vossler said:
Please provide Scriptural references.
How does that substantiate that this isnt something concocted?
All rather vague with no Scriptural basis.
http://www.apologeticsinfo.org/outlines/generalspecialrevelation.html
http://incolor.inetnebr.com/stuart/cr.htm
(see 3rd paragraph)
Well for one, God doesnt tell us to use it.
Do you need a special command from God to use your eyes? Or is it enough that God gave you eyes?
No, Scripture obviously requires human interpretation, that is not in dispute. The dispute centers on to what degree human derived measurements and ideas, which have no Scriptural basis, can and should be used in such interpretation.
Any known truth can be used to correct false interpretations of scripture, since all truth comes from God.
Evolutionists dip deeply into solely human developed hypotheses and reasoning which are based on mans very limited knowledge of Creation and then take the liberty to fill in a lot of blanks that ought not to be filled in.
Faith as small as a mustard seed is still enough faith to move mountains. The smallest truth is still true and qualifies as a standard of truth.
I humbly disagree with this assessment, because if true then we would have little or no assurance.
We have the assurance of faith. By definition that means we do not have the assurance of logic or objective evidence.
Science by contrast has plenty of logic and objective evidence, but no assurance of faith.
Whereas science takes a lot of liberty to promote mans extremely limited knowledge of Creation and present it as truth.
Not at all. Scientific method is quite rigorous and doesn't permit much in the way of liberties. Everything must be tested against predicted observation. So, however, limited our knowledge of nature, we can have confidence in the validity of what we know. It is not how much we know that counts, but whether what we know is true. Just as it is not how much faith we have that counts, but whether we have faith in the one true God.
The sooner we realize mans limitations and accept them the better off well all be and the more well turn to God as our source of truth.
You are assuming an opposition between the exploration of nature and turning to God as our source of truth. But nature is the work of God. To explore nature is as much turning to God as a source of truth as studying scripture is.
Without the Holy Spirit as an intercessor Scripture would require rational human deduction, which we all know isnt always rational.
Even with the Spirit we still need to use rational human deduction, since we cannot make sense of what the Spirit reveals without it. It is not as if the Spirit will bypass our mind.
Rationality is not always rational, but it is not always irrational either, and in both science and logic safe-guards have been developed to minimize, if not eliminate, irrational lines of thought. After all, rationality or logic is one expression of Logos. One of those human characteristics which implies the image of God. We do have to be careful not to misuse reason, but we cannot take a general stance that all rational conclusions are wrong. Most are not. So you have to be specific when casting aspersions of irrationality. It cannot be the basis of a general rejection of a whole concept. You need to show specifically where irrationality has infected the argument and invalidated the conclusion reached.
Let also not forget that interpreting Scripture doesnt require nearly as much education as interpreting Creation and that man is commanded to do the former and not the latter.
I don't see any basis for this conclusion. Much science is simple enough to teach to 5 year olds.
Obviously we do this through a study of the days of Jesus. Like I said before, I dont have a problem looking to outside sources to help with some basic descriptions that arent within Scripture itself. The difference or important point is that these descriptions or definitions in no way change Scripture but help illuminate it. If it does anything other than that it is not from God.
Likewise the study of creation sometimes illuminates scripture. Remember, nothing changes scripture. The text is fixed. All that can change is a human interpretation of the scripture.
Scripture does more that just provide sufficient knowledge essential to salvation, for me its my life blood, my sustenance and without it Id be rudderless. I know to some of you this is sanctimonious and borders on idolatry, but that is what I believe.
I think most Christians would agree. But it still does not tell us everything.
How is it that we believe that with our tiny little fraction of a slice of history, which according to evolutionists is 1/22500000 of the historical pie, that we can honestly believe we know with any degree of certainty what transpired back then.
Because our little fraction would not be what it is if the rest of earth's history had not been what it was. The observations of the present, therefore, tell us of the past. Mars, so far as we know, has no liquid water in the present. Yet observations of its surface by robot explorers tell us there was liquid water on Mars in the past. Do you really think that is unknowable?
How arrogant can we be to think that with such a limited piece of the Creation history that we somehow can determine the age of the earth, our origins and everything else evolutionists claim?
Nevertheless, the age of the earth has been determined. So it can't be impossible after all. This sort of argument is like saying I can't win a lottery because the odds are so stacked against it after my number has already been drawn. Yes the chances of winning are slim, but I still won. (Or I might have if I had bought a ticket.). The chances of figuring out the age of the earth and other scientific matters may be slim. but once it is done it is done, and no muttering about the impossibility of doing so undoes the fact that it has already been done.
Well just have to agree to disagree. Scripture will always be its own best interpreter. If for no other reason because man is notoriously self serving and will twist it to fit his wants and needs.
And therefore will interpret scripture in line with his self-serving propensity. I don't deny that comparing one part of scripture with another can be very helpful in determining the meaning, but it is still a human mind that has to make the connections, and is prone to make the connections that please the interpreter's wants and needs. This is no different from the biases that can misinterpret creation.
In both cases, bias is eliminated by the give and take of argument and evidence---the employment of human reason under (we pray) the illumination of the Holy Spirit. Even deciding what is scripture took centuries of discussion, sometimes quite vituperous. Furthermore, denominational differences show that we have no accord on many issues despite millennia of comparing scripture to scripture.
Why do we not just acknowledge that there are some things scripture does not tell us, and some things on which it is ambiguous?
Scripture can never contradict Scripture,
Yet people who take this position have to work themselves into mental contortions to "reconcile" contradictions. IMO we should just let them stand.
Once again, interpretations that are humanly derived are not all we have; we have the wonderful gift of the Holy Spirit.
And we have Spirit-guided people who sincerely disagree with each other. So we still have to figure out -- using human reasoning -- which ones are correctly interpreting the guidance of the Holy Spirit. How do you know who is correct, for example about whether we should gather for corporate worship on Saturday or Sunday or if it matters at all?
Truth has but one known source, God. Jesus, in John 18:37, said He came to testify to the truth. What truth do you think He spoke of?
The truth of who God is and what God's will is, and of what God is doing in and through his Son.
The truths of Scripture are the only truths man requires or that matter.
Does that mean they are the only truths we are permitted to know? Some truths are trivial--like the formula for making nail polish. Does that mean we should not know it? Also, scientific information often matters very much to our physical well-being. Knowing the facts about the importance of hygiene saves lives.
Maybe in some grand scheme of things you can claim this is not required knowledge and doesn't "matter". Frankly, I think you are wrong. I think these things do matter, even to God. Yet whether or not they matter is still not the issue. The issue is whether or not they are true.
So how does God primarily speak to us? I would submit through His Scriptures and the Holy Spirit. He never tells us to look elsewhere, but He does tells us to look there.
Faith based on His Word. Romans 10:17 states: So then faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of God.
It depends on the topic. On matters of salvation and righteousness and knowing God, of course the scriptures are a primary source. On matters relating to the natural world, nature is the primary source.
Isnt that the point, that were to go beyond what is known?
Yes, that is the point of faith. But we are not called by faith to deny what is known.
Where does God tells us that?
Gee, you truly do have an aversion to using the mind God gave you, don't you? You have to be told everything and refuse to figure out anything for yourself.
God tells us that in Luke 10:37. It time you began using God's gift of a mind.
Alright lets use your analogy only Ill dispute your 10%. I believe we dont even know 1% of Gods Creation, but Ill be generous and use 1%. With 1% knowledge man likes to think he knows the remaining 99%, isnt that extremely arrogant? Now how can they possibly be considered on equal footing with Scripture?
Dispute it all you like. They are numbers drawn from a hat anyway. The percentages don't matter. What matters is whether or not the 10% or the 1% is true. All truth is on a par with the truth of scripture because all truth is one as God is one.
It does when it says man came from an amoeba or an ape.
Do you think that glorifies humanity? Or degrades humanity? How can it do either if it is fact?
God commands us to love one another but he doesn't command us to love the animals, yet many people do, some love them even more than people.
God gave us dominion over his earthly creation and told us to care for it. Do you think he intended us to fulfill these commands without love?
Do you think God does not intend us to love what he loves and created with love?
Why do you need this spelled out in a specific command?
do you think that because animals are a part of God's Creation that we should therefore love them?
Absolutely.
If so, how should we love them, like one another or is there another degree of love we should use?
We should love them by being caring and compassionate about them, by helping to preserve their habitat from human overuse, by treating even those we intend to eat with kindness while they are in our care. If we loved animals as we ought, we would never accept the conditions in which they are forced to live on factory farms, for example. Nor would we permit the wholesale destruction of the rain forest that is happening right now. And we would get serious about putting the brakes on global warming. Just for starters.
If we shouldn't love them, wouldn't we in turn be elevating Scripture above Creation?
Since we should love them, the point is moot.
This sums up much of the difference between us. Mans miniscule knowledge of Creation, based solely on mans limited scope and creative imagination, is considered truth that is just as valid as the truth based on Scripture. What more needs to be said?
You keep confusing quantity with quality. Is not a grain of salt still salt? Is not a grain of truth still truth? How can even the smallest grain of truth be less true than the truth of scripture?