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SteveB28
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I don't believe in evolution because I am a Christian, meaning "Of Christ."
And yet, millions of people who accept evolution are also Christians. This does not seem a very effective yardstick for determining that acceptance, one way or the other.
Christ is certainly no evolutionist. He taught that the Scriptures were the inspired word of God and could be counted on for accuracy. He quoted extensively from the Scriptures and told us that if we didn't believe the words of Moses then we wouldn't believe in Him either. The stories of creation, Cain and Able, Noah and the flood and Lot's experiences were references as historical facts. Jesus, who was there at the time, knows the difference between mythology and reality. If the Lord believes in the special creation of man than who am I to reject it?
How does any of this relate specifically to a justification for the rejection of evolutionary theory? It seems to be nothing more than a very general ontological ramble at this stage.
And for what? Theories of man? Prepositions of those enshrouded in their own convictions for whom everything must have a scientific explanation? The 333 miracles listed in the Bible have no scientific explanation, so we must either reject them all or come to understand that the Creator, not the laws of physics, is the ultimate lord of the universe. If we live in a purely physical world there can be no miracles. The dead cannot come back to life, so how can we call ourselves scientific if we believe in a resurrected Christ? How do we call ourselves Christians if we do not?
And this seems to be no more than a general condemnation of the scientific method. It could be used just as specifically to doubt gravitational theory. Where does it explain a rejection of evolutionary theory in particular?
Do living things change over time? Indeed.
At last!
How else could so many varied species come from the more limited pairs of animals on the ark?
A premise for which no evidence exists - in fact, all available evidence, particularly genetic evidence, refutes such a baseless assertion.
However, as we observe adaptation we can see that it is a conservative process whereby traits are extinguished or accentuated but never newly acquired.
Incorrect. We have multitudes of evidence for the acquisition of new traits in living things. You have some in your own body, as do I.
Experiments to demonstrate evolution only demonstrated that it doesn't happen.
Your problem here is that we have conducted experiments in which we can observing it happen in real time!
I don't believe the evolutionist for the same reason I don't believe the atheist who says "There is no God."
That atheist would be a very rare creature. No one worth his logical salt makes such definitive statements.
I know better.
Thank you, but we are already aware of the hubris of the religious.
God created man.
Baseless assertion. One with which the majority of your fellow Christians disagree.
He didn't evolve man.
Agreed!
Were it different He would have told us.
Yes, it's amazing the number of things he didn't tell us, isn't it? All of his knowledge seems to strike a chronological barrier of about 2000 years ago. Strange - it's almost as if.........
It isn't supposed to be easy to believe. Faith is hard.
"Impossible" would be probably a more useful descriptor.
We are surrounded by people who try to undermine our faith, many of them thinking that they are only educating a poor, misguided soul who has refused to worship at the altar of Darwinism. The true lies not in the rocks, but with the Lord who created the rocks.
I have never met a former religious person who did not lose his faith of his own accord. Perhaps you could show me one of these unfortunate "undermined" individuals?
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