TheBeginningSeasons said:
So what you are saying is that you believe in the Genesis story but not the creation of man and earth and that God spoke and it was so?
No, I believe all of that. I also accept the scientific findings which says that making it so was a process that took several billion years.
There are no facts that science has ever presented to even give the notion that we came from a fish
you mean no facts that you know of. Study up on it a bit. The evidence that tetrapods (ancestors of terrestrial vertebrates) evolved from lobe-finned lungfish is fairly straightforward.
And the whole thing you wrote about epilepsy and bat and birds, and the earths rotation....where does it say anything about any of that in the Bible?
Epilepsy caused by demons: Luke 9:37-43
Bats are birds: Leviticus 11: 13a, 19
Earth does not move: Psalm 104:5 (among others)
Sun does move around earth: Joshua 10: 12-14
If science must bow to scripture, you must believe all these things instead of the scientific fables that say epilepsy is a disorder of the brain, bats are mammals, and the earth rotates on its axis and orbits the sun not the other way around.
If you give science priority on these things, what is it but vanity that keeps you from acknowledging that evolution is as much fact as that a bat is a mammal?
Do you not believe cause you can't get your hands and see and feel it? Do you not believe cause there aren't people who have done studies and found things they can mold into a hypothesis?
I don't know what you are getting at here. I accept evolution and other scientific theories because I know that scientists have got their hands dirty seeking out evidence, and I can see exhibits in museums and pictures in films and books. And I believe in things for which the evidence is unseen because I believe in God and the testimony of the apostles, and the witness of the Holy Spirit in my heart.
I would never question the fact that that God created earth
Neither do I.
and I would never question the rest of the Bible, and I am glad to hear you believe everything else.
I don't just believe everything else. I believe everything the bible teaches. Not everything except....x,y,z
But what about in Revelations when it speaks of God creating "New Earth" Is that going to be another evolutionary step?! I think not...
I agree. It probably has nothing to do with human evolution.
God definately does use stories, but if you don't believe they really happened then how can you believe any of it?
If they really happened they wouldn't be stories would they? Did there have to be a real Good Samaritan for Jesus to tell a story featuring a Good Samaritan?
IF they are just stories then that would make them fiction right? Am I wrong? I believe God parted the seas for Moses, so what about the other stories like that where miracles happened?
Most miracle stories don't supply enough detail to determine whether they happened or not. As long as there is nothing to indicate that they could not have happened, there is nothing unscientific about believing they did happen. Science does not exclude miracles. It just doesn't explain them.
I am just wondering, I have never talked to someone who knows the Bible and believes science more than the Word.
But I don't believe science more than the Word. After all, anything true that science discovers about nature was made by the Word. As John says in his gospel. "All things came into being through [the Word] and without him not one thing came into being." And as Paul tells the Colossians: "for in him all things in heaven and earth were created...all things have been created through him and for him ... and in him all things hold together."
Science reveals the handiwork of the Word, so how can one believe science more than the Word? Do you think creation lies about its Creator?
The fact is if we manipulate the Scripture from its orginal meaning then you might as well discredit it all right?
Are you confusing interpretation with manipulation? Everyone interprets the scripture--you included. It is not possible for human minds not to interpret what they read.
The question is, what is the basis for your interpretation? What logical principle does it follow? Does it illuminate the scripture or does it read into scripture your own biases and preconceptions?
We must believe it for face value, there is no other way to look at it.
Who told you that? Why do you believe it? This is an interpretive principle. What makes it a good one? How do you know it is a good one? Look back at the scriptures I referenced earlier. If you take Leviticus at face value, a bat is a bird. Is that a good intepretation of that text?
God teaches us with real life stories
Exclusively? Where did you learn that?
Yes, God does use real-life stories, like those of David and Elijah. But I never heard that God does not also use imaginative stories. Can you say for sure that the story of Job is about a real historical event? Would the point of the story change if it is dramatic fiction? Would its teaching be any the less valid if Job is a character in a fictional story?