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Jesus believed in a literal interpretation of Genesis; why shouldn't I?
Someone said that this Jesus character believed in a literal interpretation of Genesis, but even this assertion does not carry much weight. He is reported to have referred to common stories but I don't know of any reports of any claims that he believed they were literally true. Anyway, you don't believe everything you read, surely?
 
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Someone said that this Jesus character believed in a literal interpretation of Genesis,
Imagine that.
Barry Desborough said:
... but even this assertion does not carry much weight.
Imagine that.
Barry Desborough said:
He is reported to have referred to common stories ...
Yup.
Barry Desborough said:
... but I don't know of any reports of any claims that he believed they were literally true.
You're a scientist, aren't you? it's your job to investigate something, even if you don't believe it.
Barry Desborough said:
Anyway, you don't believe everything you read, surely?
No, I don't.

But if I was an educated person flaunting my education, I'd walk my talk and investigate.

And even if I investigated and didn't find anything, I wouldn't dismiss it out of hand.
 
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Imagine that.Imagine that.Yup.You're a scientist, aren't you? it's your job to investigate something, even if you don't believe it.No, I don't.

But if I was an educated person flaunting my education, I'd walk my talk and investigate.

And even if I investigated and didn't find anything, I wouldn't dismiss it out of hand.
So you can't even offer an (alleged) quote?
 
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What would you like me to quote?

And if you're not going to believe the quote, are you going to believe me?
Show me a quote where this alleged Jesus character is alleged to have said he believed in a literal Genesis. If it's anywhere, it will be in your Bible. It's your scripture, not mine.
 
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Show me a quote where this alleged Jesus character is alleged to have said he believed in a literal Genesis. If it's anywhere, it will be in your Bible. It's your scripture, not mine.
Matthew 19:4 And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,

Mark 10:6 But from the beginning of the creation God made them male and female.

Are you ready to abandon [your] mein kampf now?
 
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Matthew 19:4 And he answered and said unto them, Have ye not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,

Mark 10:6 But from the beginning of the creation God made them male and female.

Are you ready to abandon [your] mein kampf now?
That's what I was pretty well expecting, but what about the "days of Noah"? This stuff is utterly pathetic. Like an Aboriginal elder talking about the Dreamtime, or a Norseman talking of the Norse legends. It in no way validates a YEC interpretation of Genesis, which is a very recent invention.
 
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Barry, as I pointed out to you earlier, even von Däniken was willing to put forth an hypothesis as to what the Bible meant by this or that.

He didn't just sit back and whine that he didn't get it, or that he couldn't understand the creationist mindset.

He put feet to his education and at least gave us something to understand where he was coming from.

I'm not going to feel sorry for you because you're struggling so hard to understand us.

Instead, I'm going to pray for you and assume your "struggles" are fake.
 
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That's what I was pretty well expecting,
Then what's with the fake ignorance?
Barry Desborough said:
... but what about the "days of Noah"?
What on Earth do the days of Noah have to do with the first six days of the creation week?
 
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Barry, what was your take on comment #101? If you have responded to it, can you let me know the comment #. I simply want to know if this is the kind of explanation you're looking for.
Sorry Monna, I missed that somehow. It's easy to miss things with this system. I shall read it carefully and get back to you as soon as I can.
 
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Then what's with the fake ignorance?What on Earth do the days of Noah have to do with the first six days of the creation week?
I was wondering if you had anything more concrete.

The story of Noah is in Genesis, BTW.
 
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A nice story. But the lesson cuts both/all ways. We believe what we want to believe. While some will say "Seeing is believing, " the inverse is also true "Believing is seening."

When I was young, and was taught the creationist 6-day account in Genesis, there were a number of important implications, and those who taught me did so from their own perception of God - this perception being partly what they had received from their parents and teachers, and partly what they found attractive to believe. The Bible scholars among them also felt impelled to present a consistent understanding of the nature of God as presented throughout the Bible. (The specific processes by which the Bible came to be, and how different concepts developed through time, was never presented or explained.) From what I can today put together of this, which may help answer the original question I would say the following:
Literal creationists believe as they do (and I admit there are variations among them) because:
- their view of God includes his omnipotence - he is the almighty and as such possesses infinite energy. As such, Einstein's conclusion that matter and energy are interchangeable does not negate God's ability to say the word and transform some of his energy into matter. In fact it confirms it.
- their view of God, as presented elsewhere in the Bible, is that he is the same yesterday, today and forever. He is immutable. So when Genesis talks of creatures reproducing "each after its kind" this aspect of creation (as they see it) is entirely consistent with God's only unchangeable nature.
- their view of God is that he is creative, in the true sense, being able to produce not only something out of nothing (i.e. materially) but also something that is not like anything else before. This doesn't jibe well with the idea of chancey natural selection. Nor does it fit well with general ideas of God being in total and minute control and following a preordained plan.
- the idea of God saying the word and the creature appearing, is for them something that supports their conception of his transcendence of normal processes of nature - the miraculous, the stupendous, the awe-inspiring, the (if you will) unbelievable. This enhances, in their minds, his glory as well as his power.
- the idea that on the sixth day, God did something a little differently, taking time to fashion mankind out of clay, and in the second account, fashioning Eve from one of Adam's ribs, is also consistent with other bible verses that place humankind in a very special light with respect to the creation.
"(NIV)Psalm 8: 4 what is mankind that you are mindful of them,
human beings that you care for them?
5 You have made them a little lower than the angels
and crowned them with glory and honor.
6 You made them rulers over the works of your hands;
you put everything under their feet:
7 all flocks and herds,
and the animals of the wild,
8 the birds in the sky,
and the fish in the sea,
all that swim the paths of the seas.
9 Lord, our Lord,
how majestic is your name in all the earth!
Most ordinary creationists are not (I would argue) specifically or intentionally believing this because they want to legitimise the rampant rape of the world by human kind, but this aspect of creation is used by some Christians to behave as it they have a God-given right to treat the rest of the creation anyway they like, or at least not to actively curtail acts that destroy the environment and drive other creatures into extinction. (In fact, given the creationist's reasoning and claims to follow the bible literally, there is an amazing blind spot to the idea that God has made mankind accountable for the care of his earth - that's a different story).
- the story's portrayal of Adam and Eve being the original couple, told to multiply, is also bound up with the 'normal' evangelical Christian view of God's will for the family unit, explicitly consisting of a heterosexual couple, with children.
- the story presents a "proper" hierarchy - God, Man, Woman, other creature. The story of the Fall that follows is basically one in which a creature (the serpent) convinces the woman to eat the fruit, she convinces the man, and together they rebelled against God. The humans think they have taken a place (at the top) that only God had and have usurped his place, while in fact they have made themselves subservient to the creature. They have allowed "the animal" in them to usurp "the spiritual" and turned God's order upside down. (This incidentally, ties in with other parts of the Bible, that insist that until there is willingness within a person's mind to truly open itself to God, there is no way that person will be able to understand God. Believing is the key to seeing!)
- the creationist account of direct detailed creation places God outside and beyond the creation itself. In entrusting humankind with the care of the creation, he also makes a clear distinction between humans and the rest (as above), with several other implications for attitudes towards other religions: there is only one God (a triune God came much later in religion's development); creation is not part of God; nor are each and every species or creature a god in itself; and conversely, God is not like any creature, including humankind, - i.e. God is not a superhuman, he is beyond our capacity to truly and wholly know; nor has God created the universe and all in it and then abandoned it to its own fate - rather he was eminently satisfied with what he did (he saw that it was very good), loved and loves it, and continues to be very interested and active in what happens to it. Many of the early scientists (and many today) pursue(d) their professions because they were very curious to explore the hidden workings of God in natural sciences. When Christians speak of their relationship with God, it is precisely this active participation in world/personal affairs that they are talking about. Their belief (as a basic premiss) gives them a perspective that sees God's working in them and around them, so often and so consistently, that they cannot statistically accept it as coincidence or chance.

Hopefully this will give you some simple reasons why some creationists hold the beliefs they do. I cannot speak for any or all of them, on this thread or elsewhere, and no doubt some here will object to what I have written. And make clarifications.

For myself, when I read the verse that underpins many Christians' confidence in the inerrancy of the Bible (All Scripture is given by inspiration of God...) I pay careful attention to the rest of the verse,which says what the scriptures are good and profitable for. In the list there is no mention of scientific or historical accuracy, geology, cosmology, biology, archeology or anything in what we call the sciences today. And therefore, I have ceased to see creationism versus any other account of creation as an issue for myself. Instead I focus on the deeper meanings of the text and find it has a lot for me in my daily life.
Thank you for your very thoughtful response, Monna.



I must point out that Genesis does not talk about creatures reproducing "each after its kind”. I think that’s a recent slant given to it by post-evolution theory creationists. In fact, the creationist idea of “kind” is that which cannot change by evolution. As Genesis was written well before the theory of evolution, this cannot be the original meaning. Genesis talks of the earth and the waters bringing forth creatures according to their kinds (abiogenesis!). “Kind”, in French Bibles is written as “espèce”, which just means type, sort or species.



You give a number of very good reasons why people would want the creationist viewpoint to be true. My difficulty is I want to know what actually IS true, to the best of my ability and to the best methods of knowledge determination. In fact, I don’t think you can be an effective moral agent if you inhabit a mental word that is at odds with reality. Probably, this is why I can’t understand creationism or any other counter-reality beliefs.



You give a good account of what I call the creationist “grab bag” of beliefs - that we cannot mess up the environment because God won’t let it happen. That anything but monogamous heterosexual relationships are evil. That women are subject to men who are subject to God, and that women are a problem. ;)



I agree entirely that a literal interpretation of the Bible stories is not the most profitable way to view them. Like Greek mythology, they convey moral or spiritual messages which are lost or even ridiculed by a literal interpretation. Have you read any Karen Armstrong?
 
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The story of Noah is in Genesis, BTW.
When debating creationism, one should never stray from Genesis 1, or the conversation is over.

Here's your original post, which is what we're discussing:

...trying to understand the creationist mentality. I've been struggling with this for years. Is anyone prepared to give an honest, clear explanation as to why they believe in creationism?
And while the Flood is my minor forte, creationism is my major.
 
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When debating creationism, one should never stray from Genesis 1, or the conversation is over.

Here's your original post, which is what we're discussing:


And while the Flood is my minor forte, creationism is my major.
Still waiting for a coherent explanation from you. Yes, I know WHAT you believe, but what is missing is any sane explanation as to WHY you believe it.
 
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Still waiting for a coherent explanation from you. Yes, I know WHAT you believe, but what is missing is any sane explanation as to WHY you believe it.
God created us with a kind of sixth sense about Him. That sixth sense is what prompts us to look upward. When the Bible is preached, that sixth sense is at its strongest.

Romans 10:17 So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God.

A good analogy is an electromagnetic crane car:


John 12:32 And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me.

You can respond to this like a piece of wood or a piece of iron: the choice is yours.
 
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I agree entirely that a literal interpretation of the Bible stories is not the most profitable way to view them. Like Greek mythology, they convey moral or spiritual messages which are lost or even ridiculed by a literal interpretation. Have you read any Karen Armstrong?

Yes I have read some Armstrong.

My difficulty is I want to know what actually IS true, to the best of my ability and to the best methods of knowledge determination.

Truth. Can be very straightforward, more often is very complicated. And needs more or less agreed undestanding as to meaning in a good discussion. Most people think they know what truth is. Personally, I find it a difficult concept; perhaps I make it a problem myself. For example, I feel the need to distringuish between 'fact' and 'truth.' Fact is fact, but truth is (for me) considerably more. How to describe that 'more' is where I have difficulty.

John Saxon's poem based on the South Asian story of the six blind men of Hindustan who independently met an elephant illustrate just part of the issue. Our senses and perspectives are limited, and we seldom, if ever, can see the whole, or full truth. We cannot even be sure how much, or which part, of the truth we can see. One consequence of this is that we are likely to make erroneous extrapolations and conclusions from what we do see/"know." Scientists like to think that the modern scientific method is one that will reliably test for multiple alternatives to stated hypotheses, and many like to believe that all theories are open to revision, refinement or repudiation. Most conveniently forget the fact that every scientist is a human being and therefore subject to all the general types of bias, defence of pet theories or postulates, etc. etc. There are some ideas that have been very very difficult to debunk. Probably just as hard as some old religious beliefs. What becomes fascinating when watching scientific development is just how much of science is actually based on belief. Our old model of the atom, with its rings of electrons, was so much easier to grasp than the current one in which the "location" (you can't really call it that) of a specific electron is expressed as a probability. When it is the observer who through the act of observation determines (as a consequence of observing) the position of an entangled particle (and now no longer entangled particle), then "truth" or "fact" is in the eye of the observer, not independent of it. When I was taught the scientific method it was said very very clearly that repetition of the same experiment over and over again with the same results was the only way to be sure that theory being tested could be proved..."but there was still no 100% certainty, because if the result in a future test was different, then the theory could no longer be supported."

Even in the scientific world people ultimately believe what they want to believe. If I think of Thomas Edison, it could not (I surmise) have been thorough material science theory that convinced him to keep looking for a suitable filament material after "thousands" of attempts. (He is quoted as saying "I didn't fail, I just found 10 000 ways that didn't work!") He really believed he would find something and that gave him the motivation to continue. Darwin had an idea (not entirely original) that caught his attention and interest, and he set out deliberately to find a plausible explanation for the differences between the beaks of the Galapagos finches. He wouldn't have continued if he hadn't believed in his ideas. Certainly in the beginning he couldn't, and didn't know it was true. But he believed it. So science would not progress without people believing in something and going at it tooth and nail. Aristotle believed many things and taught them as true. But he was wrong. That doesn't mean that in everything he did was wrong or nonsense.

And I suspect that even you Barry hold "truths" on the basis of convictions and beliefs, that you hope very very much are not false. And you cannot live a meaningful social life without this. Friendship depends on trust, trust is a matter of belief, of faith. No doubt there have been times when you have discovered that that trust has not been underpinned by reality. My concept of truth links to the reliability of the one in whom I have put my trust. He or she is a "true" friend because of the nature of his or her trustworthiness vis a vis what I have committed to her.

Where I believe evolutionary scientists (like Dawkins) make a fundamental logical flaw is going from "we can explain the process. There is no designer." This is a logical non-sequitor. We don't need a God of the gaps, but just because people can no longer lazily say "I don't know how it happened, it must be God." the inverse is not necessarily correct.
 
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As has been said, we believe in creation because we believe in God. Furthermore, we believe that God has spoken and that his word is found in Scripture. Thirdly, Scripture teaches the doctrine of creation. It's really very simple. But for someone who does not believe in God it's incomprehensible.

It's not a matter of believing in God. It's a matter of believing in some MEN who wrote that they were speaking on behalf of a god.
 
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