shernren
you are not reading this.
- Feb 17, 2005
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many fundamentalists say the KJV is the only true Bible.
I may not know the whole picture, but from what I know, not many fundies are KJV-only people (even though practically all KJV-only people are fundies). Again, I really don't know what motivation at all the KJV-only people have, and how much of it is Scriptural. (Honest ignorance, not pokey cynicism.) But I doubt that it has much, if anything, to do with the motivations behind neo-creationism.
So I think it takes a really, really wide brush to paint KJV-onlies and neo-creationists with the same strokes.
Knowledge does not condemn. What we do with it is what may condemn us, if it isn't glorifying to God. Your lack of understanding (as evidenced by this erroneous statement) indicates anything you might have had to say about the Bible is irrelevant. If you don't understand it, you can't hope to use it to explain your basis for believing TE.
Snide patronising aside, I think we have to note that the "tree of knowledge" is a very specific type of knowledge: And out of the ground the LORD God made to spring up every tree that is pleasant to the sight and good for food. The tree of life was in the midst of the garden, and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. (Genesis 2:9 ESV) It wasn't just a tree of "knowledge". In fact, even a literal reading of Genesis presupposes that Adam had some knowledge as he was created: how can Adam name animals if he doesn't know what a name is, or a helper or loneliness if he doesn't know what those are? It is clear that God had no problem with Adam gaining and using knowledge in general: even today our world is a world about which we are still accumulating knowledge.
God's forbidding is directed at a very specific type of experiential knowledge: the knowledge of what the choice between good and evil really means. Either God considered this knowledge unfit for human experience, or God considered humans unfit for this knowledge. In either case, we are clearly told in the Genesis account that the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil would bring mortality and futility not only to man but to everything man came into influence over. And God, knowing full well that the tree of knowledge of good and evil had no other possible use (and making sure that Adam and Eve knew so too), planted it right in the center of the Garden and right next to the tree of life.
Is that what a perfect creation is like?
Will heaven, which is also perfect, also contain the potentiality of sin? Of course not. And yet if heaven is perfect, and better than the original creation, then the original creation must have been less than perfect ... and this must have been exactly what God intended to say when He called creation merely "very good".
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