I would really like to see this unpacked and sustained. Is the Trinity a vague and nebulous definition of God? Because that is how I define God. Is Jesus a vague and nebulous definition of God? Because the God I acknowledge is "the fullness of the Godhead" and, "the reflection of God's glory and exact imprint of God's very being" found in Christ. Just how is this nebulous?
You may well believe that as do some other TEs but they have no regard for the historicity of Scripture and when it comes to conflicts between secular philosophy and Scripture they side with atheistic materialism. I have heard the Gospel only once from a TE on here in 5 years and never once seen one take a stand on the Gospel in opposition to secular skepticism. You have compromised your theology with the spirit of the age and there is nothing in these discussions that has ever shown me anything else. What you are doing is making Christianity attractive to atheists and agnostics.
I am glad you state it so clearly. Indeed there is no difference between theists and non-theists as to the natural history--including the evolutionary history--of the natural world. And we know that understanding of natural history is supported by the empirical evidence available to all. It is YE creationists who must reject God as the God of nature and of natural history. It is YE creationists who must deny the actual empirical reality of nature as God's creation and claim it is an illusion. They may as well be Hindus or Buddhists when it comes to affirming God as the creator of the material world.
Not when you consider the Bible to be a myth there isn't a difference. Now you want to make this about the natural world when it has nothing to do with either natural science or the natural world per se, it's about naturalistic a priori assumptions. What is at stake here is human history and when you simply marginalize the historicity of Scripture you are abandoning any intellectual defense of the Gospel. This has consequences, you can't follow Christ and be a friend of the world. We are called to believe the Gospel and if you find the secular scientific evidence satisfactory as natural history I have no problem with you. It is when the clear testimony of Scripture is trampled under foot and essential doctrine is firmly and zealously attacked that I start to question if you ever believed it at all.
I don't know about you, but when I affirm that God is the creator of heaven and earth I mean the heaven and earth that I know through my senses and my intellect, the earth that is accessible to all--believer and non-believer alike. How else could the created world be the witness to God's glory and majesty to the pagan world Paul claims it to be? I do not believe God is a philosophical abstraction and I do not believe God created a universe that is a philosophical abstraction. But that is all the YE creation can be.
What YE Creation is, is God's supernatural working in human history from the very beginning. By your rationale Paul is a pagan since he clearly believed Adam was the first man and the reason that the curse of sin and death came upon us all. Paul, Luke and Jesus all spoke of Adam in this way and Peter clearly believed in a world-wide flood. Now that does not mean that you cannot believe the Scriptures and still be persuaded by secular science, it's even a noble effort to try to reconcile the two. It's when you malign traditional Christian theism in a compromise with secular philosophy that I am obliged to take my stand on the Gospel.
If natural history is history, and God is a God of history, then there had better be no conflict between theism and history. You cannot acclaim God as sovereign over human history and dismiss God as author of natural history.
Pagan religions have embraced mythologies as history since ancient times. Evolution as natural history is nothing more then a modern version. Greater then the gods in pagan mythology were the elementals which is a very old philosophy we now call atheistic materialism.
YEcreationism substitutes mysticism for natural history, denies natural history its historic reality and never confronts the question of how the author of a fabulous natural history can be the real sovereign of real human history.
YEC affirms the historicity of Scripture and the supernatural element of Scripture both academically and as a matter of faith. The principle of New Testament theism is in now way shape or form mystical, it is the revelation of the wonderful works of God from the beginning to the end of human history and beyond. I have long considered Darwinism to be a modern mystery religion and have seen nothing in the sciences and certainly not in the arguments of TEs to indicate otherwise.
Most of the way here we speak as one, but it seems to me that you are inserting the notion that the Christian relationship with God depends on a relationship with Adam. Surely when you say that we cannot have a relationship with an abstraction you mean that God is not an abstraction, the Holy Spirit is not an abstraction, Jesus Christ is not an abstraction.
The abstractions of Hegel and Tillich are gross heresy, Christianity is a book of history and we are a people of that history. Paul directly ties the sin of Adam to the need for justification by faith in Romans. Evolution in Christian theism is nothing but a slow poison unless you can finally find a place where you take a stand on the Gospel in opposition to the atheistic materialism that so dominates Darwinism.
If they were, it wouldn't matter if Adam was not an abstraction. We could still have no relationship with such an abstract deity. But since God is not abstract, the possibility of relationship with God exists, irrespective of whether "ha-adam" refers to a historic individual or the human race under its federal head or as a personification of the human race. All of these allow for a non-abstract relation to Adam. But none of these would be significant if we had only an abstraction to relate to as our god.
I have dismissed this rationalization repeatedly on doctrinal grounds as nonchristian. It matters very much whether you consider Adam the first man or just a mythical abstraction. Clearly Paul never intended his exposition of the Gospel in his letter to the Romans to be a personification.
It is the non-abstract nature of God that is significant in the Christian relationship.
It's is the historicity of Scripture that is essential to the Gospel, straight up and flat out. Now how far Darwinism has led you astray is beyond my depth but one thing is sure, you attack YEC zealously and without restraint. That is why I have concluded that TE is little more then a covert attack on traditional Christian theism. Theistic Evolution is a nonchristian philosophy even when it is argued by Christians.
My interest has never been trilobites, whales or random mutations. My central focus has been human history and the Scriptures speak expressly on this topic. I have read the scientific literature on the subject and found that every chimpanzee ancestor from Africa is automatically labeled on of our ancestors. It was not always that way, in fact Taung was originally considered a chimpanzee until the Piltdown hoax was no longer tenable. Evolution as history, particularly with regards to human history is either a fraud or the Bible is. Choose wisely which side you take your stand on because the middle ground has been turned into a no man's land by your cohorts.