Dicy mind said:
Hey I don't know has this been discussed before and is this the right forum but have you ever thought that what are you?
Where does our thinking come from?
I don't understand where I come from and why do I feel.
This seems to be the question of all questions because it's far away from the questions "How we're we created" and "how should we be?". Instead its "What are we?".
I don't see how the questions "How were we created?" and "how should we be?" are so distant from the question "what are we?" as you suggest they are. In fact, you cannot answer "What are we?" without first answering the other two questions. Let's look at the two possibilities:
EVOLUTION FROM LOWER FORMS OF LIFE
If you subscribe to the view that you were "created" by a spontaneous generation of a single-celled organism in some sort of primordial-soup (or prebiotic-stew), which organism evolved into slightly more complex organisms like trilobites, and then into fish, then into small semi-amphibious tetrapods who evolved into lizards (who evolved into birds) and small mammals who evolved into hominids which evolved into apes and humans, what effect does such a view have on the question "how should I be?" Well, firstly, if you believe you were so "created" by random chance and mutation, how can you believe you were "created" in the image of God? It will be a hard thing to believe. What is there in evolution that can even come close to approximating and image of an image of an image of the image of God? So, firstly you will at least doubt that you were created in the image of God, and therefore will not answer the question "how should I be?" in any clear terms as far as your relationship to God or in terms of your duty to be a decent representation of His image. But now we get to the question "What am I?" Well, if you do not believe you were created in God's image, you no doubt also do not believe that you have fallen or failed to maintain a true representation of that image. You don't see yourself as fallen from a state of perfection, but as a mere link in a naturalistic process from imperfection to perfection. In evolution you started as an imperfect amoeba, and have moved to a more-perfect man, and in the future will eventually reach supreme perfection (on the species level, not as an individual). Thus, you cannot reconcile evolutionist thinking with the Biblical teaching that God created man perfect, but man fell from said perfection and become debase and sinful. Thus when you answer the question "what am I?" you will say "I am an insignificant bacterium that over millions of years became an intellectual being of a high order" rather than "I was created perfect, in the image of God Almighty Himself, but I fell from that state and became a lowly sinner in need of the cleansing of Christ's blood."
SPECIAL CREATION
On the otherhand, if you believe that God specially created man in His own image, then you will believe that you started perfect, but yet fell, and are in need of Christ's blood. The question of creation and evolution is then the MOST fundamental question of Christianity and the correct answer is necessary to salvation, because those who were not created in God's image certainly did not fall from such an image - how then can the image be renewed, seeing it was never there to begin with, and why would it even need to be renewed if it had never been there to start with? Athanasius said that the only one who could restore man to being in the image of God was the Image Himself (Jesus Christ). Just as when a painting is destroyed by time, he said, the painter recalls the person depicted in the painting and redraws them on the same canvas, so Christ came to this world and reimpressed His image on those who would be saved. But if we were not created in His image in the beginning, how could he restore the image that was not there at the first? According to evolution we will eventually reach perfection through mutation and chance, and therefore do not need Christ's blood, because we are continually progressing toward perfection. In Christianity (which is wholly antithetical to evolution) we find quite the opposite, that we began perfect, and are now continually degrading and becoming more imperfect, and will continue to do so, so long as we remain apart from Christ (which we will do so long as we do not believe in special creation). The law of increasing entropy (the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics) states that disorder is always increasing, the amount of usable energy is always decreasing, or in other words, everything is wearing down. To put it even simpler, entropy (inevitable and steady deterioration of a system or society) is always increasing. This truth prohibits evolution in the natural world, since evolution proposes that order is increasing (simple bacteria becoming men) and the law of increasing entropy shows the opposite. More importantly, however, the law of increasing entropy is true with respect to the souls of the unregenerate - they continue to degrade and become more debase (or, as Paul puts it, wicked men and deceivers grow worse and worse). Only when the soul is joined to Christ Jesus can the entropy cease.