I think there's a problem when someone starts to insist that faith in Jesus *must* include faith in YEC, or belief against EV theory.
I have no idea why you are quoting me on that when I made no such claim. its very misleading
IMO those shouldn't even be "Christian" issues to begin with, anymore than belief (or lack thereof) in quantum mechanics should be part of the 'Christian' faith.
You comparison doesn't work Michael. The Bible doesn't speak on issues of quantum mechanics it does however speak to the creation of the earth and life so saying that what it says should not be part of the "Christian faith" is somewhat ridiculous
for one don't expect a single chapter of any book to contain the entire history of planet Earth, so I don't personally see that as a problem.
Another very poor analysis of my position or for that matter anyone's real position. Its quite the strawman actually. Your implying a whole lot of utterly false premises which I wish you would cease from and is frankly annoying coming from a fellow believer. As a believer you should endeavor to represent the positions of other believers with accuracy not make up strawmen in your own head. As fellow heirs of salvation you owe them that at minimum. No one claims that Genesis one has the entire history of the planet earth. If you would actually read what I wrote then you would see myself in particular claiming it doesn't even cover the actual creation of the globe. The problem isn't that the Bible doesn't cover everything its that what it does cover doesn't fit with evolutionary teaching. Only by the most extreme mental gymnastics and twisting of the verses can you get millions of years of animals dying and being slowly modified into other species. Only by the matrix slow motion distortion can you get the animals being brought to Adam and eve to be named over millions of years or a millions of years after they are created. Put any young person to read genesis one and two and they won;t know where to put those events and again they don;t fit in anywhere. if you can just fabricate somewhere to make it fit then a sensible teen is going to ask himself well if you can do that in genesis one why can't you do that in Matthew or Isaiah or Romans
I was absolutely fine with introducing my kids to both the Bible and to EV theory. They aren't mutually exclusive idea in the first place IMO, particularly if one isn't intent on interpreting the Bible literally.
and there you have it. signs of your very own erosion of faith and your own tacit admission that you can't hold a high view of the Bible as literal with your beliefs in darwinism. I've never seen a dad control the way his children thinks. Once you start telling children that what doesn't even read like poetry or a vision is not to be taken literal theres nothing to say they won't start doing that with the whole Bible to the point it means nothing. Hey maybe we shouldn't take the death burial and resurrection as literal either. some of it reads just like a historical narrative like Genesis one and thats not literal so why bother with the resurrection?
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