Would you not just see what was living at the time of the flood dispersed all over the globe but other strata remaining where it is?
Yes, exactly. But we don't see that. We see organisms segregated both stratigraphically and geographically, not jumbled together around the globe.
Yeah, if my participation in this forum is God calling to me, then the sasquatches are calling to me too. I need something much less subtle.
Lets stick to the prophecies I presented.
I decline on the grounds that the unreliability of a pretty major prophesy (Jesus said he would be back in the lifetime of eyewitnesses) substantially undercuts the impact of an extremely open-ended prophesy. That said, I would appreciate it if you could quote the prophetic passages directly.
In any case you have not addressed the main point of the excerpt to which you are replying. Paul was still industriously persecuting Christians despite there being a number of supposedly fulfilled prophesies. I am similarly unconvinced by supposedly fulfilled prophesies and God knows this. I can pretend to find them convincing, but I can't force myself to. So again, why should I be condemned to Hell because God doesn't feel like giving me the obvious sign he knows I need?
No, they do not mean the same thing. In the instances that Pharaoh hardened his own heart, it was written to show his character and his will to claim he was more powerful than God. When God hardens his heart, due to his already hardened heart towards God, He does it as a punishment for Pharaoh's hardened heart. He cements or stays the condition of the heart of pharaoh so that His plan to serve justice to Pharaoh is completed.
It goes with punishment once again. IF you disobey God/act in wicked ways and are deserving of punishment this seems to be a method of punishment for it.
See above.
If I have the ability to look at all points of time at once, I would know at any point of time what was happening. That doesn't mean I orchestrate any of the happenings but I can make my own plans according to what will happen at the point of Pharaoh's activity, during and after and I can use that information to make those plans while not disturbing the activity at all. In Pharaoh's time, He was an evil man and did great harm to others and deserved judgement and justice was served by using Pharaoh's own hard heart and cementing that condition as punishment. I have no way of saying this is true, I am saying this is what seems the most reasonable explanation for me.
So you do agree that in certain instances God himself hardened men's hearts. If you choose to view this as a punishment for past transgressions that is your prerogative, however it does not alter the fact that in these instances God has removed all possibility of changing one's mind. In other words in these instances he has robbed them of their free will. God wants us to choose to be with him or not, yet in these instances choosing God was not an option. Now from your posts here I would imagine that you would argue that God knows that they're never going to choose him so it doesn't matter if he robs them of any choice in the matter. But this is still an admission that in certain instances God is willing to suspend free will to achieve his ends.
This raises an obvious question to me: if you are willing to subvert free will do punish the creations you love, why not subvert free will now and then to save the creations you love? Is punishing the unfaithful more important than saving souls?
How is your opinion more valid or is there anything at all to verify that my explanation is incorrect or less reasonable?
To my knowledge there are no examples of entire nations that are genetically or culturally unable to be anything but evil or destroy other populations when they interbreed. I would suggest that this makes your suppositions less likely to be true.
He allows free will, free choice and consequences for actions.
But you are currently arguing that God was being merciful by killing those babies because they were destined to be evil. So why wait until there is an entire nation to mercy kill? Why not mercy kill the handful of people whom you as God know are going to produce an entire nation of evil people who will have to be killed later anyway, except now they'll kill a bunch of your chosen people in a genocidal battle? If God is willing to kill a nation's worth of babies without allowing them to make free will choices and experience the consequences of those choices, why not do the same to a few people much sooner?
Is he so concerned with punishment that it was important to him to first let that nation grow and be wicked (as he always knew they would be) so that they could be righteously punished (i.e. exterminated) later on?
Why condemn an entire nation of souls to Hell when acting sooner would prevent this at the cost of sending the souls of a few non-evil people to Heaven? I just don't how it is consistent for him to do this in one instance and not another, especially when one of the choices results in a few deaths and the other results in the death of a nation. If he's willing to kill an entire nation and include the babies as a mercy, why not avoid the whole calamity? We know that God is willing to step in at the cost of free will choices, so why not do it to save so many of his beloved creations?
That would be called the flood.
You misunderstand. God used the Flood to wipe out evil nations. I'm asking why he didn't eliminate the handful of individuals who founded these nations instead of such large scale slaughter. Isn't that more merciful?
The Flood. The entire population was so evil it could not continue at all. God wants intelligent beings to commune with. He is allowing free will but can not let that free will override His overall plan for salvation through His sacrifice of Himself to show His love for His creation.
So free will is so important to God that he'll kill most the planet's population to let it play out instead of stepping in early and killing a comparatively minuscule number of people, but he'll also step in and subvert free will when he wants to punish someone or achieve some goal?
If God is truly moral and all morality is grounded in His nature then yes. I believe that it means that there was a good and moral reason to act in this way. I believe that God is sovereign and has the prerogative to give and take life whereas humans do not. We don't get to play like we are God when determining to take a life but God has that right.
Okay. So we agree that from a biblical perspective large scale infant killing is under certain circumstances the moral course of action.
So you don't want to think about the most merciful or moral course of action in regards to this action but rather you want it to be black and white. Black and white, the children are being taken at a time when their will is completely their own and it doesn't violate their will to do so. If they were to choose to do evil, that would be their will and if God took them during this time it would have a different outcome but would not violate their own will to do so.
I'm not sure what you mean here, so perhaps you could rephrase it. It seems that your answer is that killing babies before they have the chance to choose good or evil does not violate their free will. Correct? I don't understand your reason though. What do you mean when you say that babies' wills are "completely their own"? I thought the whole point was that everyone's' will is completely their own.
And if free will is the chance to choose right or wrong, how is preventing a person from making that choice by killing them when they are a baby not a violation of that principle?
Or do you mean that babies are already capable of making free will choices and have in some way chosen evil so it does not violate their free will to reap their souls?
This is like asking if Oxygen didn't exist how would you breath? It is not even possible to contemplate because it goes against what we know to be true. Just because you can ask a hypothetical question doesn't mean it makes any sense in the reality of the situation. There is a complete transition that occurred with the life, death and resurrection of Christ that changed the dynamics of the way God works with mankind. That is woven into the very essence of our Christian faith. The Old Testament and the Jews and the New Testament of the Christians are separate for a reason. The way God worked then and how He works now are different and we see that in how Christ said to love our enemies and turning the other cheek. Our directives are completely different due to the completion of Christ's arrival on Earth. So you can use this hypothetical but it doesn't have meaning in Christianity. It goes counter to Christianity and you not understanding that dynamic speaks volumes of your ability to understand the spiritual realm at all.
See above. God in the form of God the father, the son or the Holy Spirit according to the New Testament and the core of Christianity would not order such a thing to happen. Period.
If you asked me how I would breath if there were no oxygen I could answer very easily: briefly and ineffectively. I would not answer: Impossible to contemplate! Just because something does not comport with what we know doesn't make it impossible to engage with, at least not for me. What I'm trying to do is get to the bottom of your morality here.
In any case your stance raises some questions when we consider your belief in the Trinity. If God and Jesus are the same being, then surely it is consistent with Jesus' character to order the slaughter of children. If God's character is immutable and in the past his character did not prevent him from ordering babies killed, how can you say that ordering baby killings is inconsistent with God's/Jesus' character now?
And let me alter the hypothetical slightly. Same question, but in this version you are living in the time period when the events of the Old Testament take place, so currently God is occasionally ordering babies killed. Would you do it? You still have your personal relationship with God and he is still your source for morality, so would you kill those babies? Would you consider this immoral? Or would you believe it was moral but not be able to follow through with it?
And here's another situation. Jesus said that we should forsake our families and even hate them. If Jesus told you that if you wanted to truly be with him you were never to see your children again, would you do it? Do you really love Jesus more than your children (as you should, according to him)? Would you regard abandoning your family the moral thing to do?
So are you claiming that no one is deserving of punishment of doing evil things if they are just factors of the personality due to social conditioning, hormonal activity and brain development?
Nope. If you go back through the posts you'll see that my argument is that babies are not born evil. You disagreed (I think) and suggested that babies have the same mind as they do when they are adults. I countered that this was demonstrably not the case.
You need to look at what I posted and we will talk about this then.
I've done my best to understand your position. Perhaps you'd be kind enough to re-articulate your position? Do you think Genesis is saying that angiosperms were created first (day 3) and humans last (day 5)? As I said before, it seems like you have two options:
1. Genesis is an accurate account of the order in which things were created and this order should be seen in the fossil record to support your claim that Genesis is evidence of divine revelation.
2. Genesis is just an overview of things that were created over huge amounts of time and is not meant to give any particular order. If this is the case you cannot claim that Genesis fits the fossil record because it isn't giving us any information about what order we should expect.
Which is it? If there's another option, please articulate it clearly for my benefit.
Fitting quite well does not imply perfectly, as you well know. It is hardly contradictory. I brought up the differences we denote for life ourselves by splitting plant life from animal life and it might have been poorly articulated when I said life began in the seas. We clearly see the separation of such in the Genesis Narrative.
You have suggested that Genesis is just an overview of what arose during the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras. So why, as I have asked a couple times already, did the authors break it up into distinct days with a morning and evening? If they didn't intend to communicate that things created on day 3 were created prior to things on day 5, why write it in such a way as to communicate exactly that?
Furthermore, if Genesis is really just a general overview of creation that is not meant to present accurate chronological relationships, how can you claim that it accurately describes the order in the fossil record?
I still don't understand your point about the different kingdoms. Are you arguing that because both modern biologists and Genesis consider them distinct groups that this counts as a point towards Genesis being the result of divine revelation? If so I think this is a very weak argument. It doesn't even take education to detect that plants and animals are pretty distinct form each other, let a lone divine revelation.
You said this when arguing that the bible was accurate because it recorded accurate science that the authors could not have known unless by true divine revelation:
"I doubt that Bronze Age tribesmen would have any idea that life began in the seas and followed a certain sequence into existence but that is what they recorded in the Bible."
From this comment it seems to me that you are arguing that life began in the seas, that Genesis records this and that this is evidence of its veracity. It also seems like you are saying that Genesis is describing the sequence in which various groups of life arose. You tell me however that you misspoke. Would you please clarify what you were really trying to say?
In any case, I asked you of you thought that Genesis was a chronologically accurate account of the order in which life was created. You said it was. But the chronology laid out in genesis doesn't the fossil record as I have demonstrated.
Really? You do realize that the time between the forming of the earth and the first known life is longer than the time since? You do realize that the earths earliest history (the surface of the earth) is lost to us and only a few rare examples are available at all? Life could have emerged and been wiped out many times before what we find in the fossil record. So while this is something that isn't in evidence due to lack of evidence, it hardly is evidence against such a possibility.
How would life arising and vanishing multiple times support your argument that Genesis fits with the fossil record?
In any case, you've missed the point here I think. For Genesis to be correct, angiosperms would have to be the first organisms to appear. We agree that this is not what the record shows, but you posit that future discoveries will vindicate your belief. However, this means that a globally-dispersed, extremely common group of organisms with vast fossil record is mysteriously absent from the record for 400 million years. But here's what you've missed I think: The paucity of rocks from the very start of earth's history is irrelevant in this instance because that 400 million year gap is not composed of barren rock, it is full of fossils! Why do we have 400 million years worth of fossils but not one single representative from an extremely common, widespread group? And remember, it's not just angiosperms. This same thing happened with a variety of major groups.
There is evidence that supports that conclusion but many times new evidence will take this in a new direction, however, it doesn't matter because what we see in Genesis is not the first terrestrial animals but a very general list starting with cattle: And God said: 'Let the earth bring forth the living creature after its kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after its kind.' And it was so. So we have a large amount of time prior to cattle and we are talking kinds here so we know that these kinds had previous kinds they came from.
I don't see how that passage supports any of what you've claimed here. Perhaps you could expand your answer. When it says "Let the earth bring forth the living creature after its kind", how does that not refer to land animals in general? To what does "creeping thing and beast" refer if not to land animals in general? Where do you get the idea that there is a large amount of time elapsing prior to cattle?
Does the Genesis Narrative look more like what we see in the world or does turtles all the way down seem more accurate?
Genesis is less wrong than the earth being supported by infinite turtles, but this doesn't lend it even a tiny bit of veracity. Claiming that Jupiter is the smallest planet in our solar system is super incorrect, but it doesn't make claiming that Earth is the smallest planet any more correct.