Hi skater,
You responded: This is why I have issues with people trying to use science to disprove God. God is an idea that is neither provable nor falsifiable. Therefore, science cannot touch it.
I couldn't possibly agree more with that statement. However, if you carry that statement to its logical conclusion regarding the creation as described in the Scriptures, i.e. that God's work in creating this realm was all a miracle, then the natural conclusion would be that science will never be able to disprove or prove that events occurred just as the Scriptures tell us. Then, working from that frame of reference, all that science would attempt to 'prove' as happening before that event would be a matter of miscalculation, or as the Scriptures say, misunderstanding the 'natural laws'.
Timothy, guard what has been entrusted to your care. Turn away from godless chatter and the opposing ideas of what is falsely called knowledge,...
Is not the argument made that we now have 'knowledge' which 'proves' the creation account cannot possibly be true? If that knowledge causes us to deny the truth of God is it not then 'falsely called knowledge'?
See to it that no one takes you captive through hollow and deceptive philosophy,
http://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-14 which depends on human tradition and the basic principles of this world
http://www.biblestudytools.com/colossians/2.html#cr-descriptionAnchor-15 rather than on Christ.
Are not the teachings that go against the miraculous 'cause' of God in creating all things based on the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ?
We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.
Would it not be agreed by most that the understanding and working out of evolutionary theory has set itself up against the knowledge of God? After all, don't most godless believe that there is no God because we can now explain the creation through naturalistic, scientific evidence? Let's consider that there was no understanding or knowledge of evolutionary theory. Wouldn't that almost 'assume' that most people would agree, then, that there is some creator? Yes, I understand that there are those among the fellowships who attempt to meld God's creation with 'evolutionary fact', but do we have any real reason to believe that these people know and understand the 'truth'? Just because they can reconcile the account of God's creation with scientific knowledge based on the basic principles of this world, do we then hail them as the truth proclaimers, despite God's repeated claim that He made it all in six days?
You responded: In regard to the volcanos, you are completely correct. And we have fossils that we know were the result of ash. We've actually developed a dating technique called argon-argon dating that works specifically with volcanic ash.
Oh, I agree that we have fossils that are believed to have come from volcanic eruption, but it doesn't apply to the majority of the fossil record. There must be some other explanation for most fossils that have been found. The majority of the fossil record comes from sedimentary formation without any ash content apparent.
As regards Lucy:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Lucy_Mexico.jpg
This is all we actually have of her. Honestly, and I will readily admit that I'm no anthropologist, but I don't see enough cranial material to be able to make, without doubt, some of the claims that are made as regards skull formation and size of brain. Notice also, as I wrote previously, that nearly every bone is broken. For all we really know this body could have been torn to shreds by the forces of the flood, or whatever cataclysmic event one cares to allow as the cause of fossilization.
Just so you know the 'other side' of the story, here's what the ICR, that venerable stronghold of idiots, as some would refer to them, says about Lucy:
Lucy's skeleton was about 40% complete and was a remarkable discovery when unearthed by Don Johanson in 1974. The creature would have stood 3.5 feet tall, about the height of a chimpanzee. Its skull was grossly ape-like, and also about the size of a chimp's, with very little in the way of human-like features. Lucy possessed very long fingers with a decided curve to them, like modern apes possess for tree-swinging activities. From other A. afarensis finds, it is believed Lucy possessed long toes with a curvature that also suggested prehensile and arboreal behavior. Lucy's upright-turned shoulder joint enabled suspensory behavior and her hands, wrists, and arms were powerfully prehensile. And so you ask, what makes Lucy such a great missing link? Angles of bones in the (reconstructed) hip joint and knee joint suggest that Lucy spent part of her time walking upright. That is as strong as the evidence gets that she was related to humans. Virtually no anatomists will support Johanson's claim that Lucy was a habitual upright walker, yet this is what most textbooks boast.
So, and you are free to check these things out on your own, the idea that the body that covered this skeletal form was necessarily an upright walking 'man/monkey' is based on fairly flimsy evidence.
I Love Lucy?
If you pull up and read the attached article, you will find that the remaining 'evidence' is that there were seemingly human footprints found in the area. Now, the evolutionary theory suggests that these footprints must have come from 'Lucy' because man wasn't around yet, otherwise she doesn't qualify as an intermediate form. The biblical model would be that man was around and while 'Lucy' swung from the trees and ate bananas, man walked around underneath her just like in an old Tarzan movie. The flood came and entombed Lucy on the ground right beside the footprints that were entombed at the same time. So, suffice it to say, that this find of some few broken bones doesn't really 'confirm as true' any evolutionary hypothesis. There are answers for both positions. I'll stick with God's truth.
often sacrificing sleep and time with families, by claiming that they haven't considered that the weight of earth would warp a skeleton.
Oh my, now I'm to consider that because scientists make great sacrifices akin to our brave soldiers in Afghanistan, they should be believed. Uh, no, I'm afraid it's going to take a bit more than feeling sorry for someone for me to believe them. I feel sorry for drug addicts but I don't necessarily believe them when they want to borrow a few dollars to buy 'groceries'. I can well imagine that the magicians of Pharoah may well have lost considerable sleep and time with family trying to figure out how to copy the many miracles God performed through Moses, but I'm not going to allow that sorrow for them to cause me to believe them. I just want to see and consider all the facts and if there is any way, yes, any way that I can align those 'facts' with the account of Scripture, then I'm going with that alignment. However, each man is free to choose what he will store in his cranium as the evidence of the 'facts'.
God bless you.
In Christ, Ted