He did, in the preface, clearly state, 'being the result of law, and not of miraculous interposition.
That's not species, that's not genus, that's not a million years ago, that's not a billion years ago. That's transcendent, it is assumed through out all living systems, all periods of time, before the evidence is examined. It's metaphysics, not science.
Yes he did
So? Since when has the recognition of lawful processes in nature (such as the alternation of day and night, the cycle of the seasons, the growth of a plant from a seed, etc. etc.) been construed by Christians as a denial of God's creative activity relative to these natural phenomena?
No one is denying the laws of inheritance or God's divine providence, it is the Darwinian who makes an absolute, unqualified, categorical denial of God's activity.
All Darwin is saying is that the origin of species is of a similar nature--a matter of law, not miraculous interposition.
That is not all he is saying, that is where he is starting. Species for Darwin was synonymous variety and by that he meant all variety. This transcends all time and all life. You've made an obviously bogus statement that creationists deny God's activity in creation, then you want to rationalize Darwinian logic.
To misconstrue that as a denial of God's creative activity is to put God in a box of only being able to touch nature via miraculous interposition.
No, it's to recognize God's sovereign will and activity in creation. This is based on the clear testimony of Scripture, not just in Genesis but in every instance creation is mentioned in the New Testament. You are denying God's creative activity or do you need me to show you the real world meaning of the key word you are using?
You know my position as well as how Darwinian logic works, you just won't admit it. As many times as I have made the argument that Darwinism is an a priori assumption of naturalistic causes you have insisted on mischaracterizing, that is, giving false and misleading character to the substance of my arguments. My actual arguments you have abandoned and instead set up a strawman argument I have neither made nor endorse.
It is not the biblical position.
The clear, concise and consistent testimony of Scripture is that God created life over the period of 6 days. The New Testament further affirms not only this series of events but also the Flood and elaborate exposition of the sin of Adam and Eve.
The book of Romans tells us that God's invisible attributes and eternal nature have been clearly seen but we exchanged the truth of God for a lie (Rom 1:21,22). As a result the Law of Moses and the law of our own conscience bears witness against us, sometimes accusing, sometimes defending (Rom 2:15). We all sinned but now the righteousness of God has been revealed to be by faith through Christ (Rom 3:21). Abraham became the father of many nations by faith and the supernatural work of God (Rom 4:17). Through one man sin entered the world and through one man righteousness was revealed (Rom 5:12) or as others have seen it, Adams dragging everyone down into sin. It looks something like this:
1) Exchanging the truth of God for a lie, the creature for the Creator.
2) Both the Law and our conscience make our sin evident and obvious.
3) All sinned, but now the righteousness of God is revealed in Christ.
4) Abraham's lineage produced by a promise and a miracle through faith.
5) Through one man sin entered the world and death through sin.
6) Just as Christ was raised from the dead we walk in newness of life.
7) The law could not save but instead empowered sin to convict.
8) Freed from the law of sin and death (Adamic nature) we're saved.
The Scriptures offer an explanation for man's fallen nature, how we inherited it exactly is not important but when Adam and Eve sinned we did not fast. This is affirmed in the New Testament in no uncertain terms by Luke in his genealogy, in Paul's exposition of the Gospel in Romans and even Jesus called the marriage of Adam and Eve 'the beginning'.
You already know this but it's you who have a position that is beyond and opposed to the clear testimony of Scripture.
It is a quasi-Deist position.
Deism - in the philosophy of religion is the standpoint that reason and observation of the natural world, without the need for organized religion, can determine that the universe is a creation and has a creator. Furthermore, the term often implies that this supreme being does not intervene in human affairs or suspend the natural laws of the universe. Deists typically reject supernatural events such as prophecy and miracles, tending to assert that a god (or "the Supreme Architect") does not alter the universe by (regularly or ever) intervening in the affairs of human life. This idea is also known as the Clockwork universe theory, in which a god designs and builds the universe, but steps aside to let it run on its own. Deists believe in the existence of a god without any reliance on revealed religion, religious authority or holy books. Two main forms of deism currently exist: classical deism and modern deism. (Deism, Wikipedia)
That is a classic description of theistic evolution. It is an absurd mischaracterization of creationism to give the false and misleading impression that they are somehow deistic. It is the role of miracles in creation that drives the Darwinian zealots and makes creationism the object of so much academic and scientific ridicule.
You know what's really sad about this, not one theistic evolutionist will call you on this. You will never openly admit that you purposely mischaracterized the Creationist position. You have no qualms about twisting my position into a philosophical naturalism I have debated and argued against my entire time on these boards. That's sad really, not that you will get by with it but the fact that you have no qualms about it.
Creationists who deny the supernatural activity of God in human affairs don't exist, deism describes theistic evolution my dear and you know it.
The only difference between the idea that God only touches nature via miraculous interposition and the Deist concept is that the Deists did not believe that there ever was any miraculous interposition. So far as the regularities of nature are concerned both your position and the Deist position is the same. You and the Deists seem to agree that God is absent from whatever is ordinary and natural.
Nonsense, squeezing creationists in this mold is a waste of time and energy. Creationists in general and me in particular see the original creation as foundational to God's activity and interaction in human affairs. That is something desists resolutely deny. Of course God lets nature run it's natural course and need not micromanage every single molecular mechanism. That's not what creationists believe, teach or defend.
"To omit the creation would be to misunderstand the very history of God with men, to diminish it, to lose sight of its true order of greatness...Faith in God and in the events of salvation history must necessarily begin with a belief in God's role as Creator (Benedict XVI, VATICAN CITY, APRIL 23, 2011, Zenit.org)
Salvation is inextricably linked to salvation, there can be no question about that. When a believer receives the Gospel and is indwelled by the Holy Spirit it is the same miracle as the creation, resurrection and especially, the regeneration of the believer through the power of the Holy Spirit.
Shernren's question is pertinent.
Nonsense.
shernren said:
Mark, does divine action require miracle?
It is a misleading question meant to distract and conflate the topic at hand.
In your opinion, does divine action require miracle?
Who cares what my opinion is? Try this, 'does evolution allow for divine action that is not subordinate to natural law'?
But ok, I'll answer the question when you define 'divine action' as distinctly different from a 'miracle'. I know you guys, like all Darwinians, don't like to define your terms but you have conflated what it means to be a creationist with reckless abandon. Now I expect you to define what you and your buddy mean by these two.
That is the only basis on which you can distort Darwin's meaning into a denial of God's creative activity.
I can define every term I use in these discussions. Theistic evolutionists never do and all I have to do to argue against Darwin's meaning is to infer God as Creator in accordance with the clear testimony of Scripture.
You cannot reject God as Creator and affirm Christ as Savior. Creation was not the last miracle and I certainly never entertained, much less endorsed a deistic worldview. Salvation, the rebirth, washing, renewal and regeneration of the Holy Spirit is the same miracle.
You actually have the nerve to accuse me of being a deist?
How dare you!