Are you serious? Don't you think that most sides in these arguments might think the other has introduced theories and ideas that are completely contrary to the text? Of course what is really happening is that the ideas are completely contrary to their interpretation of the text.
That's one way of looking at it, I happen to see it differently.
Care to back it up?
What you said was:
In order for Scripture to mean anything, one has to be able to trust it and rely on it. Only TEs and those Christians who believe homosexuality is fine seem to continually make the challenge "that is your interpretation." Why is that? That's the same challenge I hear from atheists. If that's the standard answer how can it be considered truth for you?
You seem to be answering the suggestion that you are misinterpreting scipture, (1) By lumping TEs with homosexuals and atheists and (2) You defend you interpretation as being what the bible means, by saying if you can't rely on and trust on scripture it is meaningless.
Of course if you meant something else, please say.
Of course, if you approach Scripture as an absolute source of truth you can't be vague about how you see it. Then again if you approach it from a relativistic point of view, then you allow lots of interpretations.
Given that none of us approach scripture from a relativistic point of view, I don't see the point in making that statement other than to smear TEs again.
What allows lots of interpretations is the simple human inability to understand the mind of God and all that he has revealed in scripture, especially when God seem to think the best way to communicate spiritual truth to flesh and blood man is through allegory metaphor and symbolism.
No it is just the assumption that when you do interpret a passage, you know when your interpretation is infallible.
If I believe it why shouldn't I proclaim it? If I'm wrong there will be more than enough people available to tell me and then prove it, otherwise I'll continue to proclaim it loudly and frequently.
We do tell you your infallible interpretation is wrong. but you don't believe us when we show you because you believe your interpretation is infallible.
I have had similar conversations with Catholics about the Pope.
To man and his theories yes, but not to God and His Word.
Scientific theories should be held accountable to the world God created and religious theories should be held accountable to the word of God.
If you want to hold science accountable to religious dogma we are left back with the Inquisition trying Galileo and that was not good for science or the church.
Science is good at studying the natural world. I understand that the church, and let's be clear that was primarily the Catholic church, got theology and science mixed up and they were clearly wrong. It wasn't the first time and it wasn't the last. The church should stick to theology and let science deal with its realm of study. It's only when science intrudes into theology or vice-versa that a problem occurs. It's a problem for theology (like geocentricism) when the Scriptures don't speak on a subject and likewise with science when it speaks to theological issues without adequate proof or authority.
I agree with most of this except you claim scripture didn't speak about geocentrism. A literal inerrant interpretation speaks very clearly about geocentrism, which was the problem all church leaders Catholic and Protestant had with Copernicus. Luther, Melanchton and Calvin were all clear on the geocentrism of the bible.
The question is, when is science intruding into theology and theology intruding into science? I would say science is intruding into theology when people try to use it as a basis for morality or the existance of God ("We have found a gay gene, homosexuality is natural therefore homosexuality is good", Social Darwinisms ruthlessness is the natural way, or Dawkins claim science disproves God.) However anytime the bible makes claims about the natural world, or people's interpretations say the bible is making claims about the natural world, then these claims have entered the realm where they are open to naturalistic investigation. 1Cor 15:14
If Christ has not been raised then your faith is in vain. Deut 18:22
when a prophet speaks in the name of the LORD, if the word does not come to pass or come true, that is a word that the LORD has not spoken; the prophet has spoken it presumptuously. You need not be afraid of him. Jer 28:8
The prophets who preceded you and me from ancient times prophesied war, famine, and pestilence against many countries and great kingdoms. 9 As for the prophet who prophesies peace, when the word of that prophet comes to pass, then it will be known that the LORD has truly sent the prophet." When the word of speaks about the natural world it can be tested against the natural world.
It does if the ‘science’ is preaching against God’s Word.
Deciding science is preaching against God's word is not 'Wait and see'.
Well then I suppose we’re wrong about being created in God’s image since science shows we were created through natural selection. There probably isn’t much we’ve gotten right and that’s why we need science so that we can straighten out all the bad theology. I Got it!
No you haven't. You are confusing
how were were formed with why. There is no more contradiction between God using evolution to make us and making us in God's image, than there is between God making us out of clay and making us in his image. Or do chapters 1 & 2 contradict each other?
I believe God describing His Creation week to be very foundational, geocentricism has little to no value.
Clearly you do believe it is foundation but you haven't given us any evidence for the claim. As far as I can see you believe it is foundational because it was meant literally, but if it wasn't meant literally then that falls apart. It is a circular argument. You have show no biblical doctrines that have a six day creation as their foundation. While the teaching that God is creator
is foundation and is brought up and retaught again and again through out the OT and New, no one ever taught a six day creation or suggested it was in any way important. The only place it comes up is in Exodus, not because a six day creation is being taught, but because it is being used as an illustration (in thew middle of a metaphor) for something the OT actually did hold to be important, the Sabbath. If it is foundational why did no one take the six days of Genesis days and teach them?
Science isn’t wrong, scientist are.
Simply claiming the scientists are wrong does not solve the problem that your hermeneutic is incapable of showing you when science, or scientists are wrong. Your claim your hermeneutic shows you science is wrong, but it would not have shown you the right answer with geocentrism.
Far from it, the worst attacks to Christianity and the Bible come from “believers.”
Paul was not talking about believers attacking the bible or Christianity, but the
behaviour of believers leading to the Gentiles blaspheming the Name of God.
Wouldn’t a better approach to Scripture be that everything within it is true no matter what because God said it. I think the crux of the problem is you don’t believe God said it. If you don’t understand a statement and that statement can be disproved via a scientific process, then the statement is false. Given that I don’t know the original language and environment that these verses come from, I’m not in a position to challenge their authenticity. I don’t believe the Bible teaches either a flat earth or round one, heliocentricism or geocentricism.
...six day creationism or 4.5 billion years.
I have no problem with your statement here. The difficulty I have is with your inconsistency. You reject the literal flat earth and geocentric readings because you know and accept the science. But you refuse to take the same approach with six day creationism. You don't see a problem with holding the truth of God's word and denying geocentrism and a flat earth. In fact you see the denial of flat earth and geocentrist readings as
upholding the truth of Gods word. But you think that doing the exact same thing with the literal six days is denying the truth of God's word
My research has shown a different answer,
Do share, because so far your hermeneutic has been unable to deal with the question.
but that really isn’t the issue here because ultimately you see Jesus either lying or being ignorant and I see neither. If you don’t then explain what it is you do see. Sometimes I get the distinct impression I’m arguing with an atheist, someone who can’t wait to disprove their little pet Scriptures.
No, It is just your pet hermeneutic I am having a go at. I am taking this literalist hermeneutic, a human construct that thinks it has God's word in a box, and seeing how it stands up to the word of God. But Aslan is not a tame lion.
You are simply refusing to accept the plain and simple literal meaning of what Jesus said, because you know it contradicts science. Your hermeneutic does not get you a way out of this so you correctly ignore your hermeneutic.
I don’t reject the plain and simple literal meaning because it contradicts science, I do so because it contradicts the very nature of God. The nature of God is Truth, He cannot lie and that is the first rule of my hermeneutics, as it should be for all.
You only know it would be a lie because of naturalistic research. You can measure the size of a poppy seed and a mustard seed. It is no different from science measuring the age of rock and showing a six day interpretation was wrong, or science measuring the motion of the planets and showing that it was the earth that rotated instead of the sun moving around the earth.
In each case you have a choice between
(1) believing God lied,
(2) believing, in faith, that the scientific measurement is wrong. Or
(3) believing the literal reading is a misunderstanding of what God's word said.
We both believe (1) is wrong. God does not lie. You are right to have it as the first rule of hermeneutics. That does not automatically lead to (3) with mustard seeds and geocentrism. You hermeneutic says you must choose (2) Go for the literal reading if it makes sense, which they do. Do not allow things outside scripture (scientific evidence) to influence your interpretation of scripture. Only scripture can influence your interpretation of scripture.
These are very simple hermeneutic rules, very easy to apply, and they give the wrong answer.
Yeah that’s quite a stretch for me to do, taking the liberty and assuming the text to read like there were six days when it is in fact it is clearly implied to be much, much more than that. Psalm 90 has shown us that, why couldn’t I see that without you?
Because you listening to too many YEC preachers rather than reading the word of God has to say for itself?
Good except for when you use ‘the science’ I would substitute ‘our scientific understanding.’
Does that mean you are dropping the David Cooper quote in your sig?
Creation doesn’t tell me anything even remotely similar to what it tells you.
Does it tell you the earth rotates?
Just because Jesus said he was a shepherd it doesn't mean he was.
As you’re free to believe.
You believe he was actually a shepherd? What ever happened to carpenter?
I don’t know but when I read that I see God telling us about His eternal nature. When He says that “a thousand years are nothing to God’s eternity” and that there is no proportion to His eternal Mind I saw that as a reminder of how totally frail we are and how divine He is. We can’t even accurately describe what we did in the last hour, but God can tell us everything over eternity. I could go on but I’m sure I’d be showing my lack of intellect and my bound nature when I fail to see how those days tell us about the creation days.
It is amazing how you can read such a vague and general meaning to the word day in Psalm 90 while in Genesis 1 it has to be absolutely, no other option, 24 hours, and nothing else. It is amazing how you can see no connection between Genesis mentioning days and Moses talking about God's days in a Psalm about the creation. Shouldn't we allow scripture to interpret scripture? Shouldn't we allow the only person to mention creation days in the whole bible to tell us about God's days in his Psalm about creation?
Sorry of course not. If you did it would mean giving up six day creationism. That can't possibly be allowed
