Assyrian
Basically pulling an Obama (Thanks Calminian!)
That is still mishpachah not the word kind miyn.I didn't say I couldn't support it but that I have done what I could. To me, the support has been accomplished and there is nothing more I can say to bolster it further. You accept it or you don't. I repeat....Kinds, as described in the Blue Letter Linear are.....families, kindred, kinds, clan, tribe, species.So, where it is written that they were to "bring forth the living creature after their kind," means they/we are to produce offspring within one's family, one's lineage, one's species...one's kind.
Kinds, as described in the dictionary are...nature, family, lineage, category
However mishpachah is even closer to the nested hierarchy evolution produces than miyn which simply refers to different varieties. The mishpachah of a nation like Israel are descended from a common ancestor Jacob, but they are not simply just the one mishpachah, that mishpachah has diverged too. From that common ancestor and his mishpachah are derived the mishpachoth of the tribes of Israel, within each tribe and descended from their common ancestor Judah or Benjamin, are the mishpachoth of the different clans, within each clan are the mishpachoth of families.
His chosen ones were already men, who when they were prosperous owned plenty of livestock. This is a promise of restoration Jer 31:28 I will watch over them to build and to plant, declares the LORD. The house of Israel and the house of Judah referred to the northern kingdom of Israel and the kingdom of Judah that all Israel was divided into after the death of Solomon.The two, house of Israel (Christians) and house of Judah (Jews), are one nation, His holy nation...for all twelve tribes comprise the nation of Israel. In the above verse He doesn't say He will increase populations but that He will sow His chosen ones with "seed of man, seed of beast." Does that mean that the three types will intermingle producing mixed offspring or that He will place us among man and beast (both being humans) in order to teach? I don't know.
Where does the verse in Jeremiah distinguish literal beasts and beastly men?The above verse in Jeremiah shows the difference in literal beasts and man being referred to as beast.
This is the Assyrian king speaking here, so don't expect him to be that familiar with biblical metaphors. However it isn't lions and tigers and bears he is talking about (oh my!)I'll add....Jonah 3:8 But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God: yea, let them turn every one from his evil way, and from the violence that is in their hands.A literal beast, tiger, bear, etc....doesn't cry unto God and change their evil ways. The ways of a literal beast are not evil for they live as God intended them to. It is humanity that must turn from their ways.
It is livestock, behemah, the cattle and sheep that were to be covered with sackcloth like the people were, and denied food and water until they cried out to God. Jonah 3:7 "By the decree of the king and his nobles: Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste anything. Let them not feed or drink water, 8 but let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and let them call out mightily to God. Let everyone turn from his evil way and from the violence that is in his hands.
I am pretty sure the livestock would have cried out mightily as a result, you could even argue they cried out to God Job 38:41. I doubt the Assyrian king actually thought the animals lived evil lives, what he was doing was including the whole city, man and beast, in a single corporate act of repentance, the cries of man and beast reaching to the heavens.
Cherubim? Oh you mean the other beasts. Of course. I am not denying the bible uses beast a metaphor for people, or a symbol for angelic beings, just that you can't say every reference to a beast refers to beastly men there is certainly no basis for saying 'beast of the field' refers to people and 'beasts of the earth' are all animals.Consider too who the beasts of Revelation are.
Like 'beast of the field' and 'beast of the earth' may be different ways to refer to the same creatures?Your question about "God," and the "Lord God," in the two chapters I overlooked. And, I must say, I really never noticed or thought about that difference before. Interesting question.
They are different titles for the same being. For instance, God or Elohim, is connected with creation, God is the Creator. Other titles are The Lord = Yahveh, The LORD (all caps) = Adonai, Almighty = Shaddai, Most High = Elyon.
It is the same with people. Father, son, husband, friend, scientist, football fan, Christian...different names/titles but all are the same being.
Luke wrote about Jesus too and Jesus existed from the beginning, does that mean Luke wrote Genesis?Specifically? No. Nor is it written that Moses penned Deuteronomy, or Leviticus but....we know he did. However, it is written.....John 5:46 For had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed Me; for he wrote of Me.God tells us that Moses wrote of Jesus. Jesus was "in the beginning," or in the genesis of creation and He made all things. So, Moses wrote of Him in the beginning, in the genesis....Moses penned Genesis.
John 1:1-4 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by Him; and without Him was not any thing made that was made. In Him was life; and the life was the light of men.
What has that claim got to do with whether the title in Gen 2:4 refers to Genesis 1, Genesis 2 or the whole of Genesis 1 & 2? What specifically does 'these' in 'these are the generations' refer to?All things were created within that time frame....all things and that includes all the generations of the created entities. Those future generations are in the seed. The seed of man is either heaven or is earth. We are "of the earth" and upon receiving salvation...we are then of the heavens.There is some debate about whether the title refers to the days of creation in Gen 1:1-2:3, or the the following account of Adam and Eve in the garden. But I am happy with it referring to the previous section as you say. The thing is, it means the creation account in Gen 1:1-2:3 finishes here. these are the generations of the heavens and of the earth, "these" refers to Gen 1:1-2:3. From Gen 2:5 on, is not part of "these" in Gen 2:4, it is a different document.
I have mentioned to you before that you just confuse the issue referring to 'literal' events. What you mean is real events it is the description that are literal or metaphorical. God bringing the Israelites out of Egypt on eagles' wing is a metaphorical description of a real event. If the eagles' wings are not literal, why do you think the metaphors you see in Genesis have to be literal? You take the plants of the field as a metaphor in Genesis 2 because the bible speaks of people as wheat and tares, we the bible talks of God being a potter making people and nations from clay, it is a very common biblical metaphor, if you take the plants of the field as a metaphor, why not God making Adam from clay? Did you know that the word for potter is the same word used used for God forming Adam?Yes, it speaks metaphorically but it speaks of literal events and entities. Adam was literal and God formed him to be the first man in the line to the Savior. The herb of the field is a metaphor but it represents people...real people. Same with beasts. I'm not sure what your point is about the clay???
Evolution not being mentioned in scripture isn't relevant when heliocentrism isn't mentioned either. The fact you think you understand the scripture, and you think the geocentrists got it wrong makes absolutely no difference to the problem. The geocentrists though they understood the written word too. Why should I believe you instead of science, but believe science instead of the geocentrists? How do I tell you apart?Yes, the same would apply. But, we have the written word and need not rely on anyone's interpretation. This takes us back to the beginning of the thread. The Creation is written...evolution is not even hinted at. To believe evolution you must overlook what is written.Clearly, but the same applies to creationist interpretations of Genesis. Why should we think geocentrists were mistaken because science contradicted their interpretation, but when science contradicts your interpretaiton it must be science that is wrong?
So why would the flowery language of Adam being made from clay contradict evolution, when the flowery language of God bearing the Israelites out of Egypt on eagle's wing's does not contradict the real event where they walked out?The metaphorical words, such as eagle's wings, is just a flowery, poetic way of telling the true story. He is the eagle and His wings protect and carry us away from harm, away from bondage. As the eagle and His wings are a metaphor for the literal God the clay is a metaphor for the literal makeup of earth and water....flesh and spirit. Adam was flesh/earth and God formed him with living water...He molded the earth/water - the clay and.......If you take the metaphorical words literally, the Isrelites flew out of Egypt which tells a different story from the literal account of them walking. It is exactly the same in Genesis. If you take the Genesis account literally and God made Adam from a lump of clay then clearly that contradicts mankind evolving, but if God making Adam from clay is a metaphor, just like "you are the potter and we are the clay", then there is no contradiction. It tells us a different aspect of the story, like God carrying the Israelites on Eagles' wings, but it doesn't tell a different story.Genesis 2:7 And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.It is the same with us if we are to be of the "heavens." It is His Spirit, and the living water/His Words/Truth that gives us life....true life:
Psalms 33:6 By the word of the LORD were the heavens made; And all the host of them by the breath of His mouth.
If you take one time scale metaphorically, what makes you think the the other one isn't metaphorical too? You are big into numbers being symbolic, seven is the most symbolic number in the bible. We even see how the seven day creation is used in scripture to illustrate the Sabbath, which is a symbol of all we have in Christ. Actually I just remembered you take the timescale in Genesis 1 metaphorically too. So timescale really isn't an issue.Mankind was created on the sixth day however of those men...."there was not a man to till the ground." Why? Because until that time men weren't given His Words, "for the LORD God had not caused it to rain upon the earth." The rain is knowledge and understanding. Man/earth wasn't yet ready....Genesis 2:5 And every plant of the field before it was in the earth, and every herb of the field before it grew: for the LORD God had not caused it to rain upon the earth, and there was not a man to till the ground.So Adam was formed to "till the ground" or to bring knowledge and understanding to the earth/mankind by planting seeds of truth. The plants, trees, herbs (men) were here but not the rain that would turn dry earth into malleable clay so it could be formed. This continues today. We are nothing more than trees, plants....dry earth until His Spirit forms us into a child of God.
You don't agree that he did? Or you don't agree that he could? Not agreeing he did is fine, you are a creationists. But it doesn't mean God couldn't make man in his image through evolution, and so it means evolution does not contradict God creating man in his image. No agreeing God could do it simply limits God.I understand you thinking that but....I don't agree.You need to explain this because I see no reason why God is able to make man in his image using mud, but isn't able to make man in his image through evolution. It isn't a problem with evolution, just you limiting God.
You don't take the time frame literally. Creating people, along with describing them being made from clay, if perfectly compatible with the having a normal biological origin. The smith God created was born naturally, God said he created Jacob and formed Israel, that Israel was the clay the God the potter formed. Yet there is contradiction with normal biology going on there too. Being formed in God's image is not incompatible with God using evolution. As we have see God commanding the earth to produce the differnt kinds does not contradict evolution either. Is ther anything in scripture that contradicts evolution apart from God making people from clay, which contradicts human reproductive biology as well as evolution, but only if you make the mistake of taking it literally.Along with man being earth and water (which fits into evolution) you have a set time-frame, you have man being created, not evolving, and being created in His image and His likeness, and of entities being restricted to producing within their own kinds/species....none of which coordinate with evolution.
Ok, but don't forget you are claiming scripture contradicts evolution. You need more than a draw here, and none of the other points hold either.You're right. That wouldn't be a contradiction. Being male and female from the beginning...with either creation or evolution is a draw. But, there are still other points to consider.
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