NobleMouse
We have nothing, if not belief in the Lord
- Sep 19, 2017
- 662
- 230
- 49
- Country
- United States
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
Yes, we can see it's present condition, but as to how it arrived at this condition is not so easily discerned. The "imagination" argument will always tend to fall flat since there are words in the text that explicitly say what is allegedly being "imagined".If what you see in scripture, does not coincide with what physically exists around you, then you should not be so quick to...disregard what physically exists around you, for what you perceive through ideas that you have conjured up in your imagination.
The earth is something that exists as it is. You and I can both go outside and touch it, smell it, taste it, feel it etc. It doesnt change. And you can get anyone from around the world to say...test the hardness of a quartzite. It never changes. No matter what religious background, no matter what your level of education is, no matter what degree you have, the earth is as it is.
People have historically manipulated scripture to serve their agenda rather than take it for what it says and what it would have meant in the context of the culture and those to whom it was addressed at the time it is written... then how it applies to their lives today. Those who interpret days as billions of years or saying the entire narrative of Noah's flood didn't happen at all are either [1] manipulating the meaning to fit with an ulterior agenda, or [2] have chosen to be willingly ignorant. Those who have made it their life's work and are experts in Hebrew and the study of that culture, recognize 'yom' as days and that the events in Genesis are historical narrative... whether talking about Adam & Eve, Cain and Abel, the lineage to Noah and his family, the flood, etc...Perception of scripture is just the opposite. Never in history have people all united over...interpretations of scripture. As they are based in...perception and interpretation that only exists in the mind. It is only in your imagination that a global flood happened, there is nothing in physical reality that makes it so.
If you say biblical creationists are trying to push an agenda, what's the agenda?? That the Bible means what it says? Nobody benefits by the earth being somewhere less than 10,000 years old... it's kind of like, so what? If the Bible implied the earth was 100,000 years old, I'd go with that... if it said a million, or a billion, or a 100 billion, I'd go with that too. It's not an agenda - it's just saying the Bible (God's word) is correct... and God's word indicates a creation over 6 days and provides the lineage from Christ to Adam... and we know within close approximation as to when Christ lived relative to the present.
You've also used the "elusiveness-of-scripture" argument before, but I will continue to disagree. These words are from God; God, written down by man... it's source is intelligent and pure, communicating a message of our past, why we need a savior, God's love and redemption for us, and our eternal future with Him by placing our faith and trust in Jesus as our Lord and Savior.
I didn't imagine the book of Genesis - it had already been written down before I was born... and I'm having absolutely zero difficulty mentally reconciling physical reality with God's spoken word.And with that, you have to choose what you wish to follow. Physical reality, or what you have in your imagination. And if the two are in conflict, then i would say that is an issue.
I think you're describing yourself here, I have no issues believing in God, His word, and physical reality - there is no inner conflict - I am completely at peace with reality and God's word, it's great. The conflict here you describe is what one existed within you, which is why you have interpreted days to mean billions of years and the account of Noah and God's judgment being poured out to have been a local event (I think that is your view regarding the flood).And this isnt about being Christian or not. It isnt about rejecting scripture or not either. It is about perception and imagination with respect to literature.
You just have to make a choice. Of if you accept physical reality, or if you would rather live the rest of your life in conflict with what is real, and in a sort of darkness of knowledge of the physical universe.
Just like The Barbarian, quickly resorting to what you think you know about what you've been taught about certain field(s) of science as the 'ultimate' proof. You indicate you are not rejecting scripture; however, it would seem, for example, you do not believe this passage from Genesis 7:4 (from God):Notice how nobody actually has an explanation for the lack of geologic evidence for a global flood. Kurt Wise offers a few ideas, but just as quickly as he offers them, others here such as yourself, are suggesting that many things are unknown, or perhaps cannot be known.
This is because such evidence doesnt exist. This is why young earthers cannot get a single unified story of how it all happened, because there are too many logical contradictions that young earth creationism holds with reality.
"For in seven days I will send rain on the earth forty days and forty nights, and every living thing that I have made I will blot out from the face of the ground."
There are several variations I can see as to how one might read this (and possibly other variations):
1) We can believe this passage demonstrates God's intent to wipe out every living thing on the face of the earth (biblical creationist view, my view). Or,
2) We can believe this never happened at all, and the entire text is just a remnant left-over from Babylonian myth as some within CF have proposed (I don't think this is your view, but you can correct me if it is). Or,
3) We can believe this happened, but was not a global flood... perhaps just localized to the Mesopotamian valley area, for example (I think this may be closer to your position).
For those who don't believe a flood ever happened at all (for whatever reason), this is a rejection of [some portion of] scripture. I will not invest much effort/time debating this point.
If one says the flood was local, this is a contrast to the text as the implication is "every living thing on the face of the earth" was also local at the time, OR that it was not intended to be "every living thing", just the living things say in the Mesopotamian valley area (even though the text was "every living thing"). The idea of being global is affirmed elsewhere in scripture.
So, if every living thing is said to have been local, the onus is on the person that makes this argument to then demonstrate (and we'll keep with your criteria that physical reality is 'best evidence') how all the localized life ended up as fossils across the globe. Or...
Alternatively (and there may be others), if every living thing is said to have been global, but the flood was only local, the onus is on the person that makes this argument to (1) philosophically explain why God would not have poured out judgment on all living things, when He said "every living thing", thinking about the context of why He was pouring out His judgment in the first place (bear in mind Peter (2 Peter 3:6) & Jesus (Matthew 24:38-39 and Luke 17:27) both refer to the flood in a global context, also noting there have been major local floods since this time, when God promised there would not be, the implications to the doctrine of judgment, etc...), AND (2) again keeping with the physical reality card since that is your standard, demonstrate evidence for a localized flood that would have destroyed all the life in just a certain area of the world and how this is uniquely identifiable as a discordance in both the fossil record and life forms alive today for just that local area vs the fossil record and life forms alive everywhere else across the globe, how a localized flood would have supported a vessel the size of the ark for more than a year, etc.... Note that these kinds of questions have already been given consideration:
https://isgenesishistory.com/christians-think-noah-flood-local/
Note the following article on NSCE's website does not address physical issues such as not being able to support a vessel like the ark for the span of a year, also making assumptions about the landscape, not to mention completely distorts and destroys what is written in the bible, making it sound like this was just some local villagers that happened to survive a local flood... they were floating down the Tigris and over flood plains, completely ignoring what God's intent of the flood was, etc...:
Yes, Noah's Flood May Have Happened, But Not Over the Whole Earth
My favorite is a subtitle in the article, "Regional Evidence for the Noachian and Similar Floods" - to which I respond, "Remember, God promised he would not do this again... there would not be 'similar' floods".
BioLogos takes the 'hyperbole' path in that Noah, his family, and the events of the flood are intended just to teach things of spiritual significance. Notice too, they omit what Jesus and Peter say:
How should we interpret the Genesis flood account?
I found it peculiar they present a false dichotomy on interpreting the Bible as it relates to science:
1. Abandon our faith in order to accept the results of science (or)
2. Deny the scientific evidence to maintain our interpretations of Scripture (or)
3. Reconsider our interpretations of Scripture in light of the evidence from God’s creation
Look at #2. Notice, no mention of the possibility that the interpretation of scientific evidence could be wrong - it's off the list. This is a demonstrated a logical fallacy. I'll just provide the following (9 examples) in hopes we really don't need to have a long debate on whether scientifically held beliefs have ever been wrong:
The top 10 most spectacularly wrong widely held scientific theories
Now, I'm not attempting to "assign" work here or even ask you provide a explanation/response (least of all, asking for how you've been taught to interpret the evidence by your college professors) - just posing the questions (rhetorically) as you consider whether the flood was local or global -> may be worth looking into as time/interest permits at your own leisure.
"You turn things upside down! Shall the potter be regarded as the clay, that the thing made should say of its maker, “He did not make me”; or the thing formed say of him who formed it, “He has no understanding”?" (Isaiah 29:16).They live in a perpetual darkness, continuing to vary and to be divided and without an understanding of their own reality. In a dream world. Where only what they imagine is real, and beyond their own minds, nothing makes sense.
In other words, it seems you may be thinking that what God says about the flood (and creation) is wrong and that you know better because of what you have been taught at whatever university you went to in completing your geology degree.
Upvote
0