

The vast majority of people in the ancient world could neither read nor write. They were not taught it, and there was no social imperative to teach them. Education on the whole was for the monied elite: most of the letters of St Paul would have been read to the congregation by those few who could read. The same with the Gospels. The same with Genesis, and the OT.

Again, where would Paul have learnt about science? He was a Roman citizen, so he might have read Aristotle, Plato, the Stoic philosphers, alongside the Torah and the Tanakh, but where would he have studied science? Classical education included rhetoric, poetry and philosophy; it didn't include experimental science.

I'm exagerating somewhat, as I suspect that the scientific impulse may have begun with the Greeks (Pythagorus, Archimedes, Galen etc...) But it was hardly started by the time of Jesus; and wasn't terrifically encouraged by the Romans (great builders and copiers of others though they may have been.)

Science proper doesn't really start in Europe till the Renaissance rediscovery of the ancient Greeks, and discovery of what the great Muslim scholars like Averroes were doing.

I'm sorry, but to assume that St Paul, Peter or even Jesus would have anything useful to say about the content of science is to read them as if they were 20th century people with a 20th century education.
 
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JohnR7

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My question is, if you think the Scriptures are crystal clear about creationism, do you also think they are crystal clear about all these other issues? Is it wrong for Christians to have different points of view about these things?
The Bible is clear, but people are not as clear in their understanding of the Bible. A lot of the problem is you have pastors that are not trained or qualified to be pastors. They think they can get a two year degree and that is all they need. But that just does not qualify them to do the job that they need to get out there and do.
 
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JohnR7

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The thing is, the main purpose of Genesis is not chronological it's theological.
It looks pretty chronological to me. Day one, day two, day three and so on. OEC and YEC are both dispensationalists. They are just talking about different dispensations. GAPS are really OEC and YEC combined together into one. They realize that there was an old earth that was here before. But now we are a part of a new earth that began to emerge 6,000 years ago.
 
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jereth

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The Bible is clear, but people are not as clear in their understanding of the Bible. A lot of the problem is you have pastors that are not trained or qualified to be pastors. They think they can get a two year degree and that is all they need. But that just does not qualify them to do the job that they need to get out there and do.

What does a pastor need to be "qualified" to teach the Bible, in your opinion?

Should it bother creationists that the entire staff of AiG/CMI are theologically untrained?
 
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mark kennedy

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It looks pretty chronological to me. Day one, day two, day three and so on. OEC and YEC are both dispensationalists. They are just talking about different dispensations. GAPS are really OEC and YEC combined together into one. They realize that there was an old earth that was here before. But now we are a part of a new earth that began to emerge 6,000 years ago.

I have allways subscribed to a gap theory of my own. There would almost have to be gaps in the geneologies we have in Genesis and the Gospels. The Bible doesn't give us a very good timeline but then again it doesn't need to. The geneologies are a bloodline leading up to Christ, everything else is of secondary imporatance.

The OECs I know seem focused on the creation of life and altogether unconcerned was was going on previously. Essential doctrine is Adam and Eve being the first humans and the creation events being about 6,000 years ago.
 
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mark kennedy

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To answer the second question first, how are you able to do science if you don't have scientific instrumentation? The ancient world did not even have something as necessary to measuring stuff as clear lead crystal glass (it wasn't invented till the middle ages). Without glass you can't watch the results of your experiments because not only does it have a refractive index close to zero, it is also the least reactive substance that was known then.

You seem to want to reduce science to optical devices. There was medical science, astornomy, Euclidian geometry and some pretty sophisticated calenders like the Mayan which in fact was the most accurate calender in the world until the Atomic clock.

mayan-calendar.jpg


So no test-tubes, retorts, beakers

No but they had gears, levers, winches, screws and the agubus. All thourghly scientific in their conception and application.

You also can't have lens for spectacles, telescopes and microscopes for correcting faulty eyesight, seeing the very large and the very small.

You seem to define science in terms of optical devices, that is a little restricting in my view.

If you can't have accurate measurement, you can't have science. You can have "natural philosophy", which is speculating on the nature of things from what can be observed using the naked eye and using what limited maths you have.

The notion that the Earth is round (spherical) existed well before the Renaissance. When Eratosthenes, a scholar in Egypt during Hellenistic times, learned that a shaft of sunlight penetrated to the bottom of a well in Syrene on the summer solstice, he deduced that he could use the information to measure the circumference of the Earth. Around the same time, another Egyptian scholar, Aristarchus of Samos, was trying to figure out how far the moon and sun are from the Earth. In the process, he deduced that the moon orbits the Earth, and the Earth orbits the sun. His insight came a millennium and a half before Copernicus, however, it was not appreciated at the time or widely published.​

http://www.infohistory.com/creative.shtml






The ancient world didn't have a seperate system of numbers (the Arabs, c8th century), algebra (again, the Arabs), and calculus (Newton, among others).

The ancient world had a sophisticated systematic computation methodology for measurement that still works. Calculas measures then more precisly but no more scientifically then pythagerons therom.

Despite lacking the most basic elements necessary to do scientific research, the ancient world achieved astonishing things in the realms of technology and architecture. But that's not the same as science. What science there was is hardly of much use now: who now goes to Galen for medical advice?

I am not getting you working definition for science and experiementation is only a small part of scientific method. Now granted, since Newton's demonstrations at the Royal Society in London in 1672 science as we know it was very different. However, do you conclude that prior to the invention of the refracting telescope there was no such thing as astronomy?

"In December, 1672, Newton was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society, and at this meeting a paper describing his invention of the refracting telescope was read. A few days later he wrote to the secretary, making some inquiries as to the weekly meetings of the society, and intimating that he had an account of an interesting discovery that he wished to lay before the society. When this communication was made public, it proved to be an explanation of the discovery of the composition of white light."​

The vast majority of people in the ancient world could neither read nor write. They were not taught it, and there was no social imperative to teach them. Education on the whole was for the monied elite: most of the letters of St Paul would have been read to the congregation by those few who could read. The same with the Gospels. The same with Genesis, and the OT.

That is not what you said, you said that the writters of the Bible knew nothing of science. To that I would say, what about Luke, he was respectably well educated and his books are regared as historically accurate. Moses was trained in the sciences of Eqypt which would in time give rise to Euclidian math in Greece. The only difference between the ancient Greeks and many of the other brilliant thinkers in the Mediteranian world was that they wrote everything down.

Again, where would Paul have learnt about science? He was a Roman citizen, so he might have read Aristotle, Plato, the Stoic philosphers, alongside the Torah and the Tanakh, but where would he have studied science? Classical education included rhetoric, poetry and philosophy; it didn't include experimental science.

There were no experimental sciences, in fact the ancient Greeks frownd upon experiementation. Only in modern times do we reduce scientific discovery to empirical demonstrations. This is neither a good working definiton of science nor an accurate sounding board for the depth and range of scientific inquiries.

Forgive me for the length of the quote but I really like the passage and couldn't bring myself to shorten it.

“Well, I predict that if you think about it long enough you will find yourself

going round and round and round and round until you finally reach only one possible, rational, intelligent conclusion. The law of gravity and gravity itself did not exist before Isaac Newton. No other conclusion makes sense.

“And what that means,” I say before he can interrupt, “and what that means is that that law of gravity exists nowhere except in people's heads! It's a ghost! We are all of us very arrogant and conceited about running down other people's ghosts but just as ignorant and barbaric and superstitious about our own.”

“Why does everybody believe in the law of gravity then?”

“Mass hypnosis. In a very orthodox form known as ‘education.’”

“You mean the teacher is hypnotizing the kids into believing the law of gravity?”

“Sure.”

“That's absurd.”

“You've heard of the importance of eye contact in the classroom? Every educationist emphasizes it. No educationist explains it.”

John shakes his head and pours me another drink. He puts his hand over his mouth and in a mock aside says to Sylvia, “You know, most of the time he seems like such a normal guy.”

I counter, “That's the first normal thing I've said in weeks. The rest of the time I'm feigning twentieth-century lunacy just like you are. So as not to draw attention to myself.

“But I'll repeat it for you,” I say. “We believe the disembodied words of Sir Isaac Newton were sitting in the middle of nowhere billions of years before he was born and that magically he discovered these words. They were always there, even when they applied to nothing. Gradually the world came into being and then they applied to it. In fact, those words themselves were what formed the world. That, John, is ridiculous.

They are just looking at me so I continue: “The problem, the contradiction the scientists are stuck with, is that of mind. Mind has no matter or energy but they can't escape its predominance over everything they do. Logic exists in the mind. Numbers exist only in the mind. I don't get upset when scientists say that ghosts exist in the mind. It's that only that gets me. Science is only in your mind too; it's just that that doesn't make it bad. Or ghosts either.

“ Laws of nature are human inventions, like ghosts. Laws of logic, of mathematics are also human inventions, like ghosts. The whole blessed thing is a human invention, including the idea that it isn't a human invention. The world has no existence whatsoever outside the human imagination. It's all a ghost, and in antiquity was so recognized as a ghost, the whole blessed world we live in. It's run by ghosts.

We see what we see because these ghosts show it to us, ghosts of Moses and Christ and the Buddha, and Plato, and Descartes, and Rousseau and Jefferson and Lincoln, on and on and on. Isaac Newton is a very good ghost. One of the best. Your common sense is nothing more than the voices of thousands and thousands of these ghosts from the past. Ghosts and more ghosts. Ghosts trying to find their place among the living.”​

http://web.ionsys.com/~remedy/PIRSIG, ROBERT.htm


I'm exagerating somewhat, as I suspect that the scientific impulse may have begun with the Greeks (Pythagorus, Archimedes, Galen etc...) But it was hardly started by the time of Jesus; and wasn't terrifically encouraged by the Romans (great builders and copiers of others though they may have been.)

We remember the Roman Legions and Ceasar crossing the Rubicon but sometimes forget that the glory of Rome was their engineering of roads and bridges.

Science proper doesn't really start in Europe till the Renaissance rediscovery of the ancient Greeks, and discovery of what the great Muslim scholars like Averroes were doing.

I'm sorry, but to assume that St Paul, Peter or even Jesus would have anything useful to say about the content of science is to read them as if they were 20th century people with a 20th century education.

Why would I ever want to reduce them to a modern conception of scientific discourse. Education in the modern world in not nessacarily better then in ancient times and the Renaissance was marked by a rebirth of the ancient Grecian arts and sciences as you have allready mentioned. Our sciences are more precise but are they inheritantly superior to the ancient understanding of life and nature. I would submit that if anything the tools of science are making us intellectually lazy, the ancients had to work for their knowledge we simply press a button or pull a lever for ours.

Thought provoking post, thanks for that.
 
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artybloke

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I don't doubt that the ancient world had some quite significant technologies; but technology isn't science. Tecnology (and engineering and other related disciplines) is about finding practical solutions to practical questions (how can we lift this stone up to that height?) Science is about the investigation of the natural world - how it works, how it came about etc - not because it's "useful" but just because we want to know about it. They also had a great deal of natural philosophy, some of which was on the money, some of which (Ptolemy anyone?) was way off beam. They just did not have experimental science.

Because they didn't have experimental science, they could not check from the world around them that their speculations were correct.

Our sciences are more precise but are they inheritantly superior to the ancient understanding of life and nature.

Yes, frankly. We know so much more about the natural world than they did, just in terms of the sheer number of facts, never mind the explanatory theories we have that are based on a much clearer understanding of the evidence. We're w ay past Euclid (again, is geometry a science, or a branch of philosophy?) and onto chaos theory, quantum mechanics, non-Euclidean geometries, continental drift, germ theory, relativityand so much more. Most of it solidly evidenced. Our medicine no longer includes dodgy potions a la Galen, we know about the circulation of the blood.

Not only is it more accurate, it's better.

The science of the ancient world - such as it was - was confined to a few people who read the right books - a tiny minority of even the reading population, which was a tiny minority of the overall population. Certainly, there is no evidence of the ancient Judeans and Isrealis being in the least bit scientific - this was a society that could barely smelt iron, much less speculate on the nature of the universe. It got its knowledge of astronomy - such as it was - from the Egyptians and Babylonians, it thought the earth was the centre of the universe and was flat (how much did Greek speculations affect the Hebrews, a thousand miles away, at least until the time of Alexander?)

As for Luke's much vaunted historical accuracy, it's certainly no greater than any historian of his time, and no greater frankly than you'd need for a good historical novel.

There are two things necessary for doing science: one, the means of measuring the world, two, the belief that the world is real. The ancient world has a lot of philosophical speculation, a tiny amount of actual investigation, and a belief that the real world was the world of forms, the realm of the gods, not much space for investigative science. It was, on the whole, a priest-ridden society: the kind of place fundamentalist ultimately wants to consign us to again.
 
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