reverend B
Senior Veteran
critias,
it is the highest form of flattery to not respond to anothers post. i thank you.
it is the highest form of flattery to not respond to anothers post. i thank you.
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gluadys said:I wonder if even you noticed the change I bolded. Of course, none of us believes we are wrong. But, yes, the nature of faith is such that we can be wrong. So for you to call me (as you did) an idolator on the basis that you cannot be wrong in your interpretation of scripture indicates that you have put your interpretation of scripture above the truth of scripture, whatever it is. Believing that your interpretation of scripture is correct is not a problem. Believing that it cannot be wrong is.
gluadys said:As to the incarnation, resurrection, divinity of Christ, that is not idolatry from any Christian perspective. But, as I mentioned, it is from the viewpoint of Islam. And also Judaism. Atheists don't believe in God at all, so they don't accept these beliefs about Jesus. And to Buddhists, beliefs about God are irrelevant.
gluadys said:Do we know which of these beliefs are right and which are wrong?
No we do not. We know what we believe, but we do not know that what we believe is right is right. As far as we know the most fundamental core of Christianity is based on false belief.
gluadys said:That is always the risk on which faith rests: that we could be committing ourselves to something/someone which is fictitious. After all, if we had objective assurance that we were right, we would have no need for faith.
gluadys said:Finally, I suggest you not pursue this line any further, as it is likely to lead you into more flaming. If you must respond, pm me.
reverend B said:critias,
it is the highest form of flattery to not respond to anothers post. i thank you.
Critias said:From your response here, I see you have yet to understand what I was saying to you. It was not on my basis of faith that I said what I did. There is something wrong when a person confesses that their knowledge of something is greater than God's message of given knowledge that we find in the Bible.
I haven't placed my interpretation of Scripture over Scripture. When Scripture says, Jesus is the only way, I believe Jesus is the only way. When Scripture says God created the world in six days, I believe God created the world in six days. When Scripture says Jesus was conceived of the Holy Spirit in Mary's womb, I believe Jesus was conceived of the Holy Spirit in Mary's womb.
Then it does follow if I say I cannot be wrong about Jesus being the Son of God that I am an idolater by your statement and viewpoint, correct?
I am convinced that what God says cannot be wrong.
I am convinced that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, God Himself and I am not wrong. I haven't ever considered that I might be wrong about who Jesus is. It is a belief that has been so ingrained in me that I know I am not wrong about Him. That is what faith is, not the belief that we can be wrong, but the belief that we know it cannot be wrong.
As this may or may not be one of your concerns that your faith in Jesus could be wrong, I don't share that faith. It is faith that God has given me that convicts me to know that what He said about His Son is True and cannot be wrong.
From your statement, we obviously don't agree on what faith is. The part we don't agree on is that faith is the added belief that we can be wrong.
I see no need to doubt God
and the faith that He has given us and consider that ultimately He could be wrong,
gluadys said:Incorrect perceptions are incorrect perceptions. We all need to be on the alert to correct them. The judge said quite specifically that he was making no comment on the truth of ID/creationism, only on their scientific validity.
I would disagree that a scientific fact is true only in a certain context. A fact is a fact no matter what the context. It is perception that changes, not the facts. And in science, it is facts that change perceptions.
Amen! I used to be indifferent to science, but when I had to make a choice it was biology I found most interesting. I still see nothing interesting about chemistry, but my son finds it intruiging. I find theology more interesting than science, but I feel no need to chose between them.
Agreed. As for where we draw the line--we draw it wherever God draws it. Whenever we discover where that is.
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And also to you and yours.
mark kennedy said:That was not the question before the court, the question was whether or not ID was religiously oriented.
Ivory soap floats, that is a scientific fact but so what if it does.
The fact is confined to the limited context of that fact.
It's an awkward analogy I admit but the energetic costs of adaptation is an unavoidable problem for evolution in general and Darwinism in particular.
In order to get to the conclusion of Intelligent Design you have to leave the context of empirical testing.
What ID does is challange the philososphical and intellectual moorings of Darwinism. Creationists and ID scientists and philosophers are being run in circles in the labyrinth of experiential data. ID goes to the heart of the problem, the apriori assumptions of mainstream scientific postivism.
Theology works different then the inductive approach to scientific observation and demonstrations.
For instance Peter admonishes to grow our faith in this way:
"But also for this very reason, giving all diligenece, add to you faith virtue, to virtue knowledge, to knowledge self control, to self control perseverance, the perseverance goliness, to godliness brotherly kindness, and to brotherly kindness love." (2Peter 1:5-7)
Notice faith come first, then virtue and then knowledge.
These are two very different ways of approaching knowledge and when I speak of the context of a fact this is what I had in mind.
Now notice the conclusion he came to:
"Lastly, the great character they have portrayed is perfect. It is the character of a sinless Being; of one supremely wise and supremely good. It exhibits no error, no sinister intention, no imprudence, no ignorance, no evil passion, no impatience; in a word, no fault; but all is perfect uprightness, innocence, wisdom, goodness and truth. The mind of man has never conceived the idea of such a character, even for his gods; nor has history or poetry shadowed it forth. The doctrines and precepts of Jesus are in strict accordance with the attributes of God, agreeably to the most exalted idea which we can form of them, either from reason or from revelation. "
Testimony of the Evangelists, by Dr. Simon Greenleaf, (1783-1853)
Bobber said:There is another type of science which goes about to ask the following quesiton....the physical evidence here before us....does it speak of mere chance or intelligent design?
What type of science and again I use the word science am I referring to?
Forensic Science. It does not have absolute evidence that something was done by design by it seeks to ask the question by looking at the physical facts! To suggest asking the ID question about creationism is not a form of science is a lie, spun out by the Mind Control Evolutionists or the MCE's. True education allows freedom of the mind to think...to reason....to weigh any and all evidence and not dissallowing any information....I would say the way to gain success in this arena is to boldly keep putting the finger on what the education system has become....the subject of Mind Control Paranoia....young people won't stand for it and will rise up demanding freedom!![]()
gluadys said:Quite right. My error.
That is the general nature of scientific fact. It does not deal with ultimate questions but with specific observations.
Well, no. Your theology never produces a situation in which Ivory soap does not float. Only the manufacturers of Ivory can do that, and they would have to change the formula of the soap, so it would really be a different soap even if they kept the same brand name. So, under all circumstances, Ivory soap (current version) floats.
In other contexts, this fact may be irrelevant, but it remains a fact, not changed by the other contexts.
I understand the analogy, but I don't see your conclusion as anything but a non-sequitor. What makes energy cost a problem for evolution in general? Would it not be a problem only in particular instances? Instances where energy cost constrains possible evolutionary pathways?
Exactly. And having left the context of empirical testing, one has left the context of science.
And the heart of the theory of evolution is that labyrinth of experiential data. Only when that can be explained by ID/creationism can it hope to displace evolution as science.
As to the a priori assumptions of scientific positivism, are you sure you know what they are?
Ever read John Polkinghorne's Faith of a Physicist? It is a lecture series in which he explores the similarity of theological reasoning and scientific method.
I don't doubt that Peter himself might vary the order in another letter or sermon. One could just as easily begin at the end of this list and work backward. It would make little theological difference.
I still think you are referring to the relevance of a fact to the context. The fact itself does not change as you have asserted.
Now he only needs to show that the character description given by the evangelists is also that of Jesus of Nazareth, and not merely an idealization of Jesus' character. Disciples of a teacher are prone to exaggerating their teacher's virtues after all. Among Muslims, you can find very similar descriptions of the character of Mohammad. The followers of Sun Myung Moon describe him in similar terms too.
mark kennedy said:He applies the Lemon test of Judge O'Connor which I believe has five parts. It's an interesting peice of legal precedance and one I happen to affirm wholeheartedly.
Bobber said:Yes but you would have to agree wouldn't you Chaos that the evolutionists claim would be absolute nonsense! You for sure would point out to them that they are indeed controlling the school systems and it is they who won't even allow the ID question to be asked making it sound somehow unscientific.
Bobber said:"That said, it is interesting to note that both sides of the evolution vs creationism debate both claim the mantle of persecution. If you go to non-Christan forums where the majority bias is towards evolution, you here cries of "OHNO!!3VIL_Xtians!!" whereas if you go to Christians forums, more likely than not you here cries of "OHNO!!"
[Chaoschristian]
Yes but you would have to agree wouldn't you Chaos that the evolutionists claim would be absolute nonsense! You for sure would point out to them that they are indeed controlling the school systems and it is they who won't even allow the ID question to be asked making it sound somehow unscientific.
Certain* sexual photos of children are and, IMO, should be illegal.random_guy said:Same with drawing a picture of a naked child. As horrible as that is, I view that as the price to pay for free speech, and it should not be illegal. The courts agreed and struck down virtual child porn (computer generated images of naked children).
However, actual images of naked children are illegal and still are illegal, and should remain illegal
shernren said:I'm confused ... based on my skimming of the judge's statement, his arguments tended more towards disproving the scientificity of ID. Am I right or wrong?
TwinCrier said:Evolutionist must be breathing a sign of relief now that their theory will be free from criticism once again. So much for free speech and open minds.
shernren said:I'm confused ... based on my skimming of the judge's statement, his arguments tended more towards disproving the scientificity of ID. Am I right or wrong?
As a matter of fact yes. There is no such thing.Sabazi said:Little problem with the seperation of Church and State.