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So does this verse in the Song Of Solomon talk about goat herding?jeshohaia said:Ok...G-D said it was 6 days...then it was 6 days. Jesus didnt possiably die on the cross...He died on the cross. King David didnt possiably exsist or not exsist at all...HE EXSISTED. If you take one part of the Bible as truth then you should take the whole thing. DOnt twist the truth to try to make sense out of it. How can we understand G-D?
How about the parables of Jesus, are those literal?If you do not know, most beautiful of women,
follow the tracks of the sheep
and graze your young goats
by the tents of the shepherds.
A sharp skeptic will argue (as s/he should): "Well, since all that Adam and Eve stuff is made up, what's to say that all that Jesus stuff wasn't made up too?
If Christians are to win non-believers over to Christ, then they must be, as Peter said, "always prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give a reason for the hope that you have" (1Pet 3:15). If Christians start compromising the Scriptures (which have endured two millennia of criticism, attack, rejection, and dissection) to fit the findings of science (which is perpetually changing) then they put the Bible's authority and relevance to the non-Christian skeptic's life at the whim of the next scientific discovery. When the scientific status quo is thrown out by the new discovery, so then is (some of if not all) the Bible's relevance to the non-believer.
Harpazo said:Ok, that said, my own $0.05 about Creation are this:
I take the Bible seriously. I do not buy into the post-modern mythologizing of the first three chapters of Genesis; I think that if you say that Adam and Eve were just symbols or fictional characters invented to populate the Hebrew creation account you open up all of Scripture to fiction and myth.
If Christians are to win non-believers over to Christ, then they must be, as Peter said, "always prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give a reason for the hope that you have" (1Pet 3:15). If Christians start compromising the Scriptures (which have endured two millennia of criticism, attack, rejection, and dissection) to fit the findings of science (which is perpetually changing) then they put the Bible's authority and relevance to the non-Christian skeptic's life at the whim of the next scientific discovery. When the scientific status quo is thrown out by the new discovery, so then is (some of if not all) the Bible's relevance to the non-believer.
artybloke said:False analogy. A bit like saying, well, if Dicken's Bleak House is fictional, then who's to say that Simon Schama's History of the British Isles isn't fictional. Any piece of literature has to be assessed according to its own genre. The Bible contains writings in various genre; including myth and legend and including history. Just because the book of Genesis is myth doesn't stop the Gospel of Luke, say, from being history.
gluadys said:As someone already noted, that is not the case. The bible contains many different genres including some factual history. But why does anything that is not obviously factual history, such as Gen. 1-11 have to be treated as if it were? What is so terrible about having fiction and myth in the bible? After all, its not as if fiction and myth were the same thing as deceit and falsehood.
gluadys said:But why does anything that is not obviously factual history, such as Gen. 1-11 have to be treated as if it were?
Harpazo said:My point is (and was) that if you start saying that a particular account in the Bible is not historically accurate because it contains elements that are not naturally possible (ie., super-natural) in our experience, then you have to also (for the sake of consistency) say that anywhere else in the Bible where there is a miraculous or "super"-natural event (like the Resurrection of Christ) recorded it's really just a myth.
And if you then label the entire book to be a myth (b/c of the one event), how much of the Bible is left that is historically accurate? and how much is a colorful yarn spun around a little karygma of historical truth by a group of pre-modern Jews and Greeks?
I disagree that it's obviously not factual history.
Granted, I've never chatted with a serpent nor clothed myself with light, so I can't offer any scientific or naturalistic evidence for its factuality -- but neither can anyone else. What I can (and will) say is that those of us living on this side of the Fall, the Flood, and the Resurrection have no clue what human life, the earth, reality was like back in the Garden of Eden.
Heck, we don't even know what the pre-flood world looked like, let alone what it was like in the Garden [you can not prove to me that Adam and Eve even shared the same dimensionality (10) that we do].
Before y'all catagorize me as a Young Earth Creationist or an unthinking fundamentalist bible thumper (of which I am neither), understand that I'm not saying that we try to win people to Christ by telling them that everything they supposedly know from science is false (Karl-Liberal Backslider) or that science is useless. My personal position is that science (objective science, not neo-Darwinism -- which is materialistic naturalism covered by the skin of Darwinian evolution) asserts the historical accuracy of the Bible and bolsters the credibility of its message. I think that it is myopic to say that "science" disproves the Creation account, because no branch of science -- not biology, not chemistry, not physics (in all its forms), not archeology, nor any others -- conclusively disprove the Biblical account.
Remember, historical criticism of a document says that the benefit of the doubt lies with the document purporting to be historically accurate; the burden lies on the critic to prove that it is not so. It all turns on a proper reading of the text (since I can't post links yet, check out the writings of J.W. Montgomery for some legal guidelines for documentary hermeneutics)
Lastly, I am neither young earth or old earth but I AM a Creationist. I am a pre-med student (I take the MCATs saturday), and I have a great interest in all of the sciences -- especially the "newer" ones like the information sciences, biochemistry, and hyperdimensional physics (all of which, interestingly enough, have yielded more challenges than support to macroevolutionary theory). And let me reiterate (or iterate if I haven't said it before ) that I in no way think that anyone's salvation is contingent upon their reading of Genesis 1-3 -- what is important is one's acceptance of, belief in, and relationship with Christ Jesus.
Don't borrow concepts that you have no clue about. Superstring theory is not the only quantum TOE, it lacks anything resembling evidence, and it has equally likely contenders (Quantum loop gravity, among others). The huge number of dimensions required for quantum theory is more of a drawback then a plus, as it requires a huge leap to assume unobserved, bundled up dimensions. The theory is elegant, but I'm afraid that given the evidence you'd be nuts to jump to conclusions.Harpazo said:[you can not prove to me that Adam and Eve even shared the same dimensionality (10) that we do].
The wording of the poll questions is a summary of each of the major positions I have found in this area. Which question(s) do you think was/were improperly worded, and how would you have worded it if you were setting up the poll? Thank you.TasManOfGod said:I was reading the pole questions and the thought "manipulative wording" popped into my head. Could anybody else understand why that should happen?
Actually, since Genesis was written in Hebrew, the Bible indicates that creation took six yoms. "Day" is the most common English translation of yom--but yom can mean a period of time either shorter (daylight hours, for example) or longer (a season, an era, an age, or an indefinite period of time, for example) than a 24-hour day.jeshohaia said:Ok...G-D said it was 6 days...then it was 6 days.
TasManOfGod said:I was reading the pole questions and the thought "manipulative wording" popped into my head. Could anybody else understand why that should happen?
The Lord is my banner said:You're right Tas, I queried this and was unable to vote because the nearest to a YEC option is sullied by stating we disregard science.
Blessings all, Susana
Okay, Susana, just for you: Let's add another option:The Lord is my banner said:You're right Tas, I queried this and was unable to vote because the nearest to a YEC option is sullied by stating we disregard science.
Blessings all, Susana
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