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Karl - Liberal Backslider said:Bonhoffer, the same logic would say that the theory of gravity is against scripture because according to gravity people who fall off cliffs get splattered, and therefore there's nothing wrong with pushing people off cliffs.
It is a big mistake to derive morality from a scientific theory.
Sorry if I have annoyed you. I am not saying ALL TE's pick and choose, I am saying they are MORE likely to pick and choose. Evolution in my veiw as a theory 'encourages' the pick and choose approach because man is putting their own ideas into the Bible.Karl - Liberal Backslider said:Bonhoffer, mate, will you please lay off the charge that TE "picks and chooses", and the associated claim that we "reject" verses.
We do not. We interpret them differently. Please respect that, or I can guarantee that the conversation will not remain civil. I don't care much because I'm not even a believer in infallibility, let alone inerrancy, but I know several TEs who post here are.
GodSaves said:I believe men are all fallible. I believe, when one is truly digging into the Scriptures of God's Word to know Him, we are guided by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is infallible, as He is the Spirit of God.
Why don't I change my mind and believe in evolution?
I feel I have been guided by the Holy Spirit. I am open for the Bible to tell me differently about evolution or creationism. I feel the Bible speaks in terms of creationism, not evolutionism.
I do not understand, please forgive me, why one feels they should change their interpretation of God's Word to be in accordance with what scientific men say. These men are like me, fallible. These men are unlike me, agnostic and in part atheists.
Are we, who are Christians, who truly seek God, being guided by the Holy Spirit? Are men of science trying to prove what they believe of the earth/universe to be true, guided by the Holy Spirit?
So if we, who are Christians, are guided by the Holy Spirit, why should one change their interpretation of the Bible to fit with these agnostics and atheists interpretation of evidence? Why not instead change the interpretation of the evidence?
Might it being saying that the interpretation of evidence, provided by these scientists, is more correct then our interpretation of the Scriptures that is guided by the Holy Spirit? Honestly someone is not being led by the Holy Spirit in their interpretation of the Bible. But in our pride we will argue, both you and I, that we are right. Since I have been in many of these discussions, I have been studying the Bible more intensly then I was. I am searching to see if I am wrong in my belief. I am open to be wrong. I would gladly be corrected by God. I have yet to find something to make me think other then I do.
I will not put my faith in understanding of the scriptures in men who do not even believe in God. I put my faith in the Holy Spirit to guide me and teach me, by reading the Bible, not scientific journals.
This is an issue of faith, no one was there, science cannot tell you for certain how it happened, they were not there. It is only their interpretation of the evidence, and if those who believe my interpretation can be wrong, so could the scientists interpretation of the evidence be wrong. I will continue to put my faith in the Holy Spirit to guide me. The Bible speaks of what happened and that is good enough for me. I do not need to add, alter, rephrase, or whatever else to make the Bible go with the flow and be consistent with today's scientific interpretation.
actually, by definition ALL atheistic evolutioist don't believe in GodBonhoffer said:Many atheistic evolutionists dont beleive in God.
Bonhoffer said:Maybe now. But would it have been right for man to rape and kill when they were still neoanderthals?
Bonhoffer said:But in theistic evolution God set up the biological laws of evolution. These became the laws of nature. Gods laws of nature are that it is better to take than to receive because survival is based on it.
Yes, we do--which apply either way--whether or not we were evolved over millions of years or over the course of an afternoon.Bonhoffer said:But then we have Gods spiritual laws where humans are told not to be selfish and to be good to each other.
God created us with free will. Due to free will, humanity doesn't exist in the preferred state that God intended. As to why God allows that--you'll have to ask Him.Bonhoffer said:Why did God set up biological laws (where sin is encouraged) that contradict His spiritual laws? (where holiness is encouraged)
Which is what I just said, see how we agree?Bonhoffer said:Now granted the law of this world is selfishness and greed. However it was the fall of Man, his rebellion which brought this world to be run by the law of the jungle.Earth is dig eat dog because man chose it in the Garden of Eden.
Not true, TE's have many beliefs, but TE specifically only refers to the mechanism God used to create life--that's it--it stops there.Bonhoffer said:But in TE when God made the earth He designed it as a dog eat dog society.
GoodBonhoffer said:I read a book in the libary on evolutionary theory. Now okay I can't recall what it was called and I do want to add the the writers werent implying that rape was morally good.
The two parts of this sentence do not apply to each other in an ordered society with laws and a means of enforcing those laws. You may not mean to, but you are suggesting that physically and mentally aggressive males are likely to be rapists.Bonhoffer said:The writer did however say that evolution favours men who are physically and mentally aggressive, thus male rapists are likely to survive and have most offspring.
well that's a reliefBonhoffer said:The writer did add that this was not excuse for people to do such things.
I think you certainly mean "favor" instead of "encourage." If not, the claim is ridiculous. If so, see above for my comments.Bonhoffer said:However he did imply that evolutionary scientific laws do encourage rape and violence.
You've missed my point. Your original post suggested that evolution leads to polygamy, thus you don't like evolution. So I said, hey, there are plenty of literalists who have used literalism to support polygamy, and yet you don't reject literalism. Evolution is not the reason for some supporting polygamy nor is literalism the reason others do. The reason that a Christian (from either camp) would support polygamy is from an incorrect understanding of God's expectations--thus it is interpretation that is wrong in either camp, not the core belief in and of itself.Bonhoffer said:There are loads of books and essays on evolution which show that evolution promotes pologamy. A man wants his genes to be passed onto the next generation so he sleeps with as many women as possible thus leading to more desecendents.
As for the LDS, they might be creationists, however they do not follow the Bible in the way most Christians do. In fact (sorry if this sounds unfair) they are not even Christians. They reject so many important Christian doctrines and put their faith in the BOM and their own prophets. They are so far from the truth that their beleif on creation won't make a difference if they are wrongly interepting the rest of the Bible anyhow.
Again, this is my point. Just because someone uses scripture (or a literal interpretation of it) to support racism doesn't mean the SCRIPTURE is bad, it means the interpretation of it is--same goes for evolution. YOu stated in the post: "With evolution one might say "Hey maybe black people are more stupid than white people because people dont need to be clever when they live in mud huts in the desert".Bonhoffer said:These 'Christians' might be literal Bible supporters and racist. They might well even use isolated passages to support racism. However I beleive that Christians arent only supposed to read the Bible literally, but take it as a whole and in context. This is something those 'Christians' obviously didnt do because I have checked and checked again. There is no support for racism when Gods Word is read literally, in context and as a whole.
Yes, they did--see how they misused scripture?Bonhoffer said:These people obviously rejected the teaching that we are all of One Blood.
Actually it says that the different languages and scattering across the earth came about after the tower of BabelBonhoffer said:The Bible when read literally says that we are all decendents of Noah and the different races came about after the tower of Babel.
Again, don't confuse the different issues. TE deals only with origin theology, not the flood, not the rest of Genesis, not Exodus, not the Gospels. And-----We are not all alike.Bonhoffer said:But most strands of evolutionary theory, even TE, would reject that we are all decendants of 8 people who lived 4,500 (roughly) years ago.Evolution rejects a world wide flood and would certainly reject the idea that the father of all races was one of a handful people to survive it.
Evolution shows that we are ALL directly related to people living in Africa how ever many years ago, including even maybe NoahBonhoffer said:Evolution shows that modern Africans are directly related to people living in Africa 45,000 years ago and not to some probably lightly tanned man who settled in the Middle East 4,500 years ago.
Yes, but those leaders WERE reading the Bible and they could and did justify their views with the Bible. Once again, it is the misuse of the Bible that is the problem, just as it is the misuse of evolution that can cause problems, too.Bonhoffer said:And in many cases without the Bible too. The crusades and inquition were carried out when the Bible was in church hands and not available to the public. People were then fed heresys by the church such as salvation is given as a reward for killing Muslims etc... etc.....
and guess what, no where in evolution does it say we have to kill to get into heaven, either??? I am a TE, I believe in salvation by faith just as you do!Bonhoffer said:No where in the Bible does it say we have to kill to get to heaven. The Bible clearly states that salvation comes by faith alone.
I think I've already answered all of these points, so we're in agreement, misuse of the Bible is just as bad as misues of the theory of evolution. Misuse of either doesn't mean either is bad in and of itself. If the above comments are not enough for you to "throw out" the Bible, then why throw out evolution for the very same reasons?Bonhoffer said:Those atrocities which were carried out by people who did have an access to the Bible, were carried out by people who were clearly not reading it literally, in context and taken as a whole. In context for example the OT testament does not condemn mixed race marriages, but mixed faith/religion marriages. People reading about Solomans wives in context will see that when God is angry for Solomon taking "foreign women" as wives, it is not because they are of a foriegn race but of a foriegn religion. Storys such as Ruth show that there is no problem in marriage between Jew and Gentile so as long as they both worship the same God.
and racist who would use evolution to justify racism would be just as badBonhoffer said:Racists who like to use the Bible for justification will be their own sinful hearts take everything out of context and select only isolated verses.
And no anti-semite racists evolutionist wants to accept what the scriptures say about these things either.Bonhoffer said:No anti-semite racist 'christian' will accept verses such as "there is no difference between Jew and gentile. The same Lord is Lord of all".
They will prefer to pick and choose verses to suit them.
And yet, those of us who actually ARE TE's keep telling you and others like you that it doesn't lead to this--I do not reject any part of the Bible--not one letter!!!!Bonhoffer said:This pick n choose is something which I beleive evolutionary theory encourages. i.e I'm rejecting the world wide flood or a literal Adam etc... etc....
Once again, we do not reject any of the Bible, we take it in context of the times during which it was written to discern its intended meaning. We look at likely genres and styles. We look at historical indications from the ancient Israelits and those nations they interacted with. WE look at creation itself--the most wonderful book God has ever penned--and we interpret differently.Bonhoffer said:Once we reject a literal Adam (one which Jesus talks about) or Jonah or the flood; then why not reject all verses in the Bible which condemn racism.
Good, there are surely many evolutionists that are racist, sexist, violent as well, so the idea of rejecting one (evolution) because of it and not the other (creationism) is puzzling.Bonhoffer said:No. You have just misunderstood. I am not saying creationists are pefect. There are many Creationists that are racist, sexist, violent etc etc.... Bin Laden for example is probably a Creationist.
agreed, and it is impossible to justify racism by any logical understanding of evolution, so now we're back to sqare one?Bonhoffer said:However it is impossible to reconcile racism with a literal, in context and take as a whole approach to the Bible.
Yes, they would, whether or not they were creationists or evolutionists--this is a true statement.Bonhoffer said:A racist would have to either reject literalism,the context or that all scripture is equally God breathed.
GodSaves said:Are there times when we as Christians should believe agnostic scientists interpretation of evidence when it contradicts scripture? Thus changing our interpretation of scripture, which changes some of its meaning. The Bible teaches of testing all things against scripture. All things that come in contradiction. Did you test evolution, before you accepted it and changed your interpretation, against the scriptures? When you found conflict, you change your interpretation of the scriptures, instead of rejecting the theory of evolution. The Bible teaches you reject man's word when it conflicts with God's Word, not change your interpretation of the Bible to comply with man's word.
Just out of curiousity, has science seen the ends of the universe? Can science say, conclusively that the earth is not in the center of the universe? I think this might suggest that science knows where the universe 'begins and ends' so to speak, so they can accurately say the earth is not in the center of it. Just a thought.
Bonhoffer said:If Adam had pushed Eve off a cliff in Eden, Eve would not have done splat and died. She would have just hit the floor without any damage or pain. Pushing people off cliffs wasnt a sin in Eden and wont be a sin in Gods Kingdom.
Bonhoffer said:The theory of evolution underdemines Christian morality. If man is just an animal then what is wrong with him acting like an animal?
With evolution rapists are no longer destestable sinners but fine examples of dominant mammals. With evolution male pologamy is no longer rebellion against the Creator, but the natural way of ensuring that ones genes are passed on. With evolution one might say "Hey maybe black people are more stupid than white people because people dont need to be clever when they live in mud huts in the desert". The thing about this phrase is that under evolutionary theory it becomes a possibility. Under evolutionary law different intelligences based on race make perfect sense.
And then there is eugentics!
Almost every evil of the past 100 years has had somebody trying to justify it from evolutionary theory. There is hardly anything good about the theory.
Bonhoffer said:Many atheistic evolutionists dont beleive in God.
Maybe now. But would it have been right for man to rape and kill when they were still neoanderthals?
But in theistic evolution God set up the biological laws of evolution. These became the laws of nature. Gods laws of nature are that it is better to take than to receive because survival is based on it.
But then we have Gods spiritual laws where humans are told not to be selfish and to be good to each other. Why did God set up biological laws (where sin is encouraged) that contradict His spiritual laws? (where holiness is encouraged)
Now granted the law of this world is selfishness and greed. However it was the fall of Man, his rebellion which brought this world to be run by the law of the jungle. Earth is dig eat dog because man chose it in the Garden of Eden. But in TE when God made the earth He designed it as a dog eat dog society.
I read a book in the libary on evolutionary theory. Now okay I can't recall what it was called and I do want to add the the writers werent implying that rape was morally good. The writer did however say that evolution favours men who are physically and mentally aggressive, thus male rapists are likely to survive and have most offspring. The writer did add that this was not excuse for people to do such things. However he did imply that evolutionary scientific laws do encourage rape and violence.
There are loads of books and essays on evolution which show that evolution promotes pologamy. A man wants his genes to be passed onto the next generation so he sleeps with as many women as possible thus leading to more desecendents.
Evolution rejects a world wide flood and would certainly reject the idea that the father of all races was one of a handful people to survive it.
Evolution shows that modern Africans are directly related to people living in Africa 45,000 years ago and not to some probably lightly tanned man who settled in the Middle East 4,500 years ago.
Ceris said:Just for your information, a good number of early Christians had actually seen the risen Christ.
"For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles, and last of all he appeared to me also, as to one abnormally born." (1 Corinthians 15:3-8, emphasis mine)
God Bless,
Ceris
GodSaves said:I know you did not mean this, but I am a bit bothered by the equating of agnostic scientists with the Apostles of Christ.
Bonhoffer said:The theory of evolution underdemines Christian morality. If man is just an animal then what is wrong with him acting like an animal?
GodSaves said:I believe men are all fallible. I believe, when one is truly digging into the Scriptures of God's Word to know Him, we are guided by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is infallible, as He is the Spirit of God.
Why don't I change my mind and believe in evolution?
I feel I have been guided by the Holy Spirit. I am open for the Bible to tell me differently about evolution or creationism. I feel the Bible speaks in terms of creationism, not evolutionism.
I do not understand, please forgive me, why one feels they should change their interpretation of God's Word to be in accordance with what scientific men say. These men are like me, fallible. These men are unlike me, agnostic and in part atheists.
Are we, who are Christians, who truly seek God, being guided by the Holy Spirit? Are men of science trying to prove what they believe of the earth/universe to be true, guided by the Holy Spirit?
So if we, who are Christians, are guided by the Holy Spirit, why should one change their interpretation of the Bible to fit with these agnostics and atheists interpretation of evidence? Why not instead change the interpretation of the evidence?
Might it being saying that the interpretation of evidence, provided by these scientists, is more correct then our interpretation of the Scriptures that is guided by the Holy Spirit? Honestly someone is not being led by the Holy Spirit in their interpretation of the Bible. But in our pride we will argue, both you and I, that we are right. Since I have been in many of these discussions, I have been studying the Bible more intensly then I was. I am searching to see if I am wrong in my belief. I am open to be wrong. I would gladly be corrected by God. I have yet to find something to make me think other then I do.
Both.Asimis said:Greetings,
I was wondering why YECs oppose the Theory of Evolution so much. Is it the evidence or does it has to do more with the apparent biblical conflicts it poses?
The evidence comes from several lines, including the Bible, the history of pre-Christian cultures recording that they are descended from Noah, the overall philosophy of evolution (anti-God natualistic, humanistic, pantheistic paganism, a contention easily supported), scientific fields such as astronomy, biology, chemistry, and geology, and presuppositionalism, or the understanding that all things are interpreted through a framework of beliefs.Asimis said:I am not fully convinced about Macroevolution myself yet, but I am still looking into that matter. So maybe you guys have any evidence that either refutes Evolution or simply prevents you from accepting it? Or is it the lack of evidence that prevents you from accepting it?
A couple of bible verses? How much of their works have you read? They marshal an overwhelming amount of Biblical verses.Asimis said:I ask because most of the anti-evolution sites or arguments I see are mostly based on a couple of bible verses,
First, I have been reading the scientific journals and books for over six years and have never come across a single time when AiG has misrepresented science or the claims of evolutionists. It is usually the anti-creationists who are not honest.Asimis said:Irreducible Complexity(ID) or a misrepresentation of Evolution in general(Dr. Dino and Answers in Genesis come to mind)l. In my opinion they are rather dissapointing since they do not provide an honest look at it.
See these chapters of Refuting Evolution 2:Asimis said:If the problem is because of the apparent conflict with Christian doctrine, then I would be glad to hear what are the problems that you think Evolution poses to it.
There are a number of lines of evidence for this. E.G. Biblically we know this from an analysis of the Geneologies in Scripture and compare them to historical records elsewhere, which confirm that there is no gap between them and that they are father/son relationship progressions. For more info on this, read this book: http://www.ldolphin.org/cooper/contents.htmlAsimis said:Also why do you think that the earth is only 10,000/6,000 years old?
adam149 said:First, I have been reading the scientific journals and books for over six years and have never come across a single time when AiG has misrepresented science or the claims of evolutionists. It is usually the anti-creationists who are not honest.
<snip>
Fourthly, if you have gotten your information from a sceptical website such as Talk.Origins, I highly recommend you think twice since it is them who make gigantic blunders (such as Ian Plimer who claimed that the alphabet had 23 letters; or Talk.Origins confusing a YEC with an OEC, or their dishonest attacks on Henry Morris and Jerry Bergman, documented here and written by myself
It has been thoroughly demolished. See http://www.answersingenesis.org/Home/Area/magazines/tj/docs/tj_v15n3_miller.aspAsimis said:Which books did you read? I know of several scientist that are strong atheists and like to use Evolution to attack religious beliefs (Richard Dawkings comes to mind) but these are..as far as I know in the small minority. In the same manner there are Creationist books who dismiss Evolution as a hoax without giving it much thought. There are good and balanced books on the subject of Evolution and more specially on how it relates to God..have you read the book "Finding Darwin's God"? It has some good reviews on Amazon.
But it does promote naturalistic philosophical stances. Take the following comments by evolutionists:Asimis said:As for Evolution "calling" the Bible a lie or a parable, I think this is a product of the same people I mentioned above. Evolution by itself is just a biological process, it neither deals with the origin of life (that is what Abiogenesis handles) nor does it promotes a naturalistic philosophical stance.
"Even if all the data point to an intelligent designer, such a hypothesis is excluded from science because it is not naturalistic."S.C. Todd, correspondence to Nature, 410(6752):423, Sept 30th, 1999
"We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfil many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is an absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door." Richard Lewontin, Billions and Billions of Demons, The New York Review, 9 January 1997, p. 31
"Science is fundamentally a game. It is a game with one overriding and defining rule:
Rule #1: Let us see how far and to what extent we can explain the behavior of the physical and material universe in terms of purely physical and material causes, without invoking the supernatural."R.E. Dickerson, J. Molecular Evolution 34:277, 1992; Perspectives on Science and the Christian Faith 44:137138, 1992
"Evolution [is] a theory universally accepted not because it can be proven by logically coherent evidence to be true, but because the only alternative, special creation, is clearly incredible."D.M.S. Watson, Adaptation, Nature 124:233, 1929
"One is forced to conclude that many scientists and technologists pay lip-service to Darwinian Theory only because it supposedly excludes a Creator from yet another area of material phenomena, and not because it has been paradigmatic in establishing the canons of research in the life sciences and the earth sciences."M. Walker, "To have evolved or to have not? That is the question," Quadrant, Oct. 1981, pg. 45
No creationist would argue otherwise. This is, of course, the whole point. However, because Scripture is special revelation given us by God directly, it stands as magistrate over general revelation. It is our basis of interpretation. Which is why YECs believe in a young earth and everything else they do, because this is clearly taught in scripture.Asimis said:Well, maybe we need to have "faith" in those fossils even if they are not satisfying to us? We must remember that it is not our thinking but God's that matter and since God created the world and gave us his testimony in The Bible then we should not be afraid of looking at the world for answers since whatever apparent "conflict" we may find between His Creation and His Word should be nothing but the result of our own thinking.
Take into consideration this statement by the greatest Apologist of the 20th century, Cornelius Van Til:Asimis said:I believe it is a matter of what God did and didn't do and not something that is up for us to decide. I also think, that the purpose of The Bible is not that of a science book but to get people to heaven. God created us with all the potential we have and it is his desire that we use it so in reality there is no need that everything we find in the world must be written in The Bible.
I hope this aided your understanding."If we are to defend Christian theism as a unit, it must be shown that its parts are really related to one another. We have already indicated the relation between the doctrine of Christ's work, the doctrine of sin, and the doctrine of God. The whole curriculum of an orthodoxy seminary is built upon the conception of Christian theism as a unit. The Bible is as the center not only of every course, but of the curriculum as a whole. The Bible is thought of as authoritative on everything it speaks. Moreover, it speaks of everything. We do not mean that it speaks of football games, of atoms, etc., directly , but we do mean that it speaks of everything either directly or by implication. It not only tells us of Christ's work, but also tells us who God is and where the universe about us has come from. It tells us about theism as well as about Christianity. It gives us a philosophy of history as well as history. Moreover, the information on these subjects is woven into an inextricable whole. It is only if you reject the Bible as the Word of God that you can separate the so-called religious and moral instruction of the Bible from what it says, e.g., about the physical universe.
This view of Scripture, therefore, involves the idea that there is nothing in this universe on which human beings can have full and true information unless they take the Bible into account. We do not mean, of course, that one must go to the Bible rather than the laboratory if one wishes to study the anatomy of the snake. But if one goes only to the laboratory and not also to the Bible, one will not have a full or even true interpretation of the snake." Cornelius Van Til, Christian Apologetics, 1976 (2003, 2nd ed.), Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing, Phillipsburg, NJ, pg. 19-20
Rubbish evolution is a scientifc theory and it has nothing to do with pan-theism, etc. infact themajority of Christians worldwide hold evoltuion to be true. Secondly science overwhelemingly falsifies creationism.adam149 said:Both.
The evidence comes from several lines, including the Bible, the history of pre-Christian cultures recording that they are descended from Noah, the overall philosophy of evolution (anti-God natualistic, humanistic, pantheistic paganism, a contention easily supported), scientific fields such as astronomy, biology, chemistry, and geology, and presuppositionalism, or the understanding that all things are interpreted through a framework of beliefs.
Which journals, AiG clearly misrepresents the views of science.First, I have been reading the scientific journals and books for over six years and have never come across a single time when AiG has misrepresented science or the claims of evolutionists. It is usually the anti-creationists who are not honest.
This is defitnely dishonest because as far as I can discern talkorigins is not in anyway connected with Ian Plimer, all they have is a debate between him and Duane Gish.Fourthly, if you have gotten your information from a sceptical website such as Talk.Origins, I highly recommend you think twice since it is them who make gigantic blunders (such as Ian Plimer who claimed that the alphabet had 23 letters; or Talk.Origins confusing a YEC with an OEC, or their dishonest attacks on Henry Morris and Jerry Bergman, documented here and written by myself: http://www.creationtruths.com/default.aspx?do=Article&id=tomisrep).
cretaionism is a religionSee these chapters of Refuting Evolution 2:
Argument: Creationism is Religion, Not Science http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/RE2/chapter1.asp
Evolution is comaptible with Christianity.Argument: Evolution is Compatible with Christian Religion http://www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/RE2/chapter2.asp
adam149 said:In addition, scientists such as Steven Jay Gould have shown that Darwin's purpose was elliminating a designer of the universe (see C. Wieland,Darwins Real Message: Have You Missed It?[/color][/u] Creation Ex Nihilo 14(4):1619, SeptemberNovember 1992). Evolution also allows people to be intellectually fulfilled atheists (see R. Dawkins, The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design, (NY: W.W. Norton, 1986), p. 6).
No creationist would argue otherwise. This is, of course, the whole point. However, because Scripture is special revelation given us by God directly, it stands as magistrate over general revelation. It is our basis of interpretation. Which is why YECs believe in a young earth and everything else they do, because this is clearly taught in scripture.
But rather than have faith in the fossils of general revelation, we should have faith in the clear meaning of the Special Revelation of Scripture, even if all the evidence turned away from it.
Take into consideration this statement by the greatest Apologist of the 20th century, Cornelius Van Til:
I hope this aided your understanding.
Unfortunately, this is often-times far too true. Yet, at the same time, as Christians we have an apologetics mandate and should answer critics. The reader is then left to wonder which side is actually right.Asimis said:That is the main issue I have with both sides. It is like a couple of two year old boys fighting. Creationists bash Evolutionists and Evolutionist bash Creationist and in the process the spectator is left in a pool of confusion.
You are correct. The fossil evidence is lacking, and so is any biological support that macro could occur anyway.Asimis said:Like I said in my original post, I am not convinced of Macroevolution, I do accept that microevolution happens since it is just changes inside the same species but I have not found satisfying evidence for Macroevolution yet. It looks nice in drawings and illustrations but I think that the fossils are lacking. I am open to be corrected tho.
Granted, you are correct in that a failure of macroevolution doesn't prove a young earth. However, there are many processes which would indicate such. I would also disagree with your contention that "one is left with a vague idea of what exactly are the real facts." We all have the same facts, merely interprete them differently. Facts always require interpretation through an a priori framework of beliefs. Thus, the real issue is not the facts themselves but the interpretetation of said facts. Since we believe in God, and God is the creator of the universe, He therefore is the one who determines the proper interpretation. This goes for whether one believes in an old earth or young, whichever it is, it should be in accord with Scripture, and there should be legitimate explanations for material processes which will support Scripture.Asimis said:Now the other issue is that even if macroevolution is not true, it does not necessary follows that the earth is 10,000/6,000 years old. The earth could be older than that even without macroevolution but alas even that is in the battle field and one is left with a vague idea of what exactly are the real facts.
No problem. I hope they are helpful to you.Asimis said:Oh and thanks for the links, I bookmarked them.
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