Assyrian
Basically pulling an Obama (Thanks Calminian!)
Again what has this got to do with the Oxford English dictionary definitions of Creationism and Creationist? You keep changing the subject Mark, swapping from the point I just refuted you to different claims I have refuted somewhere else and you changed the subject then too.What I said was that Creationism as doctrine is defined by the Scriptures. The canon of Scripture is found in the original and Oxford was commenting on one facet of Creationism, not the Biblical doctrine. When I introduced the actual definition from Vine's and other Lexicons you simply rejected the Vine's and offered nothing in defense of you 'interpretation' of the text. I don't know what you think your accomplishing here but you moving further away from an understanding of the Scriptures.
See you changed the subject again. Here is what I asked you:was created from the earth for the earth, his body was made from dust. If you want to take that figuratively that's your prerogative but that doesn't make it a valid exposition of the text. Adam is our first parent according to every New Testament witness and the overwhelming consensus of Christian scholarship. Parts of the Genesis 1 account have been erroneously been rationalized away as figurative, 'day' and 'dust' are not figurative but so be it. You may not believe it but that doesn't give you the right to dictate how it reads.
Now would you care to comment on the difference between modern Creationists who insist the literal interpretation of Genesis is vital and literalists in the early church who had no problem with other Christians interpreting the Genesis creation accounts figuratively?
You didn't answer me Mark. I asked you why you changed the subjectBara is ex nihilo creation, you in denial. Only once is it used in the perfect tense, which isn't a reference in time but of completion. I know it will make no difference since you can't handle a basic exposition for there is the exegetical treatment for the grammatical construction. Pay attention to what's being created and try to understand, it's used exclusively of divine activity:Qal Perfect Genesis 1:1 19t.; Imperfect יִבְרָא Genesis 1:21,27; Numbers 16:30; Infinitive בְּראֹ Genesis 5:1; Imperative בְּרָא Psalm 51:12; Participle בּוֺרֵא Isaiah 42:5 10t.; suffix בֹּרַאֲךָ Isaiah 43:1; בּוֺרְאֶיךָ Ecclesiastes 12:1; — shape, fashion, create, always of divine activity (Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon)There's nothing left to be learned, drawn out of the text or explained. We did the exact same thing with Adam in the New Testament and you wouldn't listen then either. I made every effort to show you plainly what the word means and why it's the basis for creation as doctrine and you preferred a superficial secular source of the the Scriptures and Christian scholarship. So be it.
Mark: Creation is a doctrinal issue, I think you know that.
Assyrian: Of course it is. The issue is with you confusing the doctrine of Creation with Creationism. I think you know that, I said it to you often enough.
Mark changes the subject to bara being ex nihilo: Chanting it like a mantra doesn't make it substantive...Creation is an English word that is translated from at least three Hebrew words, sometimes used interchangeably. Certain forms of 'bara' and in certain contexts render it an ex nihilo...
Assyrian points our you just changed the subject: And you change the subject again Mark
I talked about you confusing the doctrine of Creation and Creationism. You reply by saying bara is ex nihilo.
Mark continues on with the changed subject: Bara is ex nihilo creation, you in denial...
Perhaps you are the one in denial and you can't deal with the fact you have to keep changing the subject.Mark changes the subject to bara being ex nihilo: Chanting it like a mantra doesn't make it substantive...Creation is an English word that is translated from at least three Hebrew words, sometimes used interchangeably. Certain forms of 'bara' and in certain contexts render it an ex nihilo...
Assyrian points our you just changed the subject: And you change the subject again Mark

Mark continues on with the changed subject: Bara is ex nihilo creation, you in denial...
Incidentally, bara is not only used once in the qal perfect in Gen 1:1, it is also Qal Perfect 1:27 (twice), 2:3, 5:2, 6:7, Deut 4:32 Psalm 89:2, Isaiah 40:26, 41:20 (myrtle and cyprus), 43:7 (people), 45:8, 12 & 18, 48:7, 54:16 (twice: the blacksmith and the waster), Jer 31:22 and Mal 2:7 (everyone). See where you quoted BDB and it says:
Qal Perfect Genesis 1:1 19t.
That means it is used in the Qal Perfect 19 times. I have just listed them for you, if you notice, it refers to God creating the blacksmith and waster, and the myrtle bushes and Cyprus trees. The blacksmith was born through natural processes and trees and shrubs grow from seeds.
bara is also used in the Niphal Perfect, Niphal is the passive form of Qal they were created. We find it in Psalm 148:5, Isaiah 48:7 (they are created now) and Ezek 21:30 (the creation of a nation).
You are right to say the Perfect refers to a complete action rather than the time the action takes place at. Your mistake is thinking this means bara is being used in some sort of absolute and ex nihilo sense. It doesn't, it simply means the action that is incomplete in the Imperfect is finished and completed in the Perfect. The Perfect doesn't describe a different sense of a verb than other forms, it isn't more absolute, it just means the work is finished. while the blacksmith's mother was pregnant and while his father was still training him, the blacksmith was still being created (Imperfect). Looking at the completed creation, and you can look at a completed work still to come, you use the Perfect....Bara is ex nihilo creation, you in denial. Only once is it used in the perfect tense, which isn't a reference in time but of completion...
You have made this same mistake before in Creationism Darwinism and Natural History, I even gave you a link explaining the Hebrew Perfect. I also showed other passages like the blacksmith one which used bara in the Qal Perfect too. You just claimed I was wrong, then I quote a KJV TVM (Tense Voice and Mood) which gives not just Strongs numbers for the words, but the forms of verbs, and showed you where the Hebrew uses the Perfect form of bara. That was the last post in the thread, you never replied.
We were discussing you claimFor the last time, you don't get to dismiss an historical narrative as figurative because you don't happen to believe it. If there were figurative language there would have been a 'like' or 'as', whether explicit or implied. There is no such language in the text and 'bara' is never used figuratively. An act of God cannot be figurative, I don't know why you don't see the sheer absurdity of what you are arguing but you arguing it in circles.
I take the creation account literally because I take the Creator literally.
Now you are changing the subject from one (bad) argument for literalism, which is what I addressed, to a different (bad) argument for literalism. Why do you keep changing the subject Mark why can't you answer me when I take your arguments apart? I can only assume that you can't.
There was no 'like' or 'as' in Exodus 19:4 You yourselves have seen what I did to the Egyptians, and how I bore you on eagles' wings and brought you to myself. In fact the verse sound as though it talking about literal events the Israelites witnessed themselves. Of course it contradicts other descriptions of the Exodus, but that has never stopped literalists before from find ways to force seemingly contradictory descriptions to fit each other.
How about addressing my point that the science of evolution is much broader than than the allele change definition and includes the mechanisms behind the changes and the the study of the evolutionary history of life on earth?Every single time I have managed to get an evolutionist to produce a definition it was the change of alleles in populations over time. The a priori assumption of exclusively naturalistic causes are never a part of the definition from the genuine article of science. Again, I don't know why you cant or won't understand the difference between Darwinian logic and evolution, Creation and Creation science, science and supposition but that's on you, I am really out of time for this.
I asked you why you keep confusing creationism and the doctrine of Creation.I have always said that Creation as doctrine and Creation Science are discernibly different. They stem from the same transcendent, hermeneutic that is mutually exclusive with the naturalistic assumptions you defend. The issue here was never semantics, it's a doctrinal issue. You must be a creationist in order to be a Christian, you can't say the same thing for Theistic Evolution now can you?
What do you do?
You change the subject to the doctrine of Creation and Creation Science.
And them you repeat original mistake all over again conflating believing in Creation and Creationist.
Amazing not a single point so far where you have answered my point and not changed the subject. Your next response isn't changing the point though, it is accusing me of 'pedantic hair splitting', followed by a 'nothing in the way of substantive proof', and another not answering the point, before you finally try to address a point I make by downplaying the extent of figurative interpretation in the early church.
You argued that Francis Bacon (1561–1626) argued against Creationism (1859-present OED), without presenting a single piece of evidence or argument to back you claim up. It is not pedantic to ask why you think he was arguing against creationism.Again with pedantic hair splitting. Darwinism always has been and always will be one long argument against Creation. I think you understand that, you just won't admit it.
The only reason you think I haven't made a single point stick is that you run away from them too fast too see. I regard any point you cannot address as well and truly stuck.You haven't made a single point stick, offered virtually nothing in the way of substantive proof and when soundly refuted you just repeat your original error.
I see you haven't answered my point.It's not now, nor has it ever been all or none. Original sin is essential doctrine, inextricably linked to original creation, undeniably requisite to accepting the Gospel. Your getting your theology twisted, I take that so much more seriously then I do whether or not you think we evolved from apes. You would to if you knew what you were saying.In fact Augustine's interpretation of the creation of Adam figuratively shows there was no contradiction between his doctrine of Original Sin and not taking the creation of Adam literally. Which is the position of TEs here who accept Adam and Eve were real people and believe an Original Sin, but don't take God making Adam from clay literally.
Not just days and dust, God planting the garden, making Eve from a rib, and walking in the cool of the evening. That is Genesis 1, large parts of Genesis 2 and part of Genesis 3 and that is what I was able to find in a fairly short search. i understand why you would want to downplay the extent of figurative interpretation of the Genesis Creation accounts in the early church, but that sort of denial is not healthy.They took 'day' figuratively and on occasion to 'dust' figuratively. They never took Adam or creation figuratively and all of them argued in the strongest possible terms for original sin. Your actually the only Theistic evolutionist I've seen plunge this deep into this kind of grievous error.
No what I have is a bible based theology that isn't bound up with 19th century literalism.I don't know what happened to you, I don't know why you are still doing this. Look around, the theater is empty. The Creationists never listened to you and the evolutionists have left the building. What you have now is a compromised theology and a secular philosophy that is opposed to anything remotely theistic. I'm not trying to read you your pedigree here, I honestly believe you were sold a bag of goods that can't deliver on the hype.
My concern if for Creationists who are convinced by all the evidence for evolution, that they will be able to see the modern literalism is reading the bible through modernist glasses and that there are better ways to understand God's word that don't contradict what we have learned about his amazing creation. This is of course a different question to Original Sin. As I mentioned before, I left Original Sin behind along with other Catholic doctrines like the Immaculate conception and Papal infallibility when I left the Catholic Church, long before I became a TE. There is nothing wrong with going back to scripture to see if it really teaches Original Sin. The reformation dropped many unscriptural doctrines, but Luther was an Augustinian and kept Augustine's doctrine, in fact they built much of their understanding of sin and the gospel around it, which it is why it is so difficult for Christians today to question their beliefs about it. But I have always wanted to base my understanding of the gospel of what the bible says about it, not the explanations that try to make scripture fit tradition.As I have always said, if your convinced that Darwinism has made it's case and can still hold to you faith, go in peace I have no problem with you. I do want to caution you that you are in serious error doctrinally and I cannot in good conscience continue this. I avoided doctrinal issues with Theistic Evolutionists for that very reason for years for that reason. Creationism as it's argued for and against for the most part is intellectual and philosophical, having no bearing on science or theology. That your doing is dangerous to both but most importantly, profoundly dangerous for you.
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