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QuantumFlux said:I wont deny it, it's not for me to judge whether you are christian or not. Remind me alot of mormons, your doctrine is all screwed up, but if you believe Jesus redeemed you then i wouldnt say you arent. I just have a hard time placing the God of the bible into an evolution view point.
If you wish it to be considered bashing so be it, but i criticise because you may think you have all the facts but when philosophy is brought up, it breaks down. You have a God that cares more about building stuff than he does love. Funny that your quote from st. jerome says that it is foolish to think that it was created in any time at all, considering you think the exact opposite. I know that there have been people through out time to question whether Genesis is literal or not, but the majority of readers have always taken it literally. Which says in your philosophy that God was being deceptive to everyone before our time.
I'm actually glad people are leaving this thread, I believe we have beat our points to death.
QuantumFlux said:I wont deny it, it's not for me to judge whether you are christian or not. Remind me alot of mormons, your doctrine is all screwed up, but if you believe Jesus redeemed you then i wouldnt say you arent. I just have a hard time placing the God of the bible into an evolution view point.
How can love exist unless "stuff" is built that can be loved?QuantumFlux said:You have a God that cares more about building stuff than he does love.
It says no such thing, and I believe you are dangerously close to commiting a bandwagon fallacy.Funny that your quote from st. jerome says that it is foolish to think that it was created in any time at all, considering you think the exact opposite. I know that there have been people through out time to question whether Genesis is literal or not, but the majority of readers have always taken it literally. Which says in your philosophy that God was being deceptive to everyone before our time.
Process theology? I can understand a Christian accepting evolution, but evolution itself does not alter core Christian doctrine. To accept process theology is to venture into unorthodox territory.stumpjumper said:Here's a decent article about John Haught
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2000/006/3.52.html
stumpjumper said:But since you stand by your claim that you feel that TE's are not really Christians this is my last post to you. Good day.
QuantumFlux said:I'm sorry, I'm really containing my laughter on this one. This question coming from someone who believes God had to have created the universe in billions of years. Talk about being contrained by time.
5 days shows that he took time to create if for us, yet the blink of the eye in the timeline in this case is creation,
the blink of an eye in the evolution timeline is mankind's existance.
And what kind of image of God is a caveman? I dont think they are as incorrect as you would like to believe.
That is complete backwards thinking. Evolution says that we evolved into humans based on the evironment around us. The Genesis story shows how he developed the earth for us instead of vice versa. It just doesnt make any sense to have the majority of the timeline of the universe exist without love. Mankind is the only being in the universe that can love, so why only have love exist in the universe for a geological blink of an eye?
It just doesn't make sense. God is love and he made us to love him. this shows that God not only is love but he wants to be loved. Love is the most important thing to God, however through evolution that philosophy is utterly destroyed considering that love has only existed for the past few thousand years of a 5 billion year timeline.
Scholar in training said:Process theology? I can understand a Christian accepting evolution, but evolution itself does not alter core Christian doctrine. To accept process theology is to venture into unorthodox territory.
I believe the "problem" of evil can be solved from a conservative POV; I am not exactly sure what your view of God's eternality and omnipotence is, and the article's is vague, though I reject any notion that God changes or learns or is surprised over time. I think that the necessity of what we call "evil" (whether it is or is not in actuality evil) may produce a greater good. Calamity is probably a better word. Now, calamity through "natural" disasters (though I would not call them entirely natural; I believe that God causes, effects, and is present in many everyday occurances) is necessary because the world would be worse off without a type of calamity. I do not mean to sound macabre, but as someone on another forum pointed out, earthquakes, for instance, keep nutrients from settling on the sea floor by moving them to upper land masses, lightning provides nitrogen for the planet, and hurricanes help prevent heat from building up around the equator. Without these things happening, the world would be worse off as a whole, and in that sense they do serve a greater good. Arguing for another world, then, a "better" world is rather pointless, and would require a much less rational existence. So, I believe that the question primarily answers itself, and is compatible with a type of conservative Christianity.stumpjumper said:I personally accept some forms of process theology. Not David Ray Griffin's view of a non-omnipotent God but more along the lines of John Haught. Some process theologies are unorthodox but not all and they also can provide a good theodicy for the EPOE.
Scholar in training said:To what extent exactly - I of course can never know. I think that the article is closer to conservatism than other conceptions of process theology, but I do think that it places too much focus on the natural world and not enough on God's presence and action in the world.
shernren said:I would agree that process theology is probably the best way to understand evolution, but somehow I feel that it is too close to open theism for my liking. How exactly is the line drawn between the two? It also seems peculiarly close to deism; however, perhaps one way to look at it is that once there were humans who could worship God, God started intervening into the physical universe supernaturally for the sake of those who worship Him.
But I'm not sure how wise it would be to continue such meditations and explorations among people who compare us to Mormons. Hmmmmm.
Well I'm glad your misconceptions at least give you a giggle. You were the one who complained about God taking millions of years. Why did he need to waste 5 days preparing the earth for us? I don't believe God is constrained by time but you seem to think that millions of years is God wasting time whereas 5 days is not. You are projecting your own human concept of time onto God. I'm not going to complain about how long God should be taking.
Ps 103:15 - As for man, his days are like the grass
Perhaps you take issue with King David?
Not only are you burdened by misconceptions your understanding of the Doctrine of Man seems incorrect. How is our physical image in any way related to being made in the image of God?
What? So you think love only came into existance when Man did? Was God somehow lacking in love before he made us? This is seriously shaky ground you are on here, there was no deficiency in God that he needed to create us. There was, is, and always will be love and fellowship in the Trinity.
I think I have shown how categorically wrong you are on this point, Love existed before we did. Not that evolution actually says anything like what you asserted anyway.
QuantumFlux said:As for me being a newby and my posts being counter productive, truth is truth. I'm not here to make you like it.
For those who think I'm blind to the evolutionary theory, I did believe in evolution all of my life. It's hard not to in this dogmatic society where high schools make you think you're dumb if you doubt it. In essence, I was a theistic evolutionist. Then I realized my senior year in high school that all they were teaching was based on thousands of assumptions and passed off as facts. I also neglected to realize that evolution produced a violent existance. Even if we can choose other wise, God would have created it violent from the beginning.
So you keep your assumptions, and you trust in man's wisdom. I personally would rather follows God's "foolishness" over any of man's wisdom.
QuantumFlux said:oh, and I dont read web sites, I've said this before.
Web sites can be made by anyone with a computer, and putting links to sites only tells me the answer is unresearched and that the person replying is doing nothing more than following the sites information blindly.
However, I did read the thread and I dont find it against Jesus' commands to say you are wrong
You are wrong about your conslusions on evolution and wrong about what you think I and other TEs believe
QuantumFlux said:I'm sorry, did you read what I wrote? The 6 days signifies that he spent time on creation, that it wasnt just a whimsical decision to create the earth. billions of years shows that he spent more time building than he did loving. It not wasting 6 days, it had a purpose and 6 days is nothing compared to how long he has loved us.
you may not have thought about the implications of love on evolution, but that certainly is what it is saying. "Survival of the fittest" was the order of things until mankind came. Where is the love in that again?
Why God would create the universe to destroy itself is beyond me. He made the lions to kill and the vultures to pick the bones of the dead and rotting.
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