RightWingGirl said:
Wouldn't God create in a state of full functioning maturity?
No, not necessarily. That's an assumptions.
It wouldn't make sense that he would create a seed instead of a flower, or a fetus instead of a full-frown man.
Sure it would. You say the chicken, but chickens come from eggs. Which come from chickens, which come from eggs. Keep going back, and you don't have chickens and eggs; you have an ancestor of chickens laying eggs. Keep going back, and you have reptiles laying eggs. Keep going back, and you have single-cell lifeforms that reproduce asexually through cellular division. How did these single-celled lifeforms initiate? Science doesn't know yet. Lightning is a potential answer...as is meteorite collision. It could be something else...it could be a combination of two or more things.
Or it could be God working through such things. Cannot God work through something to create something. If you want to read Genesis literally, he literally used earth to make a human being (even though there isn't a trace of earth in human DNA). That shows that God can and does use his creation to create new things.
By the same token He created the stars in a state of full functioning maturity--so we could see them.
Where's the physical proof of this? For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. In other words, there is physical proof of physical actions. If something is done, proof is left behind to show it occurred.
If stars were created "in full maturity," then there should be proof of that. However, the proof shows that these stars began young. That implies that YECism doesn't hold up.
THere is an interesting theory which, while I am still not sure about it, might interest you on this matter.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v17/i2/cosmology.asp
This was already soundly defeated as above.
I have a question for you. When God told the Hebrews, in Exodus 20:11 "For [in] six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them [is]," What do you think the Hebrews, who believed in Genesis 1 literally, thought God meant by that?
This is an assumption that they took it literally. And quite frankly, they thought that the Earth was a flat, circular disk with the abode of the dead literally beneath the Earth (as well as beneath a great subterranian sea) with four pillars holding up the sky, with the sun going around the Earth. Does that mean we should believe all that too? Because that's a literal taking of the Bible and ancient Hebrew cosmology?
And God, all knowing, knew that this verse would "deceived" them (if evolution is correct) even before He said it, and yet He said it.
Again, this is a speculation. The problem is, you've probably never heard of what is a "midrash." Many people who are not versed into Hebrew philosophy and writing are not familiar with it, so here it is: it is a way of writing in which a story or legend is written that illustrates moral and religious truths.
Or in other words, it is a Hebrew myth. A myth, contrary to whatever YECs think, doesn't mean "false." That is not the actual definition of a myth. It is a story, fictional or legendary, that teaches moral or religious truths.
- Creation in seven days...the establishment of the week.
- God rested on the seventh day...the institution and beginning of the concept of the Sabbath.
- God actually created physical things...the physical existence isn't illusionary or evil but is real and good.
- God created...He is all powerful
All this, without accepting Genesis 1 as literal. And all it takes is some knowledge of Hebrew writing and philosophy as well as a very scant knowledge of Hebrew linguistics and language.
oldwiseguy said:
I would like to engage you on this 'flood ring', but I have never heard of it. What is it supposed to be , exactly?
The Earth constantly lays down additional layers of earth upon itself throughout time. These layers are created through various means...new earth generated by phenomenon like the Mid-Atlantic ridge where new earth is literally coming up from the mantle and spreads to the east and west (it is the reason why the Atlantic ocean is getting larger while the Pacific is getting smatter), vulcanism, and even meteorites.
When great calamities like a flood occur, they leave behind evidence that they occur. Take a look at the nile river; each year it flows, depositing a layer of rich silt that is phenominal for farming and cultivation. Now suppse it isn't farmed for a few years...when you do finally farm, there's a rather large layer of silt. Each new year atop an older year.
With floods, sediment is mixed up and carried. It is destinct; we can tell if there was a massive flood in an area depending on the earth in the layer. So if there really was a world-wide Deluge, there would be a layer of such sediment around the world. No layer, then no flood.
RightWingGirl said:
If the geological record was laid down almost entire by the world wide flood, than we should not find quite the flood ring you are looking for.
1. This isn't even Biblical.
2. This isn't physically possible. Previous geological record would have been layed down through the years beforehand.
I have a question for you. Where are 70% of the fossils we should find if evolution were true?
1. Fossilization is actually a rare process that requires special and right conditions of it to occur. Not all ancient bones get fossilized...it truly is a special and unique event.
2. Fossiles are discovered all the time. We probably haven't discovered even 5% of the fossils that are buried (or even found right on the surface of the Earth) around the world. New fossils are discovered all the time.
If Evolution were true, and we have been evolving for roughly the last 3,500 million years, and only in the past 1.6 million years we have had humans (erect), and modern animals in somthing like 250-300 million, and yet we have only a handful of sharply contested "missing links" to make up for 3,200 million years.
Masses don't matter...quality does. In addition, just because certain fossils and remains haven't been found yet doesn't mean they won't be.