Hi there!
I'm mostly looking for constructive criticism, following my decision to acknowledge that while wrong about the past, Evolution is useful in mechanically repeatable contexts.
I have not yet married Evolution with a Theistic perspective.
My understanding is that Mendel, a monk, first discovered inheritance, on which Evolution grounds (if not derives) adaptation; that adaptation cannot take place, unless something is first holy; and that if God cannot speak to the man, He allows His spirit to move on the creature. These things combined are enough to make it appear as though God is out of the picture, to the unlearned man; but to the learned man, he can see that God desires to create through the man, and will give the man a body, even before He is sure whether or not the man will respond to him (speaking in doing so, to the man through the creature, that he may one day speak directly to the man).
In making the concession that Evolution is useful in mechanically repeatable contexts, I am basically saying that it is neither relevant nor irrelevant how repetition is being influenced in those contexts, by God.
My main problem, is that the orchestration of God is so clearly precisely manifest in every detail that I am not really prepared to limit Him to "influencing processes already underway" as I think this still maligns the true authority of God to stop/start or break any process he sees fit. But I can see the contrasting perspective, that it is evidentially not the case that God interrupts at every given opportunity, in fact, He is quite slow, to respond, even to the willing believer - who must first hear the messenger before he is able to even consider what it is he must believe.
It is some relief simply to share this.
I had thought at one stage, to begin espousing platitudes like "Jesus is the greatest adaptation" and "Without Jesus there is no hope of theory", or some such thing, but I foresaw that more theory would be roundly rejected and perhaps unconsciously perceived (if not consciously) as unhelpful distraction from the real task of speeding understanding of iterative process in applied contexts - which I have in a small way commited myself to, just by way of assuring myself that I have not lost touch with science altogether, by simply giving them the green light, which certainly God never gives without qualifying in some way, that Science may learn.
I suppose if I were God, I would have myself concentrate on the real needs of people, not how evolved they are, but how lovingly welcomed they are into the Church, whatever their level of advancement in the eyes of the world they are. Unfortunately, there is something of a gap, between such an introduction (to the Church) and the study of the Word, which I know to be true, but which the World must come to understand is meaningful, before they can come to know that they know it to be true. Certainly, there is nothing without a little pause, and silence, and reflection.
Any thoughts on this would be helpful.
I'm mostly looking for constructive criticism, following my decision to acknowledge that while wrong about the past, Evolution is useful in mechanically repeatable contexts.
I have not yet married Evolution with a Theistic perspective.
My understanding is that Mendel, a monk, first discovered inheritance, on which Evolution grounds (if not derives) adaptation; that adaptation cannot take place, unless something is first holy; and that if God cannot speak to the man, He allows His spirit to move on the creature. These things combined are enough to make it appear as though God is out of the picture, to the unlearned man; but to the learned man, he can see that God desires to create through the man, and will give the man a body, even before He is sure whether or not the man will respond to him (speaking in doing so, to the man through the creature, that he may one day speak directly to the man).
In making the concession that Evolution is useful in mechanically repeatable contexts, I am basically saying that it is neither relevant nor irrelevant how repetition is being influenced in those contexts, by God.
My main problem, is that the orchestration of God is so clearly precisely manifest in every detail that I am not really prepared to limit Him to "influencing processes already underway" as I think this still maligns the true authority of God to stop/start or break any process he sees fit. But I can see the contrasting perspective, that it is evidentially not the case that God interrupts at every given opportunity, in fact, He is quite slow, to respond, even to the willing believer - who must first hear the messenger before he is able to even consider what it is he must believe.
It is some relief simply to share this.
I had thought at one stage, to begin espousing platitudes like "Jesus is the greatest adaptation" and "Without Jesus there is no hope of theory", or some such thing, but I foresaw that more theory would be roundly rejected and perhaps unconsciously perceived (if not consciously) as unhelpful distraction from the real task of speeding understanding of iterative process in applied contexts - which I have in a small way commited myself to, just by way of assuring myself that I have not lost touch with science altogether, by simply giving them the green light, which certainly God never gives without qualifying in some way, that Science may learn.
I suppose if I were God, I would have myself concentrate on the real needs of people, not how evolved they are, but how lovingly welcomed they are into the Church, whatever their level of advancement in the eyes of the world they are. Unfortunately, there is something of a gap, between such an introduction (to the Church) and the study of the Word, which I know to be true, but which the World must come to understand is meaningful, before they can come to know that they know it to be true. Certainly, there is nothing without a little pause, and silence, and reflection.
Any thoughts on this would be helpful.
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