• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

No death? Not even cellular?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Dracil

Well-Known Member
Dec 25, 2003
5,005
246
San Francisco
✟31,717.00
Country
United States
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Good point, not to mention what happened to their outermost layer of skin, which is supposed to be comprised of mostly dead cells.

Even more interesting is the food they ate. They can't be digested because the cells in the food can't die.
 
Upvote 0

Dominus Fidelis

ScottBot is Stalking Me!
Sep 10, 2003
9,260
383
51
Florida
✟33,909.00
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Married
Dracil said:
Good point, not to mention what happened to their outermost layer of skin, which is supposed to be comprised of mostly dead cells.

Even more interesting is the food they ate. They can't be digested because the cells in the food can't die.

Strawman :sigh:
 
Upvote 0

neverforsaken

Proud American now and always
Jan 18, 2005
2,486
219
42
Hawaii
✟3,691.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
from what the bible said, the fuits will be as meat. so im guessing all the benifits of meat would be available in the garden of eden. i wonder if A+E also had canine teeth. the canines serve a purpose in tearing flesh. all carnivore mammals have them....unless there is a case im not aware of. Good questions lady kate and dracil.
 
Upvote 0

shernren

you are not reading this.
Feb 17, 2005
8,463
515
38
Shah Alam, Selangor
Visit site
✟33,881.00
Faith
Protestant
Marital Status
In Relationship
I think if YECs wanted to go into specifics (seeing as they normally don't ;) ) they would say that apoptosis was in the plan of God, while necrosis wasn't. They'd go on to tell you in the same breath that macroevolution doesn't happen and that mammals invented canine teeth in 5000 years.
 
Upvote 0
C

Critias

Guest
I suppose many have not noticed that there is a difference between Biblical life/death and scientific life/death.

I have seen it asserted that plants can feel suffering and pain because they bleed by a progressive creationists, when plants do not have a brain to understand what pain is.

If you want to attack this idealogy, then you must first use the Bible to define death and prove that this definition of death happened before the fall.
 
Upvote 0

Dracil

Well-Known Member
Dec 25, 2003
5,005
246
San Francisco
✟31,717.00
Country
United States
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Well since the Bible talks about spiritual death, it's not an issue for us.

But if you insist it's a physical death, then the problem's for you to solve and it's up to you to show that physical death does not really mean physical death in the Bible. :)

And if you agree the Bible is not speaking of physical death, then the thread's not directed towards you. :clap:
 
Upvote 0
C

Critias

Guest
Dracil said:
Well since the Bible talks about spiritual death, it's not an issue for us.

But if you insist it's a physical death, then the problem's for you to solve and it's up to you to show that physical death does not really mean physical death in the Bible. :)

And if you agree the Bible is not speaking of physical death, then the thread's not directed towards you. :clap:

Are you suggesting the Bible never talks about physical death?

Maybe you can explain this word and why it means spiritual death and not what it is actually defined as, physical death: twm. Genesis 2:17.

Tell me why you have changed the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17.
 
Upvote 0

Dracil

Well-Known Member
Dec 25, 2003
5,005
246
San Francisco
✟31,717.00
Country
United States
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Critias said:
Are you suggesting the Bible never talks about physical death?
Are you deliberately trying to take my words out of context?

Maybe you can explain this word and why it means spiritual death and not what it is actually defined as, physical death: twm. Genesis 2:17.

Tell me why you have changed the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17.
If you really understood the word twm in that passage, you'd understand that it meant he died spiritually (at that moment). Why do you choose to hide the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17?

Furthermore, while we're at it, you seem to be under the assumption that if it didn't happen exactly as written, it'll be doom and gloom to my interpretation. Sorry, that's only a problem to you literalists. Read the quote in my signature.

You must remember, by definition, as non-literalists, we aren't vulnerable to the same arguments that you guys are. So how about trying to answer our questions instead of trying to divert attention away?
 
Upvote 0
C

Critias

Guest
Dracil said:
Are you deliberately trying to take my words out of context?

No, I am not. I was asking for clarification. There are so many beliefs within the "Christian" world today that one cannot assume one believes things that have been historically held since the time of Christ or before. That is why I asked.

Dracil said:
If you really understood the word twm in that passage, you'd understand that it meant he died spiritually (at that moment). Why do you choose to hide the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17?

I do understand muwth in the sentence, it means to physically die. There is no other definition for the word to suggest spiritual death, yet you claim it is meant as spiritual death. The author wrote about physical death, you have changed it to spiritual death, hence you have changed the author's intended meaning and imputed your own meaning into the text.

It is not I who is changing the author's intended meaning, it is you.


Dracil said:
Furthermore, while we're at it, you seem to be under the assumption that if it didn't happen exactly as written, it'll be doom and gloom to my interpretation. Sorry, that's only a problem to you literalists. Read the quote in my signature.

Where did I make this statement? If I didn't make this statement to you then you have simply created a strawman. Never have said here that if one's interpretation of Genesis is wrong that it is "doom and gloom."

If you cannot reason why you are changing the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17, there is no need to build a strawman and then attack it.

Secondly, it seems some te's here like to throw this word "literal-ists" around as if this is a hermeneutical approach to Scripture instead of a style of writing(literal). So many te's I have spoken with are confused about this and seem not understand the approaches to interpreting Scripture. Instead, te's rather resort to name calling - calling yec's literalists - instead of actually hearing what a yec says.
 
Upvote 0

Dracil

Well-Known Member
Dec 25, 2003
5,005
246
San Francisco
✟31,717.00
Country
United States
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Critias said:
No, I am not. I was asking for clarification. There are so many beliefs within the "Christian" world today that one cannot assume one believes things that have been historically held since the time of Christ or before. That is why I asked.
I do understand muwth in the sentence, it means to physically die. There is no other definition for the word to suggest spiritual death, yet you claim it is meant as spiritual death. The author wrote about physical death, you have changed it to spiritual death, hence you have changed the author's intended meaning and imputed your own meaning into the text.

It is not I who is changing the author's intended meaning, it is you.
I suggest you do a bit more research then. You've definitely missed something.

Where did I make this statement? If I didn't make this statement to you then you have simply created a strawman. Never have said here that if one's interpretation of Genesis is wrong that it is "doom and gloom."

If you cannot reason why you are changing the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17, there is no need to build a strawman and then attack it.
You've mistaken a figure of speech for a strawman. Here, let me lay it out, "Doom and gloom meaning of my interpretation." means "my interpretation is wrong" in more straightforward words. Is that not clearly what you're implying when you say "Tell me why you have changed the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17." Or are you saying that changing the author's intended meaning can still make one's interpretation correct? Unless you believe so then you are the one who has made the strawman here.

Secondly, it seems some te's here like to throw this word "literal-ists" around as if this is a hermeneutical approach to Scripture instead of a style of writing(literal). So many te's I have spoken with are confused about this and seem not understand the approaches to interpreting Scripture. Instead, te's rather resort to name calling - calling yec's literalists - instead of actually hearing what a yec says.
You actually think literalist is a bad thing? Most YECs I've met here are actually proud of the label "literalist" (look around in the Creationist forum for some examples). You're confusing labels with name-calling. That's the equivalent of saying that by calling you a human or a YEC, I'm "name calling."

To be nitpicky, I'd say the true definition of a "literalist" as used by the early Christians was closer to the meaning "literary," unlike the ways people use it nowadays. But I'm using the definition as understood by most people in this forum.

And I see you've once again dodged the opening questions. Do you intend to keep diverting attention away?
 
Upvote 0
C

Critias

Guest
Dracil said:
I suggest you do a bit more research then. You've definitely missed something.

I think this forums proves that not all Christians take the Bible in the same way.

Dracil said:
You've mistaken a figure of speech for a strawman. Here, let me lay it out, "Doom and gloom meaning of my interpretation." means "my interpretation is wrong" in more straightforward words. Is that not clearly what you're implying when you say "Tell me why you have changed the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17." Or are you saying that changing the author's intended meaning can still make one's interpretation correct? Unless you believe so then you are the one who has made the strawman here.

Yes, I am saying you are wrong, but nothing bad - such as doom and gloom - are going to happen to you for being wrong. That is what the figure of speech implies.

I believe imputing your own meaning into the text is the wrong way to intrepret the Bible. If you feel that is how you should do it, it is your choice, but I believe you are wrong.

Where is the strawman that I have created that you are saying I have? You stated Genesis 2:17, muwth - die, means spiritual death. The definition of the word doesn't even hint to mean spiritual death, it means physical death. So why are you changing the meaning of the word, when it is unwarranted and thus by changing the meaning of the word, changing the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17?

Dracil said:
You actually think literalist is a bad thing? Most YECs I've met here are actually proud of the label "literalist" (look around in the Creatinist forum for some examples). You're confusing labels with name-calling. That's the equivalent of saying that by calling you a human or a YEC, I'm "name calling."

I never said literalist is a bad thing, but you throw it around as if it is the only way a yec interprets Scripture. Literal is a style of writing and the style of writings within the Bible change very often, even within Books, chapters, and verses themselves. It is not out of the norm to see figures of speech within a literal context or a literal verse follow by a figure of speech for a comparison. Yet, by your claim of literalism, one cannot search for the author's intended meaning because one must stick to a literal reading regardless of whether the author meant every word to be literal.

I believe the title, literalists, as it is used frequently here is resorting to name calling because it suggests that yec's read the whole Bible, or all of Genesis as a literal style of writing. That is incorrect and I am sure you have been told this before, if not you are being told now. So to claim one is a literalists is to claim that one never reads Genesis or the Bible as anything other than a literal style.

If you have been told, and you have now been, that a yec does not view the whole Bible nor all of Genesis 1-3 for that matter as a strict literal style, then you are name calling. It is so because you have been told differently and your refuse to hear it.

Dracil said:
And I see you've once again dodged the opening questions. Do you intend to keep diverting attention away?

Well ask your question and I will answer. If it is why I have changed the authors intended meaning, I have already answered it.

Muwth means only physical death, that word is used for die in Genesis 2:17. You cannot claim that it is anything other than physical death if you are going to read it looking for the author's intended meaning.
 
Upvote 0

Dracil

Well-Known Member
Dec 25, 2003
5,005
246
San Francisco
✟31,717.00
Country
United States
Faith
Catholic
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Others
Critias said:
I think this forums proves that not all Christians take the Bible in the same way.

Yes, I am saying you are wrong, but nothing bad - such as doom and gloom - are going to happen to you for being wrong. That is what the figure of speech implies.
Urk. Once again, the phrase "doom and gloom" as I was using it was not being applied to me, but to my interpretation. No matter, this isn't important.

I believe imputing your own meaning into the text is the wrong way to intrepret the Bible. If you feel that is how you should do it, it is your choice, but I believe you are wrong.
Ah, but I'd say it is impossible to read anything without putting your own meaning into the text. It is the way our brain works. We'd have to agree to disagree then.

Where is the strawman that I have created that you are saying I have?
The strawman is in claiming that I made a strawman. It did not apply to anything else.

You stated Genesis 2:17, muwth - die, means spiritual death. The definition of the word doesn't even hint to mean spiritual death, it means physical death. So why are you changing the meaning of the word, when it is unwarranted and thus by changing the meaning of the word, changing the author's intended meaning of Genesis 2:17?
Mmm, are you changing the words you're using? I'm quite sure in your original post, you said the word "twm," but now it's "muwth"?

I never said literalist is a bad thing, but you throw it around as if it is the only way a yec interprets Scripture. Literal is a style of writing and the style of writings within the Bible change very often, even within Books, chapters, and verses themselves. It is not out of the norm to see figures of speech within a literal context or a literal verse follow by a figure of speech for a comparison. Yet, by your claim of literalism, one cannot search for the author's intended meaning because one must stick to a literal reading regardless of whether the author meant every word to be literal.
Well in that case, I think we may yet reach an agreement then. :)

Ok, so you agree with my other definition of literal, and thus agree that there can be figures of speech. The question then is, how do you know the author's intent? Or rather, what do you think *is* the author's intent here? I'd say the author's intent in writing Genesis is part of the overall message of faith and salvation in the Bible.

I believe the title, literalists, as it is used frequently here is resorting to name calling because it suggests that yec's read the whole Bible, or all of Genesis as a literal style of writing. That is incorrect and I am sure you have been told this before, if not you are being told now. So to claim one is a literalists is to claim that one never reads Genesis or the Bible as anything other than a literal style.
The way literalists is used here is no more different than the words "creationist" and "evolutionist" are used here. All these words are used as something to be proud of, or something to be treated with disdain. But as I said, if you're using the alternative definition, then it's not an issue in the discussion between you and I.

If you have been told, and you have now been, that a yec does not view the whole Bible nor all of Genesis 1-3 for that matter as a strict literal style, then you are name calling. It is so because you have been told differently and your refuse to hear it.
No, it is because the word "literal" has two different meanings. There is the "correct" way, which you're advocating, which is generally not used in these forums. And there is the "popular" way, as is understood by most people here, which is the equivalent of "YEC" or "TE." You are now thinking that your defintion of "literal" is the only one, and you are actually trampling upon the other YECs' definition of literal. I understand which definition of literal you're using now, but it would be good to not presume people are talking about the less common form to begin with.

Well ask your question and I will answer. If it is why I have changed the authors intended meaning, I have already answered it.

Muwth means only physical death, that word is used for die in Genesis 2:17. You cannot claim that it is anything other than physical death if you are going to read it looking for the author's intended meaning.
They have already been asked in the first, second, and fifth posts in this thread. However, since you are using the alternative defintion of literal, rather than the ones usually used by YECs, this is no longer the main point. Indeed, the thread was actually not directed towards you, but to the other YECs.

The main point then, between us, is what IS the intended meaning of the author?
 
Upvote 0
C

Critias

Guest
Dracil said:
Ah, but I'd say it is impossible to read anything without putting your own meaning into the text. It is the way our brain works. We'd have to agree to disagree then.

I disagree. I believe it is possible to read something and look for the author's intended meaning without changing the meaning of his/her words and the context of that which it is in.

Dracil said:
Mmm, are you changing the words you're using? I'm quite sure in your original post, you said the word "twm," but now it's "muwth"?

I assume you don't have a Hebrew font installed on your computer. What I wrote was in Hebrew and "muwth" is the transliteration of the word.

Dracil said:
Well in that case, I think we may yet reach an agreement then. :)

Ok, so you agree with my other definition of literal, and thus agree that there can be figures of speech. The question then is, how do you know the author's intent? Or rather, what do you think *is* the author's intent here? I'd say the author's intent in writing Genesis is part of the overall message of faith and salvation in the Bible.

I would say that the author didn't know that there was going to be a Bible, let alone 61 other books written by another 40 or so authors, within a span of 1600 or so years.

Because the author was limited in knowledge of what the future held, he wrote with the inspired intent to tell of what he did know, by divine inspiration from the Almighty God.

Dracil said:
No, it is because the word "literal" has two different meanings. There is the "correct" way, which you're advocating, which is generally not used in these forums. And there is the "popular" way, as is understood by most people here, which is the equivalent of "YEC" or "TE." You are now thinking that your defintion of "literal" is the only one, and you are actually trampling upon the other YECs' definition of literal. I understand which definition of literal you're using now, but it would be good to not presume people are talking about the less common form to begin with.

I don't see it as trampling over yec's understanding of their hermeneutical approach. I see it as correcting the name of their approach. I think often people don't take the time to think out completely what some words implications are. Literalists means one who takes everything literally. To say yec's are literalists is a fallacy because many have stated here that they don't take Psalms to be literal in every verse and chapter therein.

So, literalists is an incorrect word to use to describe them. Most yec's that I have come across don't call themselves literalists, but are rather called literalists by those who object to their interpretation. It is simply an over exaggerated remark meant to make yec's look stupid. It is also used to trap yec's into a complete literal interpretation of everything, otherwise they will be called inconsistent with their hermeneutical approach.

It is simply a dishonest tactic and that is how I see it.

Dracil said:
They have already been asked in the first, second, and fifth posts in this thread. However, since you are using the alternative defintion of literal, rather than the ones usually used by YECs, this is no longer the main point. Indeed, the thread was actually not directed towards you, but to the other YECs.

The main point then, between us, is what IS the intended meaning of the author?

If we are still on the same subject: Genesis 2:17, then I believe the author's intended meaning is not spiritual death but physical death. I believe the author already knew and understood that it is sin that separates man from God and that because of their sin, one of their consequences was not being able to eat of the Tree of Life, which would result in physical death.

The phrase "in the day" is a figurative phrase used in the OT several times, and in Genesis 2:17 it is meant to refer to "in the day of disobedience." The passage starts off with saying what not to do, then says if you do do it, which is disobedience, then you will die in the day of your sin(disobeying God).

It cannot refer to spiritual death, in the verse, because of the definition of the word muwth is physical death not spiritual death. It does not even give the slightest of hints that it is to be taken as spiritual death. In fact Genesis 3:19, confirms this is physical death by God announcing that Adam will return to the dust from that which he was made.

Satan, in Genesis 3:4 uses this phrase against Eve telling her that surely she wouldn't die from eating the fruit off the Tree of Knowledge. She wouldn't die from eating the fruit, nor did she die on the day she ate the fruit, but in the day of her sin, she became subject to physical death because God kicked them out of the Garden.

Sin = separation from God = spiritual death
Muwth = physical death

Both happened at the fall.

Christ's death on the Cross = forgiveness from sin = spiritual life
Christ's resurrection = physical life for eternity

One of those we receive when we believe in Jesus Christ and follow Him.
The other we receive upon Christ's return.

Both are redemption of what happened at the fall.
 
Upvote 0
Status
Not open for further replies.