For what it's worth, a lot of evolutionary creationists (myself included) accept the word "day" as used in Genesis 1 to mean a literal 24-hour day. We just don't accept that the story was ever meant to convey history.
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the use of the words morning and evening only indicate that the 'day' consists of a first part and a last part.
if a day can represent some greater length of time then why on earth would you assume that a morning and an evening cant also.
Again, reading long periods of time into the Genesis creation days is more an OEC thing than an evolutionary creationist thing.The Jews were not confused in thinking that those days were long periods of time like modern theistic evolutionists are.
Again, reading long periods of time into the Genesis creation days is more an OEC thing than an evolutionary creationist thing.
Yes, I would agree the days in Genesis are literal, but not actual. They are a literary device to frame the story, not part of actual history.
'literal' but not 'actual'? Is this some kind of a joke? Didn't I just establish that the Lord Jesus family lineage is verified in three seperate historical sources? (Genesis, Chronicles, and Luke?) and that line goes from Adam to Jesus Himself.
It's a distinction that, frustratingly, some don't seem to make -- including some of our EC brethren, I might add!Yes, I would agree the days in Genesis are literal, but not actual.
And those contradict each other. So at least some of them cannot be actual.
There are other reasons for the genealogies than historical accuracy.
Also you are jumping to a different topic. We were speaking of the days in Genesis 1.
'literal' but not 'actual'? Is this some kind of a joke?
Not really. When we sing the song "Twelve Days of Christmas", we mean a literal twelve days; the song does not mean "On the first unspecified long but finite period of time of Christmas". And yet, we do not think that the song is actually talking about a specific period of time. Therefore, literal but not actual.
Now I know it's a joke; Friend, there is no such thing as 'literal but not actual'.
Did you fail to read Jude's statement, "And also Enoch, the seventh from Adam.."???
I'll say it again which you and your T.E. friends seem to be avoiding deliberately; The family lineage of Christ Jesus mentioned by Luke was inspired by the Holy Spirit and Jesus said the scripture cannot be broken. That means that His family line is legitimate clear back to Adam as verified by THREE different accounts in the Bible. That speaks very strongly for the actual, literal, and historical position of scripture. No other position is honest.
I think I will stick with the Holy Spirits leading according to scripture and not your opinions.
Why would God Almighty mislead countless millions of people for over 3,000 yrs to believe in the six day creation of the world only to (finally!) reveal the real 'truth' to mankind through Darwin? So Darwin was right but Moses was wrong?
Now I know it's a joke; Friend, there is no such thing as 'literal but not actual'. Literal means
Quote: "in accordance with, involving, or being the primary or strict meaning of the word or words; not figurative or metaphorical."
Quote: "The most obvious or non-figurative sense of a word or words; language that is not perceived as metaphorical or ironic."
Quote: " following basic meaning: adhering strictly and concisely to the basic meaning of a word or text a literal interpretation."
These are dictionary meanings of the word and you cannot divorce them from that which is 'actual'.
No. Please cite the study you referred to. You didn't just make it up, did you?
Do you stand by this as a scientific statement of biology?
Natural selection is the differential reproductive success of varying phenotypes in a population. It is non-random and environmentally-determined and leads to the adaptation of the population to its environmental cues. There is nothing mystical about it.
You misunderstand what I said. I didn't say that genes came about as a response to environmental cues, I said that their expression comes about in response to environmental cues. Variational alleles to not occur randomly with respect to their affects on the organism, they are already present within the genome en trans, kept until they are cued into expression...they have been there since God put them there the day they were created.No, it is not, because the pre-existing variational genes did not come about as a response to environmental cues. They occurred randomly with respect to the effect on the organism or its population.
Then you didn't understand what I said, or you didn't understand what the papers state. They both support what I said they do.Thank you for providing references. I have looked up both of them and neither supports your claim.
And I didn't say that they were. Genes are not altered by their environment, their expression is either turned "on" or "off" by the cues they receive from their environment.The Ralston & Shaw paper says specifically:Thus, there appear to be certain situations in which the environment affects not only the growth and health of an organism, but also the use or deployment of the organism's genes. Does this mean that genes aren't, in fact, everything? The observation that genetically identical organisms often vary greatly in phenotype clearly shows that gene-environment interaction is indeed an important regulator of phenotypic variation, including variation related to a number of diseases.Emphasis added.
This says nothing about genes being altered by environmental cues.
Correct.It is the gene expression which is affected, and it alters the phenotype not the genotype. The genotypes, in fact, are identical.
You aren't making much sense here. Whether or not the direct offspring's phenotype is the same as the parent, the exact compliment of the genotype remains the same. Expression does not change that, and the parent's grandchildren, if raised in the same environment as they were, will inherit their phenotype. So phenotypes are heritable.Note as well, that the phenotypes are not inheritable. In fact, the offspring may have different phenotypes than their parents if they are raised in a different environment, because the gene expression will be altered even though the genes themselves have not changed.
No, evolutionary change states that a single celled organism can, over eons of time, give way to an elephant. What you describe here is genetic inheritance. There is no such thing as "microevolution" except in the mind of the evolutionist. This is another word game played to give "macroevolution" the feel and smell of reality.Evolutionary change implies actual, inheritable, genetic change.
Agreed, the variation is pre-existent, environmental cues do not create new alleles, but that's not what I said. I said that environmental cues signal into expression variational alleles that have been stored within the genome unexpressed until they are needed.The other paper says:The study revealed that allelic differences in hemoglobin-oxygen affinity are attributable to the independent or joint effects of substitutions in five exterior amino acid residues that line the opening of the heme pocket. Additionally, patterns of DNA sequence variation indicate that functionally distinct a-globin alleles are maintained by natural selection that favors different genotypes in different elevational zones.Emphasis added.
Again the variation is pre-existent and nothing is said about the environmental cues producing new alleles. But natural selection favours different existing genotypes in different environments.
the use of the words morning and evening only indicate that the 'day' consists of a first part and a last part.
if a day can represent some greater length of time then why on earth would you assume that a morning and an evening cant also.
For what it's worth, a lot of evolutionary creationists (myself included) accept the word "day" as used in Genesis 1 to mean a literal 24-hour day. We just don't accept that the story was ever meant to convey history.
The Holy Spirit led Moses, the author of Chronicles, and Luke to legitimize the family of Christ and that rules out any possiblity of long evolutionary ages.
Yes, I would agree the days in Genesis are literal, but not actual. They are a literary device to frame the story, not part of actual history.
And those contradict each other. So at least some of them cannot be actual.