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The Gap Theory

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dunkel

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genez said:
Because I have only seen those who are out to disprove the veracity of the Bible use the same exact ones! That's why.......

So the content of the argument can be ignored if you don't like the form of the argument. How convenient. Hm, I don't really like your attitude here, so I'll just ignore any claims that you make about how the Bible contains no errors. What? Me ignoring your claims doesn't make them untrue? Dang, that sucks...

genez said:
I am not stalling anything. I sense something afoot here that is playing it cool, even when exposed. For you claimed you found these on your own.

Show me where I said this. Here I'll help. I said this:

"The Bible also talks about domesticated camels before camels were known to have been domesticated and coins before coins were known to have been used."

Then I said this:

"I'll have to dig up the specific ones I was referring to, but here are a few other spots that contain factual inaccuracies:"

Then I said this:

"Gotten my hands on it? Um, it's right there in the Bible. Are there certain passages of the Bible I shouldn't have my hands on? And is it significant that you offered no refutation to the points?"

Where, in any of those quotes (or something I didn't repeat here), did I claim to have found those particular passages.

Tell you what, I'll do you one better. I googled "bible errors" and found those verses. Happy now? Guess what...it still doesn't change what the verses say. Doesn't change the fact that the verses I posted, wherever I copied and pasted them from, contain factual errors that you are apparently unable to explain away.

genez said:
Even in Compuserve when dealing with proud and belligerent atheists, they conceded the point on the hare chewing his cud. They also stopped using it.

Perhaps they got disgusted with the idea of eating poo. Or perhaps, in your younger days, you were more convincing. Maybe it's because I'm not an athiest. Maybe it's because I don't have an all or nothing attitude about the Bible like atheists and many Christians apologists have. I don't know, I wasn't there. Or are you trying to say that I should roll over and accept yor arguments, simply become someone on Compuserve did, many years ago?

genez said:
You? No big deal...... I am simply twisting words.

"cud" comes out of one end of an animal and "poo" comes out of the other end...so which end of the hare does the stuff come out of? I think it's the koala bear that eats it's mother's poo when it's a baby, in order to build up the bacteria in its gut necessary to digest eucalyptus leaves. So is the koala chewing its cud? Or its mother's cud? Or is it just eating it's mom's poo?

Anyway, you're totally missing my point..or the author's point, really. For you to spend time on this, trying to figure out how you can turn a cud chewing hare into reality, is to take away from the real message.

genez said:
There are some (not many) small typos in certain copies of texts of Scripture. Easy to figure out. Errors that would only require a tiny slip of the pen when making a transcription.

I'm glad you acknowledge that. The obvious question, which I won't actually ask you, is...if the Bible is the Word of God, which he inspired men to write down, why did he allow these slight slips of the pen and other translation errors to make it in there? As another inerrant Bible type said in one of these other threads (I'm paraphrasing), are you saying God didn't have the power to make sure everything got translated and copied correctly? Are you saying God is NOT omnipotent? Or just didn't care that his inerrant Word was getting mangled by incompetant scribes??

Right, so I'm not going to pursue that line of questioning. Mainly because I agree with you and don't want to start a fight over the issue.

genez said:
There are other things that appear to be errors when read in the translation, but the original text would clarify once the original language is understood correctly.

Fair enough. However, I'm going to SWAG it and say that probably 95% of American Christians who hold the inerrant Bible view are basing this view solely on what they read in the KJV or NIV or whatever English translation. So, unless you're going to bust out the original text in Hebrew or Greek, showing me where the translation error is, I think it's safe to exclude this from our discussion.

Even assuming you could do so (maybe you can, I don't know), I can say with virtual certainty, that it wouldn't clear up all the issues. Maybe some of the issues like 4000 stables or 40000. Maybe the original Hebrew says "or the hare, which is nasty and eats its own poo...don't eat this filthy animal", I don't know. But since the Bible was written by men, copying down oral traditions of events that happened many years before they were born, it's unlikely that there were no discrepencies somewhere along the way. Maybe if we find some problems in the original Hebrew writings, we should go back and see what the oral traditions had to say, because maybe if we hear the original stories spoken it will clear up any errors that we erroneously find in today's versions.

genez said:
As for your mathmatical discrepancy?

Wow, all we had to do was round down...why? Because the ancients can't be expected to be held to the same standards as us sophisicated modern mathematicians:

[size=+1][font=Times, Times New Roman, Serif][size=+0]McKinsey goes on to blather for several additional sentences in this vein, but it is well-known and accepted that ancient estimates of distance, length, etc. were not always given down to the levels of our modern measurements.


Ok, that's cool. I don't necessarily agree with his condecending attitude towards the mathematical abilities of the ancients...I mean, we're still using mathematical forumulas and principles that are thousands of years old (pi, for example?). Ancient cultures were also able create highly accurate calanders, which we have only recently been able to match (last few centuries, anyway). But ok, they weren't as precise as we are today, fine. So we can allow for a slight fudge factor...

Anyway, that was an interesting read, thanks.. But it does bring up a few questions...if, as your link explains, we can't really expect that much mathematical accuracy from the ancients, why should we put so much stock in the accuracy of their other scientific explanations *cough*genesis*cough*? Another example is an explanation of the hare chewing its cud (one I thought you might bring up)...while the hare doesn't chew its cud like a cow, as you pointed out, it does eat its own poo. Apparently, and this is something I didn't know, it does this by eating the poo directly out of, uh, the exit point for said poo. It moves rather quickly when doing this, so that an observer might not notice the source of the material that he sees the hare munching on. After watching cows display similar behavior, it would seem reasonable to the observer that the hare was doing the same thing the cow does, even though the two behaviors are actually quite different. I would guess that the problem with this explanation is that it shows that the hare doesn't "cheweth the cud" after all, thereby causing inerrant Bible types to have an anurysm.

I'm not really sure if I even want to continue this for a couple of reasons. First of all, it's an awful waste of time...for me, anyway. It doesn't bother me in the least that the Bible might contain a few mistake, of different kinds, here or there. For me to argue back and forth over the meaning of "cud", as I've said, kind of takes away from looking at the real meaning behind the words, rather than the words themselves. It is precisely for the reasons that you pointed out...translation issues, possible mistakes while making handwritten copies...that we have to try to look past the details and get to the real message, the spirit of the law rather than the letter of the law, so to speak. Regardless of whether a hare eats its poo or chews the cud, what is the point? Don't eat dirty animals...good advice in a time before reliable refridgeration and sanitation standards. Did Solomon have 4000 stables or 40,000? Who cares, he had a bunch, he was a rich, powerful guy, that's the point. Was the Earth created in six days? Do we need to spend time explaining away the differences between Genesis 1 and 2? Look, God's in charge, he made all of this (in one way or the other), don't disobey him, great, let's move on. Is God going to quiz us when we get to Heaven?

God: How many stables did Solomon have?
Me: Dang...I know this one...dang...4 or 40 thousand?
God: Haha, trick questions...sorry, please take the elevator down to the basement
Me: No, wait...ask me how many days it took you to create everything...ask me if a hare chews its cud!!!

Oh yeah, second reason I'm not sure I should continue this...I'm concerned for your well being. See, I only have to be right once, whereas you have to be right every time.. We can go through 100 examples of Biblical mistakes and if you can only explain 99 of them, then the Bible is inerrant. For you, it's all or nothing, baby. For me...ok, I'll allow for some Biblical scribe that didn't like fractions, so he rounded 31.4... down to an even 30...but poo is poo and cud is cud. I'm just afraid that if I do finally come up with some problem that you can't figure out and can't recall from your Compuserv days and you can't google the answer, your head might explode or something. I'd hate to be responsible for that.
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nephilimiyr

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genez said:
Hardly a fertile ground for a born again believer. Even the scholarly Pharisees searched the Scriptures all the time and could not see Christ. That is something that those who think simply having an education is everything, miss.
I just wanted to say that even though the Pharisees didn't see Jesus Christ in the scriptures, many of them, like Nicodemus, believed Jesus to be a teacher sent to them by God. Nicodemus recognized and accepted the miracles, signs, and wonders that Jesus was performing and told him that no one could do these things unless God were not with him.

The paradigm that the Pharisees were in did not allow for a Jesus to be the Christ. They had an understanding of the scriptures but what they lacked was wisdom. We see this played out perfectly in the discourse between Nicodemus and Jesus. What I'm getting at genez is that I don't believe the Pharisees didn't accept Jesus being the Christ because they didn't know the meaning for words in the scriptures but because they lacked the wisdom to discern what the scriptures were saying.

So, what does that have to do with what we're talking about here? Justified and I were discussing the correct meaning of a word. The correct meaning of this word could and should change the meaning of the whole thought given in the verse, providing all the other words in the verse are agreed upon.

Our problem today is two fold, finding the correct meanings for words and then haveing the wisdom to discern the truth. The Pharisees I believe only had one problem to deal with and that was haveing the wisdom to be able to discern the truth.

So the question about Cyrus Gordon wouldn't be so much as to whether he knew how to correctly interpret and or translate Hebrew, he may have, I don't know, but whether or not he had the wisdom to discern the truth. Odviously, since, or if, he did not convert to Christianity tells me he lacked this wisdom. It just goes to show that one can have all the understanding but if wisdom isn't there, all this understanding means nothing.

Proverbs 4:7, Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding.
What does this mean to me? This means one should respect understanding but should treasure wisdom. One can have all the understanding of the scriptures from top to bottom but if they lack wisdom, forget it, they will miss the mark everytime.
 
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nephilimiyr

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dunkel said:
The Bible also talks about domesticated camels before camels were known to have been domesticated and coins before coins were known to have been used.
All you're really saying here is that what we know to be certain now is that camels were domesticated at this time period and that coins are first found to be used at this time period. That doesn't mean that camels were actually domesticated earlier then what is known now and that doesn't mean that coins were used earlier then what we know now.

To base a dogma on what we know to be true today isn't a very wise thing to do. None of the known information that you stated in your post is immune to being changed in the future. In fact, that's why I chose the word "dogma". :)
 
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justified

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Hey Folks, This thread is about the Gap Theory and Creation please do not turn it into a discussion about biblical accuracy and historicity.


Cyrus Gordon retired in 1989. A Jew. Not a Christian. No Holy Spirit. He taught at Brandeis. Hardly a theological seminary. Secularism personified.

Here is a current anti- Bible position held by a prof who teaches the Hebrew Bible there now....

http://my.brandeis.edu/news/item?news_item_id=104196

Makes a statement. Yes?

Hardly a fertile ground for a born again believer. Even the scholarly Pharisees searched the Scriptures all the time and could not see Christ. That is something that those who think simply having an education is everything, miss.

Exegetical issues are debated amongst qualified scholars today. There are areas of contention today. Surely you must know this. Yet, you come here to debate non-exegetes? Ones who depend on others for their exegesis?

What kind of game do you wish to play with us? Who can defend themselves against you (on your terms), even when you are dead wrong? That's the point.

What is with you,man? Do not start with these ad hominem arguments! Cyrus Gordon is a Jew, you are absolutely correct. But practicing Jewish men are hardly secular. I suggest you read the book his student wrote, Our Father Abraham: Jewish Roots of the Christian Faith which has made tremendous in-roads towards reconciliation of Jews and Christians: and THAT IS the holy spirit.

I will not be gulled into a ****ing contest debate with you, as if I'm going to be offended that some guy doesn't like my mentor's mentor. If you want to discuss facts, argue logically and act scholarly, let's get on with it. Otherwise, there's no point.
 
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dunkel

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nephilimiyr said:
All you're really saying here is that what we know to be certain now is that camels were domesticated at this time period and that coins are first found to be used at this time period. That doesn't mean that camels were actually domesticated earlier then what is known now and that doesn't mean that coins were used earlier then what we know now.

Can't argue with that.

nephilimiyr said:
To base a dogma on what we know to be true today isn't a very wise thing to do. None of the known information that you stated in your post is immune to being changed in the future. In fact, that's why I chose the word "dogma". :)

And that is the difference between science and blind faith in the the literal intepretation of the Bible. If someone digs up some some nomad camp from 10,000 years ago and there are camel bones, historians and archeologists will be able to say "Hm, we need to push back our date for camel domestication". Some papers are written, the evidence is looked at again and again, and probably some blurbs in an encyclopedia and some textbooks are changed. Now what happens when something in the Bible is not supported or shown to be incorrect? Well, obviously the science is flawed, it's only atheist scientists doing this work to destroy the Bible, it is the work of Satan, God made it to look this way, some verbal gymnastics to show that this or that word had different a dofferent meaning to the authors of the Bible, and on and on. ANYTHING except changing the view that the Bible is 100% factually correct.
 
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dunkel

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justified said:
Hey Folks, This thread is about the Gap Theory and Creation please do not turn it into a discussion about biblical accuracy and historicity.

Sorry, you're right. And since I know little to nothing about Gap Theory or how it relates to Creation, I'll bow out. Anyone I was debating can feel free to contact me via private message.
 
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GenemZ

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nephilimiyr said:
I just wanted to say that even though the Pharisees didn't see Jesus Christ in the scriptures, many of them, like Nicodemus, believed Jesus to be a teacher sent to them by God. Nicodemus recognized and accepted the miracles, signs, and wonders that Jesus was performing and told him that no one could do these things unless God were not with him.

Not all Pharisees rejected Christ. The majority did.

The paradigm that the Pharisees were in did not allow for a Jesus to be the Christ. They had an understanding of the scriptures but what they lacked was wisdom. We see this played out perfectly in the discourse between Nicodemus and Jesus. What I'm getting at genez is that I don't believe the Pharisees didn't accept Jesus being the Christ because they didn't know the meaning for words in the scriptures but because they lacked the wisdom to discern what the scriptures were saying.

And? Why did they lack wisdom to know what the Scriptures are saying?

Matthew 16:17 niv
"Jesus replied, "Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah, for this was not revealed to you by man, but by my Father in heaven."

So, what does that have to do with what we're talking about here?

Unless the Holy Spirit opens your eyes, certain truths will be veiled, even if you know Hebrew intimately. That's the point. Ever argue with a religious Jew over Isaiah 53? Or, Psalm 22? They spin an entirely different meaning into the text, and will give what appears to be a very informative type spin as to why it can not be speaking of Christ. Without the Holy Spirit there are passages that just can not be seen from a Christian perspective. They do not have the Spirit alive to their experience.

Justified and I were discussing the correct meaning of a word. The correct meaning of this word could and should change the meaning of the whole thought given in the verse, providing all the other words in the verse are agreed upon.

Meanings of words even in English can be fought over in texts that can have multiple meanings. Arguments for both sides can be read into a paragraph. I find myself doing this all the time. I make believe someone is trying to learn English, and look and see how the one learning can be told various meanings for the same sentence..... and it can be done quite easily at times.

Our problem today is two fold, finding the correct meanings for words and then haveing the wisdom to discern the truth. The Pharisees I believe only had one problem to deal with and that was haveing the wisdom to be able to discern the truth.

2000 years from now, and someone will exegete words of Michael Jackson's "I'm Bad" can be made to look like a confessional. And, a great body of information could be used to make it seem quite plausible. Yet, that would not be the case. It would be the opposite. But, if someone pulled out his equivalent to a Concordance of English words? I think he could convince millions that Michael Jackson was confessing his sins in that song. The guy who said Michael J. was simply boasting about himself? He will be seen as wrong by many. Like we see with the GAP theory being based upon a majority point of view used to make it appear to be invalid.

So my question about Cyrus Gordon wouldn't be so much as to whether he knew how to correctly interpret and or translate Hebrew, he may have, I don't know, but whether or not he had the wisdom to discern the truth.

That is my point. Because when someone has something to defend as a belief system, words can be made to work in your favor if you are intelligent and very knowledgeable on the subject. Just like in weaponry. One can create a counter for what the other wants to break down your defences. Words are weapons in the hands of certain men. A therapists can be made to look like "the rapist" if someone is skilled enough in convincing the crowd that there were two words, not one, in the text.

Odviously, since, or if, he did not convert to Christianity tells me he lacked this wisdom. It just goes to show that one can have all the understanding but if wisdom isn't there, all this understanding means nothing.

Proverbs 4:7, Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding.

He may have acknowledge the Jewish roots to Christianity. So? That does not mean he saw Christianity in Christ. Having been a Jew myself, I can see from a perspective that acknowledging such a thing is an easy thing to do. Its an undeniable thing. But, having the wisdom to see why Christianity is real? That's another matter that Jews can not face. For that takes the Holy Spirit.


What does this mean to me? This means one should respect understanding but should treasure wisdom. One can have all the understanding of the scriptures from top to bottom but if they lack wisdom, forget it, they will miss the mark everytime.

That is why I made it a point to bring up the background of the man that was being boasted about. Secular genius can not impart spiritual realities. They can not know them. Because of that, the bias will lean one way when the meaning of a text could have several possible "plausible" meanings. Lots of secular knowledge does not produce truth. Some may possess worldly truths about knowledge, but lack the wisdom to see God's truth from within the worldly truths they possess.

I had the same problem with an old school mate who came out of Orthodox Judaism. He wanted to go back to the rabbis for his Hebrew understanding. I thought he was nuts. I stayed away from him after learning about that. For he wanted to get me involved, too. On the other hand, I knew another Orthodox Jew who got saved, and he knew better. His own dad being an Orthodox Rabbi! He knew that it would be tainted by the veil if he learned from them the meaning of Scripture.

2 Corinthians 3:13-15 (New International Version)
"We are not like Moses, who would put a veil over his face to keep the Israelites from gazing at it while the radiance was fading away. But their minds were made dull, for to this day the same veil remains when the old covenant is read. It has not been removed, because only in Christ is it taken away. Even to this day when Moses is read, a veil covers their hearts."

And... "Moses" is to be included in the Creation account!

Grace and peace, GeneZ
 
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sawdust

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justified said:
You know, for someone who says he came "out" of Judaism, you read scripture very much like the sages did.

He said he "came out of Judaism"... he never said he stopped being a Jew. Same as I would never stop being an Aussie no matter what country I lived in.

We always need to know the spirit before we can understand the meaning of the words. :)

peace
 
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GenemZ

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sawdust said:
He said he "came out of Judaism"... he never said he stopped being a Jew. Same as I would never stop being an Aussie no matter what country I lived in.

We always need to know the spirit before we can understand the meaning of the words. :)

peace

Where I work (hotel) we once had a group of young Israelis staying for some time. When they were off work we used to converse and share our experiences in life. I had lived in Israel for a summer, so I had an idea how they think. We got along fine. Occassionally I would run a Hebrew passage or word by them and they would give me some feedback. It was very cordial....

One night the manager was working with me, and one of the Israelis said something about me being a Jew. The manager was suprised, and told him that I was a Christian. The Israeli responded, "Yes! But he has a Jewish soul!" For some reason that felt good to hear. :)

I have heard a few ex-orthodox Jews who are now Christian, teach. Some sounded very much like a rabbi when teaching. I did not care for it. For it reminded me too much of the deadness I used to experience under religion. Just the same, there was a big difference between them and a typical rabbi. It was that the Holy Spirit was able to open their eyes to truths that unbeliever rabbis could not grasp.

Its not the presentation that counts. Its the Spirit that makes the difference. Yet, God raises up men with certain presentations that are directed towards a certain group, or people. But, without the Spirit, the presentation would only appeal to their flesh.

2 Corinthians 3:6 niv
"He has made us competent as ministers of a new covenant—not of the letter but of the Spirit; for the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life."

Grace and peace, GeneZ
 
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