shernren
you are not reading this.
- Feb 17, 2005
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Oh I'm quite sure that number two is correct. But if you feel duped, even by a small percentage, you aren't quick to jump on any bandwagon. A lot of theistic evolutionists I've talked to quickly disregard creationism and call the leaders of the creationist movement willful liars who care more about making a buck than doing any real research.
To be quite frank, there are more adulterous pastors than there are evolution frauds or rude TEs, whether by absolute number or by proportion. And yet I see a lot of churches jump on the whole "pastor" bandwagon.
Simply claiming that everyone's jumping on its bandwagon doesn't necessarily make an idea false.
All I'm saying is that if creationism happened the way the bible says it did, then all science is misled. You can't experiment a supernatural act of God. And people have told me then that God is a liar and nothing in His character shows that He would do it in six literal days, but then I think that's a justification. Because God's own word says how it was done. If you choose a scientist's word over the bible, that's your own choice. But God put forth the Sabbath based upon the seven day week He instituted in the bible as well. I don't see where God's character fits with evolution more than creation when everything I've seen of God points towards the seven-day creation.
Now I don't happen to agree with the "God is a liar if science is wrong" argument, as this post explains. But that doesn't stop me from believing that we have fairly good reason to believe that science is right. Check out this post on why I think it would be an aberration for God to create, or cause a global flood, and then leave plenty of evidence to the contrary.
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