But lies we give different perspective to.
Indeed. We are quite suspicious about each others respective foundations. But we take it as given that each perspective has something to offer.
Why should my acceptance of inerrancy or rejection of inerrancy cause any difference in the sensory and observational data I receive about the physical universe? Why would starlight or fossils or rocks around me behave any differently simply because I held to one school of thought about Scripture instead of another?
Groucho Marx: "Who are you going to believe, me or your lying eyes?"
Lots of creationism is built upon an evidential debate. But, what the hey .... Why not just question whether we have the ability to observe in the first place. Works for me. My reply to you elsewhere:
Here is an interesting story. A woman told me about how she was completely broke and starving while trying to get through school. This was like 20 years ago. All she had was a small quantity of spaghetti, which she put into a pot to cook and put a lid on it and prayed for God to save her. Each time she took the lid off, there was more spaghetti than there should have been.
Question: why did she need the lid?
Note the feeding of the 5,000. Why is it that it is only upon collecting the fragments that the Jesus' power is revealed? I think a magician would suggest that this would really be the best opportunity to create the illusion of multiplication. Since we deny that this multiplication was an "illusion", is there something about the appearances that makes the miracle work better when people can't see it happening?
http://www.christianforums.com/t5723898-darwins-beliefs.html&page=5#post36921447
So no, I don't think creationism is so much a position of lies as a position of people who could be investing a lot more time, effort, and thought into the issue. (Of course, again, people who claim to have invested such things but show little fruit for it are either lying or deluded.) It will not stunt faith significantly to simply focus on other areas of our glorious beliefs.
Well, if evolution is right, we have been lead down the garden path by somebody.
Now that I can't fathom. I might not like how some creationists base their ideas on essentially 40 years of defective geological and biological research, but I certainly have no concern that they are basing their "eternal soul" on it.
I am all for the perseverence of the saints as sound theology.
But, there is such a thing as an eternal reward that is distinct from being saved from damnation. Apart from exactly what it is that the poster was suggesting, there are future consequences for each of us in this debate.
Mat 10:42 And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold [water] only in the name of a disciple, verily I say unto you, he shall in no wise lose his reward.
Mat 16:27 For the Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his angels; and then he shall reward every man according to his works.
As for Fijian and our reform theology debate, in which the nature of time is so critical, here is a bit of wisdom:
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a bannana." - Groucho Marx