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Would you change your opinion

Would you change your opinion?

  • I am currently a creationist and I would not change my mind

  • I am currently a creationist and I would change my mind

  • I am currently an evolutionist and I would not change my mind

  • I am currently an evolutionist and I would change my mind.


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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
I say debate because I hear experts on one side of the issue claiming that the data says one thing while other experts claiming the data (sometimes the same data) is saying something else.
In that case, look for the one that is actually using the data. That is, look for the person giving you either the raw data or references to the literature that you can find. Many of the references to creationist literature are very obscure journals or sometimes even abstracts. It's why I try to keep my references to Nature, Science, PNAS, Scientific American, Natural History and other journals that you will be able to find in your public library. I'm not always successful because some of the critical data is in other journals, but that is the goal.

PLUS, a lot of the data can now be accessed -- at least the abstracts -- via PubMed. That's http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi

If I'm having a conversation with a biochemist about macro-evolution and the role of mutations he can run circles around me with jargon, data and the application of that data to the point that I have no way of knowing if he's being accurate, is using the lastest data or applying that data properly.
Again, you can ask him for his references to the primary literature. The date of publication gives you an indication of how recent the source data is.

I'm forced to either do some pretty indepth research (is there are quick course in biochemistry) or trust his conclusions that mutations played a vital role in macroevolution. I get another biochemist using the same data and for complex reasons he explains using biochemist jargon comes to the conclusion that mutations are rarely beneficial and could not have played a significant role in macroevolution.
:) Let's take this as a case study.
1. "Macroevolution" is a red herring here. For evolutionary biologists, there is no hard and fast distinction between "microevolution" and "macroevolution". The distinction is a creationist invention because the data for change within populations (microevolution) is so well established that even they can't deny it. However, that change within a population also is the same change that produces differences between populations -- macroevolution.
2. Variation is important for evolutionary change. That is, variation among individuals. Most variation is actually by sexual recombination. However, the frequency of mutations is about 1 per genome or a bit more. That's a lot of mutations. Only about 2.6 mutations per thousand are out and out harmful. That means that 997.4 mutations per thousand are potentially beneficial. However, even if the actual beneficial mutation were only 1 per 100 mutations (pretty rare, right?), natural selection ensures that the mutation will spread thru the population.

There are some books that will help you.
What Evolution Is by Ernst Mayr. Will give you the basics of evolution and the terms.
Evolution by Mark Ridley
Evolutionary Biology by Douglas Futuyma. These are textbooks and will tell you everything you wanted to know, and some you had no idea of, about evolution and the evidence behind it. These will include the biochemistry relevant to evolution.

Evolution/creationism:
Finding Darwin's God by Kenneth Miller Great data refuting the new intelligent design.
Abusing Science: The Case Against Creationism by Phillip Kitcher. Good philosophy of science discussion and creationist positions.
The Triumph of Evolution and the Failure of Creationism by Niles Eldredge. A good overview and a lot of the evidence that falsifies creationism.

In terms of the Flood,
The Biblical Flood: A Case History of the Church's Response to Extrabiblical Evidence by Davis A. Young

The major focus of my study (as far as the validity of the Bible) has been regarding the person of Jesus Christ, the person who claimed to be God, creator of the earth and savior of mankind. My faith in Him rest primarily in my own subjective experience of Him.
And this is where your faith should rest. Not on science. Science can't tell you whether there is a God. All science can legitimately do is tell you how God created.

There also appears to be a tremendous amount of legal/historical evidence for Him being who He claimed to be.
I see extrabiblical historical evidence to say that a person named Yeshu ben Joseph lived and preached in first century Palestine and his followers thought he was the son of God. So, Yeshu ben Joseph is a historical person. I haven't seen any legal/historical evidence outside the Bible substantiating the Christian claims. Jesus Outside the Bible by R. Joseph Hoffman seemed to do a complete survey of all instances mentioning Jesus outside the Bible -- including the apocryphal gospels.

Ah, mutation rates:

PD Keightley and A Caballero, Genomic mutation rates for lifetime reproductive output and lifespan in Caenorhabditis elegans. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94: 3823-3827, 1997

You can find PNAS in your public library.

BTW, PNAS is free online each week at www.pnas.org. You might want to check it out each Thursday or Friday.
 
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pmh1nic

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Your post supports my claim of giving me more intellectual credit and time then I'm due :).

"I see extrabiblical historical evidence to say that a person named Yeshu ben Joseph lived and preached in first century Palestine and his followers thought he was the son of God. So, Yeshu ben Joseph is a historical person. I haven't seen any legal/historical evidence outside the Bible substantiating the Christian claims. Jesus Outside the Bible by R. Joseph Hoffman seemed to do a complete survey of all instances mentioning Jesus outside the Bible -- including the apocryphal gospels."

The strongest evidence that Jesus is who He claimed to be is me, my personal experience and the impact He has had on my life, although I don't expect anyone but those who witnessed the change to put much credence in my story. I also consider how that experience has been mirrored in the lives of millions of others. I'm not just talking about people who were born and raised in a Christian home but those who were living anything but a Christian life who had an encounter with Jesus (maybe not a Damascus road experience visible, audible), an experience that brought about a change deep in their lives.

The historical record regarding the impact in the lives of those closest to Him (Jesus) and the ripple effect of that impact through the centuries is another evidence that Jesus was who He claimed to be.

The strength of the disciples thinking, believing or knowing that Jesus was the Son of God is displayed in the extraordinary things they did in defense of the message they were commissioned to preach, that He was the Way, the Truth and the Life, the avenue to a relationship with God. They knew whether the resurrection story was fact or fiction, if He actually walked on water, raised the dead, healed the blind, etc., etc.

I've read a number of books on how the Biblical record we have of the life and preaching of Jesus was compiled, how that record has been transmitted through the centuries and the consensus from the "experts" on whether the record we have today accurate expresses the life and times of Jesus. I don't read Hebrew, Greek or Aramaic and I've never been on an archeological dig. I know there are decenters among the ranks of Biblical scholars regarding some of the issues that would making wholesale acceptance of what we call the New Testament as an accurate expression of the life and words of Jesus (although my experience with the Word tells me there is something very special about this Book).

On a philosophical level I understand I will never understand God. For that matter I may never fully understand His creation. The Bible says "How unsearchable are His riches and His ways passed finding out." I enjoy the investigation, I'm fascinated by the science, I'm confounded by what are to me abstract concepts (ten dimensions folded up into Calabi-Yua shapes) and places where there is no time (or at least the dimension of time as we understand it).

In the end it comes down to each of us on our personal search to find meaning a purpose in life or to find that there is no purpose in life. Actually I was pretty much convinced there was no grand purpose in life but my encounter with Jesus changed that.
 
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Markh

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I was under the impression that the ark was found...I also thought that science had proved that there was a big flood in the middle east around the noah time...

I think the flood is a different issue to evolution as the writer of the bible would consider the flood to be worldwide as it would be strectch to the dges of "his world"

anyway, i dunno how this topic has progressed I just saw the 1st 2 pages :)

I would definitely change to disregard evolution, however, in my mind it makes perfect sense. I haven't read the creationist science, maybe I should at least do this.
 
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lucaspa

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Markh said:
I was under the impression that the ark was found...I also thought that science had proved that there was a big flood in the middle east around the noah time...
1. Several people have claimed to have found the ark. All the claims are bogus.
2. Yes, there is evidence for a very large local flood in the Tigris-Euphrates Valley about 3800 years ago. There is evidence that the civilization in at least 3 cities was wiped out.
4. However, the Noah story is a retelling of earlier stories about a flood.

I think the flood is a different issue to evolution as the writer of the bible would consider the flood to be worldwide as it would be strectch to the dges of "his world"
Yes. Flooding the Tigris-Euphrates would be "his world" all right. The problem is that the Flood is very important for creationists, especially YECs. They must have the Flood to account for the geology of the planet. Without the Flood, geology alone falsifies a young earth. Also, without the Flood the fossil record shouts "EVOLUTION"! So, YECers are way off the Biblical reservation here because they have to have a Flood that is world-wide and incredibly violent. Not because of the Bible, but to save their theory from falsification.

I haven't read the creationist science, maybe I should at least do this.
Be sure to check the "creationist science". We haven't found any that is valid.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
Your post supports my claim of giving me more intellectual credit and time then I'm due :).

"I see extrabiblical historical evidence to say that a person named Yeshu ben Joseph lived and preached in first century Palestine and his followers thought he was the son of God. So, Yeshu ben Joseph is a historical person. I haven't seen any legal/historical evidence outside the Bible substantiating the Christian claims. Jesus Outside the Bible by R. Joseph Hoffman seemed to do a complete survey of all instances mentioning Jesus outside the Bible -- including the apocryphal gospels."

The strongest evidence that Jesus is who He claimed to be is me, my personal experience and the impact He has had on my life, although I don't expect anyone but those who witnessed the change to put much credence in my story. I also consider how that experience has been mirrored in the lives of millions of others. ...

The historical record regarding the impact in the lives of those closest to Him (Jesus) and the ripple effect of that impact through the centuries is another evidence that Jesus was who He claimed to be.

The strength of the disciples thinking, believing or knowing that Jesus was the Son of God is displayed in the extraordinary things they did in defense of the message they were commissioned to preach, ... They knew whether the resurrection story was fact or fiction, if He actually walked on water, raised the dead, healed the blind, etc., etc.
OK. We had differnt definitions of "legal/historical". Yes, the personal experience is definitely evidence, but I wouldn't call it "legal/historical". I also agree that the behavior of the disciples (assuming Acts is accurate) is also evidence. I haven't found an alternative hypothesis that would explain their dedication to preaching in the face of poverty, persecution, and death. Having a true Resurrection is the only hypothesis at the moment. Also, I have not found, and can't devise, a comprehensive explanation for the spread of Christianity without the basic message about Christ being true.

I've read a number of books on how the Biblical record we have of the life and preaching of Jesus was compiled, how that record has been transmitted through the centuries and the consensus from the "experts" on whether the record we have today accurate expresses the life and times of Jesus. I don't read Hebrew, Greek or Aramaic and I've never been on an archeological dig. I know there are decenters among the ranks of Biblical scholars regarding some of the issues that would making wholesale acceptance of what we call the New Testament as an accurate expression of the life and words of Jesus (although my experience with the Word tells me there is something very special about this Book).
Good. Yes, what we have in the gospels is not historically accurate in all its details. You can even see how stories common to the 3 synoptic gospels were changed from one to another. This is what happens in oral traditions. However, having the details be wrong does not mean that the basic message is wrong.

Also note that there were many differences in the early Church as to exactly who Jesus was and his relationship to God. It wasn't easy for them to decide.

On a philosophical level I understand I will never understand God. For that matter I may never fully understand His creation.
Always keep in mind that the negative statements in science are the ones we are certain about. For those statements, there is evidence that simply can't be there if the positive statement were true. For instance,
1. The earth is not flat. We are absolutely certain about that.
2. The earth is not immovable. Again, certain.
3. There never was a world-wide Flood.
4. Each species was not created individually in present form. Again, certain.

So, the task is still daunting, but not as impossible as is sometimes made out. We can know something about creation, even if we can't know all.

The Bible says "How unsearchable are His riches and His ways passed finding out." I enjoy the investigation, I'm fascinated by the science, I'm confounded by what are to me abstract concepts (ten dimensions folded up into Calabi-Yua shapes) and places where there is no time (or at least the dimension of time as we understand it).
Fun, isn't it?

In the end it comes down to each of us on our personal search to find meaning a purpose in life or to find that there is no purpose in life. Actually I was pretty much convinced there was no grand purpose in life but my encounter with Jesus changed that.
This is where creationism can really hurt. By saying God had to create in the way creationism states or God did not create, creationism throws a huge wall in our personal search for purpose in life. Because creationism blocks off anyone who accepts the evidence available to all in God's Creation. People must either reject that evidence that they can see or reject God.

Now, you said earlier that nothing would convince you that your personal experience of God is wrong. I agreed. But can you see that people who have experienced Creation such that they know the earth is old or that evolution happened aren't going to be convinced that their experience is wrong either? They aren't going to do that just like you aren't going to be convinced that your experience was wrong.

The real problem is that science only works with experience that everyone can have under approximately the same conditions. So what creationism is doing is potentially getting everyone to reject God. You draw strength from having millions share your experience. But what happens if someone would tell you that you had to give up that shared experience or give up God? Would you? See the problem?
 
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pmh1nic

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"Yes, the personal experience is definitely evidence, but I wouldn't call it "legal/historical"."

I think there are probably more than a few in prison that would differ with that statement :). Testimony from witnesses that have shown themselves to be otherwise reliable is considered legal evidence.

"Yes, what we have in the gospels is not historically accurate in all its details. You can even see how stories common to the 3 synoptic gospels were changed from one to another."

I'm curious as to your comment regarding "changed from one to another." I realize that details in the gospels are not always given in the same chronological order or that not all the same details are given when telling the same story. I'm not aware of any major contradictions between the gospel stories. The differences in recounting the same incident is a common occurance when more then one individual witnesses an event. I don't consider this cause for discounting the overall accuracy of the accounts.

"People must either reject that evidence that they can see or reject God......But can you see that people who have experienced Creation such that they know the earth is old or that evolution happened aren't going to be convinced that their experience is wrong either?"

Yes, fundamentalist Christians view the Bible as the inerrant Word of God and hence vigorous battle to counter every argument that seems to contradict what is considered on their part the literal translation of the Bible. On the other hand when hard science contradicts what is being put forth as the literal translation of the Bible it is viewed as confirmation that the Bible is basically a book of myth, superstition and a not so accurate historical account of Jewish and Christian religion.

The all or nothing view is considered extremely important since there is a concern that if you're left to pick and choose what parts of the Bible are the accurate expression of God's will, purpose and plan for our lives people will twist, turn and otherwise attempt to stretch the meaning of Biblical passages to fit their personal preference. Maybe that assumes a level of intellectual dishonesty.

On the other hand those that concluding that the Bible contains nothing of value or substance regarding the reason we are here or issues of life because the "literal" interpretation contradicts their view of what is fact based on scientific research may be missing an insight into an aspect of our humanity that is revealed in the Bible in spite of those believed inaccuracies.

Is there a middle ground? I wonder if most people are even open to consider that there may be a middle ground or is any compromise considered a lack of "faith?"

There are certain foundational doctrines that cannot be compromised and still truthfully call yourself a Christian. These are the things the Apostle Paul spoke of in 1 Corinthians 15. Of course I believe there are other important doctrines and matters related to developing a deeper relationship with God that are presented in the scriptures. But I believe that having a relationship with God goes beyond just a mental assent to these doctrines and that we can develop a relationship that isn't constrained by the battles regarding young earth, old earth and evolution.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
"Yes, the personal experience is definitely evidence, but I wouldn't call it "legal/historical"."

I think there are probably more than a few in prison that would differ with that statement :). Testimony from witnesses that have shown themselves to be otherwise reliable is considered legal evidence.
OK. I wondered where you were getting the "legal" part. You are saying that eyewitness testimony is "legal" testimony.

While I see your point, I think you are putting yourself out on a limb here. You are making your evidence sound better than it is. While people are sometimes convicted solely on eyewitness testimony, that is rare. And it is rare because such testimony is so often unreliable -- even from reliable people. When we hear "legal" evidence today, we think of testimony that can be corroborated by more than one witness or by forensic evidence. You don't have that here. While you have millions of testimonies of experience of God, what you don't have are multiple testimonies of the same event. Thus, for Paul's conversion on the road to Damascus, we have only Paul as a witness. No one else saw that particular event. Do you see? When we have eyewitness testimony to convict someone, we have to have multiple witnesses. Also, we don't have any testimony outside the circle of believers. Thus no "objective" witnesses. Now, you can argue that anyone with that evidence is going to be a believer and therefore a demand for "objective" witnesses is unreasonable, but it is not going to help when discussing with agnostics and atheists.

You can argue that eyewitness testimony is not a priori wrong -- eyewitness testimony in court -- but I think you have to be careful not to say that because it is eyewitness testimony it is "legal".

"Yes, what we have in the gospels is not historically accurate in all its details. You can even see how stories common to the 3 synoptic gospels were changed from one to another."

I'm curious as to your comment regarding "changed from one to another." I realize that details in the gospels are not always given in the same chronological order or that not all the same details are given when telling the same story. I'm not aware of any major contradictions between the gospel stories.
I didn't say "major". Mark 2:1-4. In Mark (the earliest of the gospels) we have a story indicative of the architecture of Palestine -- adobe walls but thatch roofs. And the paralytic is on a pallet -- a stretcher. When you get the same story in Matthew and Luke, the house has changed to one with wooden beams (more appropriate to Rome or the cities of Greece) and the paralytic is now on a full sized bed. The oral tradition has changed things from the earlier account and made the account more elaborate.

In Mark 15:46-47, they simply wrap Jesus' body in shroud, put in it a tomb, and Joseph rolled a rock in front of the door. The women leave. Mark makes a point of saying that the rock was too big for the women to roll away. In Luke, we get the detail that no one else had ever used the tomb, but no comment on the size of the rock and no wondering if they can roll it away; they evidently feel they can. The women also leave. In Matthew, we get the detail that it was "a great stone" rolled in front of the tomb. The women stay to watch the tomb. Also, we get a story about the Pharisees being concerned the disciples will steal the body (why?) and Pilate puts a guard on the tomb!

Now, much of the stories are the same -- what you would consider "not major contradictions" -- the tomb, Joseph of Arimathea, stone in front, women come to the tomb in the morning, etc. However, there are also some differences and we can reason how and why they came into the story. Inthis case, Luke is the most primitive.
1. The comment on the size of the stone is in answer to critics who say the women stole the body. So Mark has the stone too big for the women to move.
2. Critics accuse the disciples of stealing the body. So now Matthew adds the whole schtick of the Roman legionairies guarding the tomb and the fact that the tomb is watched at all times.

Are these "major contradictions"? Depends on your definition of "major". But you can't deny that the differences are there.

The differences in recounting the same incident is a common occurance when more then one individual witnesses an event. I don't consider this cause for discounting the overall accuracy of the accounts.
I agree. I have made the same argument numerous times to atheists. Especially when an event is traumatic, accounts differ. I have stated that, if the Biblical accounts were the same in every detail, then I would be suspicious that someone came along and cleaned everything up or made up the whole story from scratch. Real accounts are not the same in every aspect.

"People must either reject that evidence that they can see or reject God......But can you see that people who have experienced Creation such that they know the earth is old or that evolution happened aren't going to be convinced that their experience is wrong either?"

Yes, fundamentalist Christians view the Bible as the inerrant Word of God and hence vigorous battle to counter every argument that seems to contradict what is considered on their part the literal translation of the Bible.
I think you missed the point. Creationists are asking people to do what you say you won't do: doubt your experience. Creationism says people must either give up their experience or give up God. You have made it plain to us -- and I have agreed -- that you will never give up the validity of your experience of God. You had it; it's real; and no one is going to convince you otherwise.

Likewise, a person that has seen a transitional sequence of fossils from one species to another or even across higher taxa, a person who has seen the skeleton of Lucy at the American Museum of Natural History and compared it to the ape and human skeletons, a person who has seen a new species form in the lab or the wild, is not going to give up those experiences and say evolution is wrong. The problem is that those experiences are not open to a few, but everyone. The fossil sequences are displayed in museums. Anyone can go look at Lucy or see pictures of the skeleton. Anyone can read the studies showing the formation of a new species. So creationism is saying that everyone is wrong. And that simply isn't going to work. People are going to believe their experiences and not creationism. Since creationism says it is God or science, people will choose science because that is their experience.

On the other hand when hard science contradicts what is being put forth as the literal translation of the Bible it is viewed as confirmation that the Bible is basically a book of myth, superstition and a not so accurate historical account of Jewish and Christian religion.
Viewed by who? By the fundamentalists? That's just part of the wall they put up to prevent people believing. By atheists? That's a misuse of science by militant atheists. The answer there is not to reject the science, but to really understand what science is and show how the atheists are misusing science.

The all or nothing view is considered extremely important since there is a concern that if you're left to pick and choose what parts of the Bible are the accurate expression of God's will, purpose and plan for our lives people will twist, turn and otherwise attempt to stretch the meaning of Biblical passages to fit their personal preference. Maybe that assumes a level of intellectual dishonesty.
The problem here is that no Christian takes all the Bible as literally true. Every Christian uses extrabiblical evidence to say certain passages should not be interpreted literally. So the "all or nothing" view has been dead for at least 1600 years in Christianity, ever since St. Augustine warned against it. Christianity has gone thru this. Christians used to think that certain passages meant that the earth was flat. When the extrabiblical evidence was overwhelming, those passages were then said not to be literal. Certain passages were said to show the earth was immovable, and those passages were used to argue against a sun-centered solar system. When the extrabiblical evidence was overwhelming, those passages were re-interpreted. Slave owners took passages from the OT and said that slavery was sanctioned by the Bible. And it is. But abolitionists "pick and chose" other passages and now we think slavery is immoral and against the Bible!

Christianity is not the Bible. It is the Living Word. Jesus. And yes, we do keep reinterpreting the Bible in the light of that Living Word and the changing world around us. When we were children, we thought as children. But as we grow up as a society, we think like adults. Those that want the "all or nothing" approach want to keep us as children.

On the other hand those that concluding that the Bible contains nothing of value or substance regarding the reason we are here or issues of life because the "literal" interpretation contradicts their view of what is fact based on scientific research may be missing an insight into an aspect of our humanity that is revealed in the Bible in spite of those believed inaccuracies.
:clap: Very good. Those that do this are members of a different faith -- atheism. Actually they are militant atheist who stand in relationship to atheism as Biblical literalists stand in relation to Christianity.

Is there a middle ground?
There is a huge middle ground. All the mainline churches are in the middle ground. Agnostics occupy the middle ground. Even most atheists are in the middle ground. They may differ as to faith, but they do realize the limitations of science and do not declare that science shows the Bible false.

There are certain foundational doctrines that cannot be compromised and still truthfully call yourself a Christian.
Right. So the question becomes: does science threaten any of these? I don't see any part of 1 Cor 15 that science contradicts. Do you?
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
On the other hand when hard science contradicts what is being put forth as the literal translation of the Bible it is viewed as confirmation that the Bible is basically a book of myth, superstition and a not so accurate historical account of Jewish and Christian religion.

...

On the other hand those that concluding that the Bible contains nothing of value or substance regarding the reason we are here or issues of life because the "literal" interpretation contradicts their view of what is fact based on scientific research may be missing an insight into an aspect of our humanity that is revealed in the Bible in spite of those believed inaccuracies.


I wanted to put these two paragraphs together because I want to make a point about "myth". You are using "myth" as "not true". Of course, that is how we often use it in terms of Greek myths or Norse myths. However, there is another way to use "myth". But to do that you need to understand that there are different types of truths. And that is what your second paragraph says. There are truths about our humanity, the reasons we are here, or issues of life. It is ironic that, in this forum, it is the theistic evolutionists/scientists who are arguing that there are truths other than historical or scientific! And the creationists who often insist that historical/scientific truths are the only truths. Strange, isn't it? :D

Myths are meant to convey these other truths. That they are not historically or scientifically true doesn't affect that they are true in other respects. Let me give you two examples not from Christianity (so we avoid the emotions you have for Christianity).

1. The Greek myth of Pandora's Box. Yes, it's not scientifically or historically true. There never was a Pandora or a box. Yet isn't it true that humans do let loose wars, diseases, poverty, persecution, and other ills upon the world? Isn't it also true that, in the midst of all these ills, there is also hope, and hope keeps us going thru all the bad things? So, on that level, the "myth" of Pandora's Box is true.
2. Shakespeare's Macbeth. The history of Scotland presented there is "mythical" as in "not true". There was never a literal Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Duncan, or the rest. But doesn't Macbeth tell us truths about our humanity? Greed, lust for power, guilt, remorse, honor, justice? On that level, Macbeth is true, which is why it is still such a popular play.

So, we have a "myth" of Adam and the Garden of Eden. No literal Adam. Yet Adam represents what we all do: disobey God. And we are all "kicked out" of God's good graces (the Garden) because of it and distanced from God (living in a harsh world without His guidance and comfort). We all need forgiveness. Also, we are all material -- made of "dust" if you will. So the "myth" of Adam and Eve is true on the level of our humanity and our purpose.
 
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pmh1nic

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Hi Paul

I don't have time at the moment to comment on all of your last post but I did want to mention that there were other witnesses to the Apostle Paul's "experience" on the road to Damascus. As for forensic evidence you have an empty tomb (I understand the problems with that statement...are we sure we even know which tomb). BTW why would anyone but believers give testamony to a resurrected Savior (if you're sure of the resurrection most likely you're going to be a believer)?

The differences in the gospel stories (I apologize for intimating they you viewed them as major) could also be consider a factor pointing toward the authenticity of the gospel accounts. If someone were really attempting to pull on over on us you'd think they'd do a better job of making the facts conform to the other accounts. The resurrected Christ (as Paul mentions in one of his epistles) was seen by hundreds many of them still alive during the time the gospels were written and available to refute the claim that Jesus rose from the dead. Although human psychology may not be considered a hard science I think it does come under the heading of forensic evidence. That said it would be extremely difficult to account for so many to be willing to devote their lives and suffer torture and death promoting a story they knew for a fact to be a lie.

I understand your point regarding our usage of the word myth and realize that a myth can be used to convey an idea, concept or truth. I can also see how some of the stories in the Bible could be viewed that way with no harm done to the central message. BUT there are many supernature accounts conveyed regarding Jesus where the text and context would require a major stretch to apply the idea that the story is a myth to convey some type of lesson. I'll get back later with some examples.

Have a great day.
 
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pmh1nic

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Paul

I'm sorry about the piecemeal way I've responded. I've been pressed for time today. I did want to comment on something you said regarding our personal experiences:

"I think you missed the point. Creationists are asking people to do what you say you won't do: doubt your experience. Creationism says people must either give up their experience or give up God. You have made it plain to us -- and I have agreed -- that you will never give up the validity of your experience of God. You had it; it's real; and no one is going to convince you otherwise.

Likewise, a person that has seen a transitional sequence of fossils from one species to another or even across higher taxa, a person who has seen the skeleton of Lucy at the American Museum of Natural History and compared it to the ape and human skeletons, a person who has seen a new species form in the lab or the wild, is not going to give up those experiences and say evolution is wrong. The problem is that those experiences are not open to a few, but everyone. The fossil sequences are displayed in museums. Anyone can go look at Lucy or see pictures of the skeleton. Anyone can read the studies showing the formation of a new species. So creationism is saying that everyone is wrong. And that simply isn't going to work. People are going to believe their experiences and not creationism. Since creationism says it is God or science, people will choose science because that is their experience."


I'm not sure I would classify viewing the fossil record at the AMNH in New York (which I've enjoyed doing on a few occasions) an experience on the same level as what is called the conversion experience. Viewing these fossils is an experience but it's an experience intentional designed by the museum staff to act as supporting evidence of evolution. For the vast majority of people (including myself) it is a superficial experience design to help them draw the conclusion that apes are part of the ancestry of man. You might have to be a trained palentologist to appreciate that this is anything more than just an example of a common skeletal structure between to distinct species.

On the other hand you have untold millions of people who's life's have been radically changed (the Apostle Paul for one) in a moment of time by what they claim was an encounter with Jesus Christ.

To tell a Christian to doubt his experience is almost like telling him to doubt that he exist. To tell an atheist to doubt that the exhibit at the AMNH is really no more than an example of similiarities between differing species probably isn't going to really rock his world. I don't think I've ever heard someone say that there lives were dramatically changed for the better as a result of accepting the theory of evolution.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
I'm not sure I would classify viewing the fossil record at the AMNH in New York (which I've enjoyed doing on a few occasions) an experience on the same level as what is called the conversion experience. Viewing these fossils is an experience but it's an experience intentional designed by the museum staff to act as supporting evidence of evolution.
You are still missing the point. Now you are implying that evolution is a conspiracy set up by people. It's not. Also, you are still missing the point that the deeper evidence is still available to everyone. That you don't avail yourself of it is due to practical reasons, not that you can't. You too can get clearance and look at all the hominid skeletons if you wish. You can see the transitional sequences. And they are not "designed" to support evolution; evolution is a conclusion from the sequences. See the picture at the end of the post. The only conclusion is that one species of snail transformed from a previous species.

Science deals only with experiences that are the same for everyone. Science deliberately limits itself to those types of experiences. Now, those experiences may be superficial as far as you are concerned, but the deeper experiences are also open to you.

But creationists tell us that those experiences aren't real. You are trying it now. It simply won't work. They can and are real.

You might have to be a trained palentologist to appreciate that this is anything more than just an example of a common skeletal structure between to distinct species.
But the point is that anyone can become a trained paleontologist if you want to. It's not a secret society and the knowledge isn't hidden away. And there are individual fossils that link Lucy to H. sapiens. Lots of them. Like the middle shells link the two snail species at the ends.

On the other hand you have untold millions of people who's life's have been radically changed (the Apostle Paul for one) in a moment of time by what they claim was an encounter with Jesus Christ.[d/quote]

And you've untold millions who have seen the evidence refuting creationism and supporting evolution for themselves. You can't call it a conspiracy anymore than you can call all those millions a conspiracy.

To tell a Christian to doubt his experience is almost like telling him to doubt that he exist. To tell an atheist to doubt that the exhibit at the AMNH is really no more than an example of similiarities between differing species probably isn't going to really rock his world.
Yes. It will. It will tell him that his own eyes are lying to him. And he isn't going to accept that. Anymore than you are going to accept that your experience was a hallucination and the change in your life based on something you ate or a chance combination of illegal drugs in your system.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
I don't have time at the moment to comment on all of your last post but I did want to mention that there were other witnesses to the Apostle Paul's "experience" on the road to Damascus.
Where did you get this idea? We don't have any independent documents affirming that.

As for forensic evidence you have an empty tomb (I understand the problems with that statement...are we sure we even know which tomb).
Which means we don't have forensic evidence, do we? You don't have any forensic evidence to falsify the accounts, but, since you don't know which tomb and all the tombs have been used over and over again since then, we don't have forensic evidence for.

BTW why would anyone but believers give testamony to a resurrected Savior (if you're sure of the resurrection most likely you're going to be a believer)?
A person dedicated to the truth would. Josephus would have, for instance. He is very objective in his descriptions of Christians. The Romans would have recorded what they saw, because they were not that devout to their own pantheon. But we don't have any Roman accounts. We don't even have Roman confirmation that they executed Jesus. The Jews in the Midrash say they executed Jesus. By stoning him for apostasy. And John has at least 2 instances where they tried, so it's not that far out.

The differences in the gospel stories (I apologize for intimating they you viewed them as major) could also be consider a factor pointing toward the authenticity of the gospel accounts. If someone were really attempting to pull on over on us you'd think they'd do a better job of making the facts conform to the other accounts.
That's what I said. However, I am disturbed by the major difference of who did the execution between the Midrash and the gospels.

The resurrected Christ (as Paul mentions in one of his epistles) was seen by hundreds many of them still alive during the time the gospels were written and available to refute the claim that Jesus rose from the dead.
Huh? The claim is that hundreds saw. But the subsequent events don't bear that out. For instance, where are their accounts if hundreds saw him. If they had seen the risen Jesus, they wouldn't be refuting the claim that Jesus rose from the dead, would they? But, OTOH, if they hadn't seen it, then they wouldn't be confirming it, would they? And it's the lack of confirmation that is the problem. What I have trouble with is that, if hundreds had seen the risen Jesus, then why did Jews universally reject Jesus?

Although human psychology may not be considered a hard science I think it does come under the heading of forensic evidence. That said it would be extremely difficult to account for so many to be willing to devote their lives and suffer torture and death promoting a story they knew for a fact to be a lie.
But initially there weren't that many. Just a couple of dozen, not hundreds. Where were the hundreds that supposedly saw the risen Jesus?

BUT there are many supernature accounts conveyed regarding Jesus where the text and context would require a major stretch to apply the idea that the story is a myth to convey some type of lesson.
But we aren't talking about any of the stories regarding Jesus, are we? We are talking about Genesis 1-11, not the gospels. Since I never said the stories of Jesus were myth, why are you bringing them up?
 
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pmh1nic

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"You are still missing the point. Now you are implying that evolution is a conspiracy set up by people. It's not."

My point really wasn't to cast a shadow on the motives of the museum staff but to put in perspective the issues at hand. The new birth experience touches the core of the person humanity. Evolution is only one of the conclusion you can draw regarding the display at the AMNH. It's not a matter of your eyes lying to you but how do you accurately interpret what you are seeing. If science deals in the experiences that are the same for everyone then evolution major elements of the theory of evolution are not science since not even all scientist agree on them.

The Apostle Paul's account of his conversion experience is record a number of times in Acts. Research regard the historical accuracy of Luke's gospel and his account of the early history of the church in the book of Acts has shown him to be a reliable source. I don't know of an independed source outside of the book of Acts but I also don't finded any reason, given the proven reliability of Luke, that there is any reason to doubt the accounts of Paul's conversion and that there were others that witnessed his Damacus Road experience.

We can never recreate the resurrection evident. The scientific evidence eventually will be made available (He is coming back again). The most compelling evidence we have today is the effect that event had on the earlier believers who saw the resurrected Christ and risked (and in many cases lost) their live's for proclaiming that message. The other powerful evidence in the change (sometimes dramatic change) in the lives of millions of people who have received and embraced the gospel message.

A person dedicated to the truth who saw the resurrected Christ would be a believer. Josephus makes mention of Jesus (there are a number of extra-biblical references to Jesus) but I don't believe he claimed to be a witness of the resurrected Christ.

I don't know why you would say the the subsequent events don't bear out that hundreds saw the resurrected Christ. It is clear that the gospel message had already spread throughout Judea as far as Damacus before Paul's conversion (approximately A.D. 33 ~ 37). The message of the gospel had gained enough popularity that the Jewish leadership felt threaten enough to give Paul authority to perscute the church which would seem to be evidence of it's popularity even in the face of persecution. That would seem to support the idea that there were many reliable witnesses to the resurrection account. That same message made it as far as Rome with enough force to win converts even in Rome before Paul wrote his epistle to the Romans. (about A.D. 57).

A secondary stong evidence of the truth of the resurrection message is (as mentioned before) the powerful effect that message is having in the lives of millions today. I have listen to the testimony of scores of people who's lives have been changed through what they claim was a spiritual encounter with the resurrected Christ. From murder's and drug addicts (some who have been free of drugs and a life of crime for 10, 20, 30 years of more) to doctors, lawyers, scientist, mathematicians and every occupation and walk of life in between.

"But we aren't talking about any of the stories regarding Jesus, are we? We are talking about Genesis 1-11, not the gospels. Since I never said the stories of Jesus were myth, why are you bringing them up?"

Because according to the gospels Jesus often referred to the Old Testament quoting numerous passages or the Old Testament scriptures. He mentioned Noah, Jonah, Sodom and Gomorrah. He also made reference to the Genesis account of the creation of man and woman. If you believe that Jesus is the Savior of the world, King of Kings and Lord of Lords His mention of these Old Testament passages servers to validate these books. We get back to the problem mentioned in one of the earlier post regarding having to accept the whole Bible as the Word of God, reject it in total or leave it to each person to pick and choose what they want to accept at their convenience.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
My point really wasn't to cast a shadow on the motives of the museum staff but to put in perspective the issues at hand. The new birth experience touches the core of the person humanity. Evolution is only one of the conclusion you can draw regarding the display at the AMNH. It's not a matter of your eyes lying to you but how do you accurately interpret what you are seeing.


How do you accurately interpret your spiritual experience? Did the followers of Jim Jones accurately interpret what they thought was a "experience touches the core of the person humanity"?

If science deals in the experiences that are the same for everyone then evolution major elements of the theory of evolution are not science since not even all scientist agree on them.

The data is open to everyone. What you call "major elements" are interpretations of the data. Notice that there are 20,000 Christian denominations. That means at least 20,000 different interpretations of the core experience of the person's humanity!

As it happens, like Christianity, there is commonality among evolutionists. All biologists accept common ancestry of organisms and all accept natural selection as the means of getting adaptations. Right now all are accepting, because new data has become available, that natural selection is the means of getting new species. There is argument about specific lineages, but now about whether there are lineages.

Just like all Christians agree that Jesus is the Son of God but they disagree about the role of the ministry or which books are part of the canon.

I really suggest the book Religion and Science by Ian Barbour to you. You will find that Christianity and science aren't that different in how they approach the world.

The Apostle Paul's account of his conversion experience is record a number of times in Acts.

But each of those records is that only Paul saw the risen Jesus at that time, right? C'mon, you have written down your personal conversion a number of times in this forum alone, but only you experienced it, right?

Research regard the historical accuracy of Luke's gospel and his account of the early history of the church in the book of Acts has shown him to be a reliable source. I don't know of an independed source outside of the book of Acts but I also don't finded any reason, given the proven reliability of Luke, that there is any reason to doubt the accounts of Paul's conversion and that there were others that witnessed his Damacus Road experience.

You haven't even demonstrated that Luke witnessed the Damascus Road experience! Luke came on board as Paul's companion -- if he really was the same as the gospel writer -- after that experience.

What we have with Acts is that it is the only source. We don't have much choice but to accept it as basically accurate. That is not the same as saying it is accurate.

We can never recreate the resurrection evident.
So? What is most important is that the event didn't leave physcial evidence that persisted to today.

The most compelling evidence we have today is the effect that event had on the earlier believers who saw the resurrected Christ and risked (and in many cases lost) their live's for proclaiming that message. The other powerful evidence in the change (sometimes dramatic change) in the lives of millions of people who have received and embraced the gospel message.
I will accept this as evidence for why you believe as you do. However, I am going to caution you that it is not overwhelming evidence. I will point you to Buddhism, Islam, and Mormonism. In all of these we have people who risked and, in many cases, lost their lives for proclaiming that message. And we also have millions of people (more than for Chrsitianity in Islam and Buddhism) whose lives have been changed by accepting Buddhism or Islam. By your logic and criteria, you also now have overwhelming evidence that Mormonism, Islam, and Buddhism are true.

The problem, of course, is that you don't think they are true. You think the people believing those faiths have been deluded. Well, sauce for the goose. They think you have been deluded. Atheists think all of you have been deluded. That is the point of Bushido's quote. It is a cautionary tale to you to be careful about the strength of your claims. Yes, you can claim that this is your belief based on your personal experiences, which are valid to you. But it doesn't allow you to say that the personal experiences of Moslems, Buddhists, Mormons, or atheists are wrong. Their personal experiences have the same weight of evidence as yours do. In each case, there are millions of people involved.

Be content with your belief. Yes, you can share your belief and you can resist assaults on your belief. But I don't see how you can reasonably proclaim your belief as absolute truth based on the evidence you have.

A person dedicated to the truth who saw the resurrected Christ would be a believer. Josephus makes mention of Jesus (there are a number of extra-biblical references to Jesus) but I don't believe he claimed to be a witness of the resurrected Christ.
No, and he didn't make any reference to any supernatural events about Jesus.

I don't know why you would say the the subsequent events don't bear out that hundreds saw the resurrected Christ. It is clear that the gospel message had already spread throughout Judea as far as Damacus before Paul's conversion (approximately A.D. 33 ~ 37).
The message was not spread by hundreds, but by less than 2 dozen. Where were the rest? The message was rejected. The Jews did not become Christians. There weren't enough of them to convince the rest. Thus, there weren't "hundreds" insisting the message was right.

The message of the gospel had gained enough popularity that the Jewish leadership felt threaten enough to give Paul authority to perscute the church which would seem to be evidence of it's popularity even in the face of persecution. That would seem to support the idea that there were many reliable witnesses to the resurrection account.
Not really. After all, the Essenes had been persecuted in the previous generation and there was no resurrection event to give rise to them.

lucaspa: "But we aren't talking about any of the stories regarding Jesus, are we? We are talking about Genesis 1-11, not the gospels. Since I never said the stories of Jesus were myth, why are you bringing them up?"

Because according to the gospels Jesus often referred to the Old Testament quoting numerous passages or the Old Testament scriptures. He mentioned Noah, Jonah, Sodom and Gomorrah. He also made reference to the Genesis account of the creation of man and woman. If you believe that Jesus is the Savior of the world, King of Kings and Lord of Lords His mention of these Old Testament passages servers to validate these books.


Here we go again. :sigh: Connecting things that are not connected.
1. We are not questioning Johah, Sodom, or Gomorrah.
2. We theistic evolutionists have looked at the passages where Jesus uses the creation stories and the Noachian deluge. We have concluded that Jesus is not using them as literal history, but for the theological messages they contain. And those theological messages work just as well if God created by evolution as if He did so by creationism.

We get back to the problem mentioned in one of the earlier post regarding having to accept the whole Bible as the Word of God, reject it in total or leave it to each person to pick and choose what they want to accept at their convenience.
We pick and choose anyway. That decision has already been made by every Christian. Every Christian does picking and choosing. Your "accurate" historian Luke tells us in Luke 2:1 that the whole world was enrolled in Caesar's census. Yet you know that Japanese, Sioux, and Zulus were not enrolled. You don't take Luke at his word but use extrabiblical knowledge to interpret him as meaning the Roman world. You reject it in part but keep the Resurrection.

Similarly, one of the places Jesus uses the creation stories is Mark 10 and Matthew 19. Read the whole chapters. First, Jesus tells us the Pentateuch is not the "word of God", but the word of Moses. That is, Moses wrote the Pentateuch and Jesus does not even say he was inspired! Then to add another insult, Jesus proceeds to tell us Moses got it wrong! He put the divorce laws down wrong. Then Jesus changes the divorce laws and forbids divorce.

Now, look around at your Christian friends and your congregation. Any of them divorced? Do you think less of them because of it? Christians have a divorce rate equal to that of the general population. So Christians have obviously decided to "pick and choose" and, in this case, have decided to reject Jesus himself on this subject.

IOW, it's way too late to argue that we should not pick and choose. Christians have already decided that they will pick and choose. What we are discussing is whether Genesis 1-11 is an area where we should take a literal reading or not. Should we pick or choose here. That's it. Very specifically, what should we do about Genesis 1-11. Not what we should do about the entire issue of picking and choosing. That boat sailed long ago.
 
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pmh1nic

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"I will accept this as evidence for why you believe as you do. However, I am going to caution you that it is not overwhelming evidence. I will point you to Buddhism, Islam, and Mormonism. In all of these we have people who risked and, in many cases, lost their lives for proclaiming that message. And we also have millions of people (more than for Chrsitianity in Islam and Buddhism) whose lives have been changed by accepting Buddhism or Islam. By your logic and criteria, you also now have overwhelming evidence that Mormonism, Islam, and Buddhism are true."

To the best of my knowledge there is no other experience in the religions you mentioned that compares with or duplicates the results of the conversion experience that has been duplicated in the lives of millions of people over the last 2,000 years of history. You have billions of adherents to Buddism and isolated instances of people claiming a supernatural experience (Mohammad receiving the Koran, Joseph Smith receivingthe Book of Mormon) but nothing on the scale of what has happened in the history of the Christian Church.

Those experience set Christianity apart from the other major religions of the world. My experience mirrors that experience. That's not to say every Christians has to have that type of dramatic experience but repeating of that experience in the lives of millions of believers who claim the genesis of the experience is an encounter with the resurrected Christ is evidence of Christ being who he claimed to be. There is a limit to the picking and choosing among Christians. A person can label themself a Christian but if they don't accept the foundational Christian doctrine regarding the resurrection of Jesus then they are a Christian in name only.

"All biologists accept common ancestry of organisms and all accept natural selection as the means of getting adaptations. Right now all are accepting, because new data has become available, that natural selection is the means of getting new species. There is argument about specific lineages, but now about whether there are lineages."

There are variations regarding doctrinal beliefs and religious practices within Christianity but the foundational beliefs (outlined by the Apostle Paul in I Cor. 15 with the redemptive death of Christ and His resurrection being central) that constitute whether you're a Christianity are settled. That said all biologist accept adaptation as a means of getting variation within species but I'd change the "all" to "most" when claiming a universal acceptance among biologist that adaptation results in the origin of different species. There are dissenters in the ranks.

Luke didn't witness Paul's conversion. He recorded Paul's accounts of his conversion experience in the Book of Acts. As with any historical record you have to rely for the most part on witness accounts and other circumstantial evidence. The evidence is overwhelming that there was a Saul, a pharisee who converted to Christianity and had a powerful influence on the spreading of the gospel message and central to that message is a resurrected Savior. The lack of forensic evidence doesn't negate the significant amount of circumstantial evidence that what is recorded in the Book of Acts is an accurate account of what took place.

"First, Jesus tells us the Pentateuch is not the "word of God", but the word of Moses. That is, Moses wrote the Pentateuch and Jesus does not even say he was inspired! Then to add another insult, Jesus proceeds to tell us Moses got it wrong! He put the divorce laws down wrong. Then Jesus changes the divorce laws and forbids divorce."
In those passages Jesus was in no way claiming that what Moses wrote was not the Word of God nor was He saying Moses was wrong. What He said was that God's intention was that a man would have one wife for life but because of the hardness of men's hearts a divorce was allowed (better to separate than to kill each other) in cases of adultery. On the contrary Jesus validated Moses writing as being the Word of God by often quoting the Pentateuch which contains accounts of the creation, the flood, Sodom and Gomorrah among many other supernatural occurrences.

Either Jesus was who He claimed to be (Savior of the world and returning King of Kings), who validate and assigned special Divine authority to the Old Testament through His quoting it as the authoritative text, or He was a certified mental case. There is a connection between how you interpret the Old Testament scriptures and the acceptance of Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.
 
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lucaspa

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pmh1nic said:
"I will accept this as evidence for why you believe as you do. However, I am going to caution you that it is not overwhelming evidence. I will point you to Buddhism, Islam, and Mormonism. In all of these we have people who risked and, in many cases, lost their lives for proclaiming that message. And we also have millions of people (more than for Chrsitianity in Islam and Buddhism) whose lives have been changed by accepting Buddhism or Islam. By your logic and criteria, you also now have overwhelming evidence that Mormonism, Islam, and Buddhism are true."

To the best of my knowledge there is no other experience in the religions you mentioned that compares with or duplicates the results of the conversion experience that has been duplicated in the lives of millions of people over the last 2,000 years of history.
Yes, there are. Mormonism has the conversion experience of Christianity added to that the special intervention of the angel Morotai.
Moslems claim a conversion experience due to Allah. In Islam, the "miracle" is the Quran, which is said to be the direct dictation of Allah to Mohammed. Moslems claim that realizing that is equivalent to having a direct visitation by the risen Christ.
And Buddhists have their own transcendental experiences.

There is a limit to the picking and choosing among Christians. A person can label themself a Christian but if they don't accept the foundational Christian doctrine regarding the resurrection of Jesus then they are a Christian in name only.
Right. But theistic evolution doesn't deny that doctrine. It is only by falsely tying the resurrection to a literal reading of Genesis do you have trouble.

There are variations regarding doctrinal beliefs and religious practices within Christianity but the foundational beliefs (outlined by the Apostle Paul in I Cor. 15 with the redemptive death of Christ and His resurrection being central) that constitute whether you're a Christianity are settled.
I Cor. 15 is not a foundational chapter. For instance, the Nicean Creed only says "For us and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary
and became truly human.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered death and was buried.
On the third day he rose again"

Paul's theory on why Jesus' death and resurrection is redemptive (first Adam and last man) is a theory only. It is not a foundational theory. If it had been, it would appear in the Nicean and Apostle's Creeds. And it doesn't.

That said all biologist accept adaptation as a means of getting variation within species but I'd change the "all" to "most" when claiming a universal acceptance among biologist that adaptation results in the origin of different species. There are dissenters in the ranks.
There used to be the "neutral theory" of speciation, where reproductive isolation (speciation) happened by a mutation and then adaptive changes followed. Kimura was an advocate of this theory. Experiments in the last 30 years have shown this neutral theory of speciation to be wrong.

The "dissenters" are not in the ranks of biologists. You will find them among creationists but they are not productive biologists doing research and contributing to biology.

Luke didn't witness Paul's conversion. He recorded Paul's accounts of his conversion experience in the Book of Acts. As with any historical record you have to rely for the most part on witness accounts and other circumstantial evidence. The evidence is overwhelming that there was a Saul, a pharisee who converted to Christianity and had a powerful influence on the spreading of the gospel message and central to that message is a resurrected Savior. The lack of forensic evidence doesn't negate the significant amount of circumstantial evidence that what is recorded in the Book of Acts is an accurate account of what took place.

Different claim from what you first made. Remember the claims. Because my answers should not be taken outside the claims that they address. My original claim was that conversions were personal experiences and without witnesses. You countered by claiming that several witnesses were present at Paul's encounter with risen Jesus. I countered that that wasn't the case. You now acknowledge my point, but are now changing the discussion to whether Paul's account is accurate.

Paul, what I detect here are 2 main themes:
1. You can prove beyond a reasonable doubt the truth of Christianity
2. Evolution threatens that truth.

I dispute both. I'm not arguing that Christianity isn't true, but that we can prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. I don't think it can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt at the present time. I think any effort to rhetorically argue that Christianity has such proof is both wasted effort and is actually harmful to Christianity. Obviously that means I am not out to convert the world.

Now I do, and have repeatedly, resisted attempts by atheists to disprove Christianity. But that is a completely different set of claims. So, I will defend your belief from attack by outsiders and say that the arguments you have offered are valid for that purpose. Where we disagree is that the arguments are not sufficient to constitute proof beyond a reasonable doubt to have someone else convert. Do you see the difference?

"First, Jesus tells us the Pentateuch is not the "word of God", but the word of Moses. That is, Moses wrote the Pentateuch and Jesus does not even say he was inspired! Then to add another insult, Jesus proceeds to tell us Moses got it wrong! He put the divorce laws down wrong. Then Jesus changes the divorce laws and forbids divorce."
In those passages Jesus was in no way claiming that what Moses wrote was not the Word of God nor was He saying Moses was wrong. What He said was that God's intention was that a man would have one wife for life but because of the hardness of men's hearts a divorce was allowed (better to separate than to kill each other) in cases of adultery.


Matthew 19:7 "The Pharisees asked him, "Why then, did Moses give the law for a man to hand his wife a divorce notice and send her away?" Jesus answered, "Moses gave you permission to divorce your wives because you are so hard to teach." Nothing that what Moses wrote was the "word of God". Instead, both Jesus and the Pharisees are acknowledging what Moses wrote was on his own.

On the contrary Jesus validated Moses writing as being the Word of God by often quoting the Pentateuch which contains accounts of the creation, the flood, Sodom and Gomorrah among many other supernatural occurrences.
Quoting does not acknowledge the writing as being the Word of God. People often quote the Iliad and even quote from it what the Greek gods are saying. That doesn't validate the Greek pantheon or the details of the history contained in the Iliad. I haven't seen any place where Jesus said the Pentateuch was the "Word of God." In fact, I doubt the gospel authors would ever have that in there, because for them Jesus was the "Word of God". In fact, John 1:1 says this explicitly.

A way to test your claims about criteria on how to view the Bible is to take that criteria outside the Bible and see if we think the criteria is valid when applied in other areas. A valid criteria will hold no matter where it is used. But if we don't consider the criteria valid other places, then using it for the Bible is just special pleading.

Either Jesus was who He claimed to be (Savior of the world and returning King of Kings), who validate and assigned special Divine authority to the Old Testament through His quoting it as the authoritative text, or He was a certified mental case.
Sorry, but three separate claims here that you have tied together.
Claim 1: Jesus was the Savior of the world and returning King of Kings.
Claim 2: Jesus validated and assigned special Divine authority to the OT by quoting it.
Claim 3. Jesus can fulfill Claim 1only if Caim 3 is correct.

I accept Claim 1 but reject Claims 2 and 3. Your attempt to tie them together is a case of the logical fallacy of "does not follow" or "non-sequitor".

There is a connection between how you interpret the Old Testament scriptures and the acceptance of Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.
Bare assertion. What we are discussing is whether that is true. I claim that having to accept a literal Genesis 1-11 in order to accept Jesus as Lord and Savior does not follow. God can create the universe by the processes discovered by science -- including evolution -- and Jesus is still Lord and Savior. The history of Christianity backs my claim. Most Christian denominations accept evolution and accept Jesus as Lord and Savior.
http://www.ncseweb.org/resources/articles/4650_statements_from_religious_orga_3_13_2001.asp

"First, the theory of evolution, far from undermining faith, deepens it._ This was quickly seen by Frederick Temple, later Archbishop of Canterbury, who said that God doesn't just make the world, he does something even more wonderful, he makes the world make itself._ God has given creation a real independence and the miraculous fact is that working in relation to this independent life God has, as it were, woven creation from the bottom upwards: with matter giving rise to life and life giving rise to conscious reflective existence in the likes of you and me._ The fact that the universe probably began about 12 billion years ago with life beginning to evolve about 3 billion years ago simply underlines the extraordinary detailed, persistent, patience of the divine creator spirit.
The second reason I feel sad about this attempt to see the Book of Genesis as a rival to scientific truth is that stops people taking the bible seriously._ The bible is a collection of books made up of very different kinds of literature, poetry, history, ethics, law, myth, theology, wise sayings and so on._ Through this variety of different kinds of writing God's loving purpose can come through to us._ The bible brings us precious, essential truths about who we are and what we might become._ But biblical literalism hinders people from seeing and responding to these truths.
Then there is science._ Science is a God-given activity._ Scientists are using their God-given minds and God-given creativity to explore and utilise God-given nature._
Sadly, biblical literalism brings not only the bible but Christianity itself into disrepute."
http://www.oxford.anglican.org/docs...522743334.shtml
 
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pmh1nic

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I would be very interested in a source that chronicles Mormon or Islamic conversion experiences that rivals the countless stories I've read regarding the life changing experiences of millions of Christians down through the ages. The isolated experience of Mohammad and Joseph Smith are not on par with the millions of dramatic conversion experiences of people from all nations, cultures, education, social, ecomonic and religious backgrounds. Neither does the spiritual experiences of Buddist who are participating in mediation seeking a transcendant experience. I'm talking about people who's lives were going in one direction and were completely turned around in a moment of time.

"Different claim from what you first made. Remember the claims. Because my answers should not be taken outside the claims that they address. My original claim was that conversions were personal experiences and without witnesses. You countered by claiming that several witnesses were present at Paul's encounter with risen Jesus. I countered that that wasn't the case. You now acknowledge my point, but are now changing the discussion to whether Paul's account is accurate."

You missed my point. The account of Paul's conversion includes the fact that there were others accompanying him on his way to Damascus to arrest Christians when he had this conversion experience. What I was appealing to was the accuracy of Luke's account of the event.

"I Cor. 15 is not a foundational chapter. For instance, the Nicean Creed only says "For us and for our salvation
he came down from heaven,
was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary
and became truly human.
For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate;
he suffered death and was buried.
On the third day he rose again"

Paul's theory on why Jesus' death and resurrection is redemptive (first Adam and last man) is a theory only. It is not a foundational theory. If it had been, it would appear in the Nicean and Apostle's Creeds. And it doesn't."


I should have been more specific. I wasn't referring to the whole 15th chapter. My main point was regarding the redemptive death and life giving resurrection of Christ as being the cornerstone of Christian doctrine (verses 1 ~ 20).

"Quoting does not acknowledge the writing as being the Word of God. People often quote the Iliad and even quote from it what the Greek gods are saying. That doesn't validate the Greek pantheon or the details of the history contained in the Iliad. I haven't seen any place where Jesus said the Pentateuch was the "Word of God." In fact, I doubt the gospel authors would ever have that in there, because for them Jesus was the "Word of God". In fact, John 1:1 says this explicitly."

We're not talking about just anyone quoting the Bible. We're talking about Jesus the living Word quoting the Bible. He was also a Jew who understood the relevance the Old Testament scriptures had in the Jewish culture. He understood the central place and role the Old Testament Law and Prophets played in the Jewish religion. When tempted by the devil in the wildness He quoted scripture and said man lived not by bread alone but by the Word of God referring to what the Jews understood to be the word of God, the OT. Jesus clearly understood how these books were viewed by the Jews He was speaking to, He quoted the books and affirmed there divine authority.

If an leading authority on particle physics makes reference to an article written on string theory (with or without making any conditional statements regarding the overall accuracy of the article) it does tend to lend credibility to the article. That's not logical fallacy or non-sequitor.

"I claim that having to accept a literal Genesis 1-11 in order to accept Jesus as Lord and Savior does not follow."

Well we do agree on something :). I'm not claiming that you have to believe in a literal translation of Genesis 1-11 in order to accept Jesus as Lord and Savior BUT I think it becomes very difficult to explain why the passages shouldn't be interpreted literal using only considerations of the language, the immediate context and what appears to be the usage of these passages in a very literal sense in other parts of the Bible.

I don't know how to reconcil what I believe is the appropriate literal translation of the Bible with evolutionary theory. If you want to say the Genesis account shouldn't be interpreted literally your basis for saying that (based on the books I've read on the subject) can't be the immediate language and context. I've read some literature that appears to allow for a literal translation and an old earth (what's known as the gap theory) but I don't know of any way to literally translate the Genesis account of the creation of man that comforms with him (man) having evolved from a lower species of animals without incorporating a bunch of twist and turns in the meaning of words and grammer that don't conform to standard rules of interpretation.
 
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MagusAlbertus

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the teachings of other religions are self-aggrandizing self-worship, or ancestor worship.. the Koran is thinly veiled justification for rape and murder. The sad thing is that the Wahabists *terrorists* are the only ones following the book of Satan the way it’s honestly written. The rest have Hindu and Christianized their views.. what with that being the only way to get along in a civil society.
 
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