I really don’t have much faith in seminaries. There are seminaries for every denomination who disagree on biblical doctrine which indicates that the majority of them have to be wrong. I have listened to a seminar posted from YouTube by someone here in CF. It was almost 2 hours long and I ended up writing a very long refutation pointing out the mistakes the professor made. The two biggest problems with his explanation were the origin of the creation account in Genesis and how the Israelites would’ve understood it. He insisted that the story originated from Mesopotamia which means that the story came from the imagination of man and not from God and how the Israelites would’ve interpreted it is irrelevant to the truth that it is saying. Jesus was constantly correcting the Jews on their interpretation of scripture which means that how they would’ve interpreted it has no impact at all on what it’s actually teaching. So many people just want to hear what they want to hear so they look around for the first source they can find that promotes their position and they’re content with that. As long as someone with a degree agrees with them then they don’t question it. If the creation account in Genesis is the result of a rewriting of ancient Mesopotamian pagan theology then it’s a serious discredit to the validity of the Bible because it means that Genesis 1 and 2 are nothing more than stories conjured up by the imagination of pagan men and has no more truth to it than the made up pagan gods that were created by men. So I’ve leaned that just because someone has a college degree doesn’t automatically mean that everything they teach is accurate.
Now we're getting somewhere.
Do you see what you're arguing? You are claiming that any evidence provided that goes against your interpretation of scripture is wrong, because you don't like the conclusions that can be drawn from that evidence.
The Biblical creation narrative can't be drawn from earlier Mesopotamian narratives. Why? Because that would mean that the Bible didn't come from God.
It doesn't matter that the idea that the Genesis account being based on earlier Mesopotamian creation stories is a well supported hypothesis and entirely uncontroversial in academic circles. It probably doesn't matter that the Genesis account is also based on earlier Judaic polytheistic accounts, and the framing in the Bible is a retelling to align with the Jewish shift to monotheism.
None of the facts matter.
As with the physical science, like radiometric dating, you will just reject any evidence that would require you revising certain beliefs. It's the same presuppositionalism I see with anti-vaxxers, flat earthers and other conspiracy theorists.
I wonder though, do you take this approach to anything else in your life? If your mechanic tells you your exhaust system is cracking do you ignore him because you believe the stock exhaust can never fail?
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