ALoveDivine
Saved By Grace
- Jun 25, 2010
- 972
- 228
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- United States
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- Male
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- Christian
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- US-Republican
I can't claim to know for certain how exactly God created the universe, but I think science, as well as scripture obviously, are our best places to look for an answer. I've come to think the following.
1. The universe is billions of years old, because the totallity of scientific knowledge confirms this.
2. The Big Bang did occur 13.7 billion years ago and this was the moment God created the heavens and the earth. Not all at once, but gradually over a long long period of time. Remember a day to God is as a thousand years to us, so cosmological ages can pass and be only a moment in the eyes of Almighty God.
3. Genesis is true but it is not to be interpreted strictly literally. The first few chapters are allegorical; real truth is revealed through stories that need not be historical. The truth is that God created the heavens and the Earth and created us in his image, ie with a spiritual nature. It makes a lot more sense for God to explain these things allegorically than strictly scientifically, especially considering the earliest audience of this story lacked scientific knowledge.
4. I think there was a literal Adam and Eve, the first Homo Sapiens to receive a spiritual nature directly from God. This was the birth of Humanity as we know it, supposing the dividing line between true humanity and animals is spiritual and not strictly genetic.
5. I would even go so far as to say that Genesis specifically references evolution with phrazes such as "let the earth bring forth" and "formed from the dust of the ground". Such language refutes the idea of organisms being created ex nihilo and suggests that we were created out of the earth. Evolution dovetails with this beautifully, which itself provides excellent support for the inspiration of Genesis.
6. The flood of Noah was a local flood, but still wiped out the vast majority of humanity, as humanity was concentrated in the region. I think were the bible refers to the "whole earth", "whole land" would perhaps be a better translation. I have no problem with the idea of a global flood, but there is simply no evidence to think there was one. As scripture and creation, both authored by God, cannot contradict, the two must both be true. This can only be the case if the flood was local but universal in effect, ie the destruction of humanity at that time.
7. Predation is a part of the natural order and yes, God designed it. I think he did so because predation is necessary for balanced ecosystems in a universe with physical laws such as ours, physical laws that allow for regularity of conditions and experience, and indeed life itself. Without predation, ecosystems would collapse and there would be far MORE death and suffering. Predation is, ultimately, much more benevolent than a planet of nothing but vegetarians.
I don't think science and Christianity need to be at odds with each other. Perhaps if more thought this way, and endeavored to understand both without abandoning either, then maybe more skeptical people would take Christianity as a serious possibility. Just some food for thought.
1. The universe is billions of years old, because the totallity of scientific knowledge confirms this.
2. The Big Bang did occur 13.7 billion years ago and this was the moment God created the heavens and the earth. Not all at once, but gradually over a long long period of time. Remember a day to God is as a thousand years to us, so cosmological ages can pass and be only a moment in the eyes of Almighty God.
3. Genesis is true but it is not to be interpreted strictly literally. The first few chapters are allegorical; real truth is revealed through stories that need not be historical. The truth is that God created the heavens and the Earth and created us in his image, ie with a spiritual nature. It makes a lot more sense for God to explain these things allegorically than strictly scientifically, especially considering the earliest audience of this story lacked scientific knowledge.
4. I think there was a literal Adam and Eve, the first Homo Sapiens to receive a spiritual nature directly from God. This was the birth of Humanity as we know it, supposing the dividing line between true humanity and animals is spiritual and not strictly genetic.
5. I would even go so far as to say that Genesis specifically references evolution with phrazes such as "let the earth bring forth" and "formed from the dust of the ground". Such language refutes the idea of organisms being created ex nihilo and suggests that we were created out of the earth. Evolution dovetails with this beautifully, which itself provides excellent support for the inspiration of Genesis.
6. The flood of Noah was a local flood, but still wiped out the vast majority of humanity, as humanity was concentrated in the region. I think were the bible refers to the "whole earth", "whole land" would perhaps be a better translation. I have no problem with the idea of a global flood, but there is simply no evidence to think there was one. As scripture and creation, both authored by God, cannot contradict, the two must both be true. This can only be the case if the flood was local but universal in effect, ie the destruction of humanity at that time.
7. Predation is a part of the natural order and yes, God designed it. I think he did so because predation is necessary for balanced ecosystems in a universe with physical laws such as ours, physical laws that allow for regularity of conditions and experience, and indeed life itself. Without predation, ecosystems would collapse and there would be far MORE death and suffering. Predation is, ultimately, much more benevolent than a planet of nothing but vegetarians.
I don't think science and Christianity need to be at odds with each other. Perhaps if more thought this way, and endeavored to understand both without abandoning either, then maybe more skeptical people would take Christianity as a serious possibility. Just some food for thought.
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