SuperSaint4GodDBZStyle
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Also Servant. How long have you been a scientist and what do you have a degree in?
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So an obvious question (and a very sincere one) for all of the theistic evolutionists here is then this: how do you rationalize your Christian beliefs with your scientific endeavors?
I agree Servant. My favorite car is the Mistubishi Evolution Lancer. This is a good example of micro-evolution in which we observe. They have all these different types of Evo's from Japan but it doesn't turn into a Galant, it stays in the form of Lancer. As God created man, this is an example of Man creating cars. But many evolutionists say that it must be naturalistic, but it just can't happen without the help of a Creator.
I am not a biologist; my expertise is in geology and engineering so please bear with me if I appear to be ignorant of the language biologists use, and haven't read all the peer-reviewed papers in a field other than my own. But don't evolutionary biologists believe in the "tree of life"- that through natural selection, a single, accidentally-formed simple living cell produced every species seen today?
Well, according to evidence, it points that all of life descended from a common ancestor, and that all the fossils we found were not extant at the same time. Likewise, many Christians believe that there was a global Flood in the past 6000 years, but as a geologist, you know that there is no evidence for a global Flood as described in the Bible. How do you reconcile your field with Flood geology or YECism?Many Christians subscribe to the notion that God created most individual species, including humans, in one instant of creation. Some of those individual living species (like dinosaurs) became extinct, others evolved to produce the variations that we see in each species (Europeans, Asians, Afro-Americans, First Nations, etc.; which begs the interesting question of what race Adam and Eve were).
So one theory is that life began as a single point, the other that life started from many points- all created by God in one instant of creation, as described in Genesis.
You're basically making the same claims as the Creationists when it comes to evolution. There's lots of evidence, but unless you're in the field or take time out to study it, you may think that it's based on assumptions, when in fact, common descent is a conclusion based on evidence. You may think that common descent is not scientific, but to the scientists that actually work in the field, they follow the exact same scientific method as you and other geologists. Does this make sense?
It does- and I stand corrected.
But your last point is worth expanding on. Until the exploratory voyages in the Mediterranean Sea of the research vessel Glomar Challenger in the 1970's, no one ever dreamed that a massive flood of Biblical proportions was possible.
However, the data collected by the team led by Kenneth J. Hsu indicates that at some point in the past (I'm deliberately leaving out the dates to avoid sidetracking controversies), northward movement of the African plate closed off the Mediterranean at the strait of Gibraltar, which then in turn caused the Mediterranean Sea to dry up (more water evaporates from its surface than comes in from its contributary basins). This encouraged civilized enclaves that bordered the Mediterranean to move down hill as the waters receded. Eventually, continued movement of the African plate caused downwarping of the land bridge at Gibraltar, and allowed a sudden and massive flood of Atlantic ocean water to inundate the entire Mediterranean basin. Now I realize that this was not a global flood as described in the Bible, but it was certainly an event that would have registered quite strongly with the people of that era, and caused massive destruction.
To get the full story, one really should go back to the original papers written by Hsu on this subject; the best that I have is in a special oceanographic volume of Scientific American published in 1977 or so.
Species don't evolve into another already existing genus. Dogs will never evolve into cats, but a distant ancestor evolved into both dogs and cats. Your Lancer could never evolve across into a Galant, does that mean they didn't have a common ancestor? Your Mitsubishi and my Renault, all of the cars and trucks we see today have a common ancestor in the 1885 Benz Patent Motorwagen.I agree Servant. My favorite car is the Mistubishi Evolution Lancer. This is a good example of micro-evolution in which we observe. They have all these different types of Evo's from Japan but it doesn't turn into a Galant, it stays in the form of Lancer. As God created man, this is an example of Man creating cars. But many evolutionists say that it must be naturalistic, but it just can't happen without the help of a Creator.
So an obvious question (and a very sincere one) for all of the theistic evolutionists here is then this: how do you rationalize your Christian beliefs with your scientific endeavors? Is it simply that you believe that God used the mechanism of evolution to produce the multitude of species that we see today? Or, as I suspect, is it more profound than that?
The original thinking was that the earth was young. Old isn't the default; young is. People switched to thinking the earth was old because of the evidence, not because of some ingrained fundamentalism.Servant a lot of people suggest the earth is old because that they have thought like that for a long time and it is very difficult to change your thinking.
Nah, they suggest that because the earth really is old and know this because of a freaking enormous body of empirical evidence that attests to this.Servant a lot of people suggest the earth is old because that they have thought like that for a long time and it is very difficult to change your thinking.
no. to be accurate you take your interpretation of what Scripture says to be authoritative and absolute Truth. unless you are God Himself, your interpretation is not the same thing as what the Scriptures say, but rather a human attempt to understand them, and therefore as frail and erring as all human thought is.I object really. Becuase I believe on the actually 6day account that God said in the Bible. So, I take God's word as absolute truth.
"God's Word is the judge, not majority opinion." - Quote from Dr. Kent Hovind.
You're not taking God's word as truth, though. You're taking a literal interpretation of God's word, that happens to be glaringly incorrect, as truth.I object really. Becuase I believe on the actually 6day account that God said in the Bible. So, I take God's word as absolute truth.