Evolution as change over time is no myth. Now the popular Darwinian evolution is full of myth.
Explain the evolution you don't consider a myth.
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Evolution as change over time is no myth. Now the popular Darwinian evolution is full of myth.
Explain the evolution you don't consider a myth.
Subtle and not so subtle changes within kinds.
Its called micro evolution where as macro evolution is a myth
Its called micro evolution where as macro evolution is a myth
Then there is the archer fish who shoots insects off of leaves into the water and then eats them... And the narrator say... If this fish didn't adopt this talent, the species would have starved for lack of food and they would now be extinct...
Basically what I just said. Follow along.
Explain the evolution you don't consider a myth.
Evolution as change over time . . . .
"Follow along"...boy you are a piece of work. You "basically" said it but I gave it specific names. Apparently it is you who needs to "follow along".
So, if someone forms a puddle of urine in front of your house, that's evolution . . . . .
Ok. I can admit that that "evolution" exists.
Hi, I'm new to this forum, and yours is the first post that I read. To your last paragraph I would add this comment. It is not possible for science to prove that the earth is older than the Biblical narrative, as empirical science requires observation and testing which cannot be done regarding past events. And while I absolutely believe that God created the world with the appearance of age, it would have been deceptive on His part to create evidence of death (fossils) before Adam sinned. Since God cannot lie the only rational explanation for those fossils is that those creatures died and were buried during the flood, just as God told us. I believe in science, and as long as it follows the truth it will eventually bring us to God.The claim has been made by many that Young-Earth Creationism drives people away from the faith. It is said that when believers who have initially accepted the teaching that the Bible is inerrant and therefore historically reliable when it comes to creation and the related chronology--when they encounter supposedly overwhelming evidence for billions of years and even evolution, that their faith in the reliability of Scripture is destroyed or irreparably damaged. I don't doubt that there are those who seem to fit this pattern. But the claim does not seem to hold water.
Saving faith in the God of the Bible is not a faith that is founded on physical evidence. If the only reason that you believe is because you've weighed the evidence and concluded that there is more evidence for God and the Bible than against, then you will stop believing as soon as some clever person provides new and greater evidence against. To believe is to spiritually embrace the Person of God and not merely to embrace facts about Him. The reality of the presence of the Holy Spirit and the certainty of the truth He reveals to the believer--the truth that God exists, the truthfulness of the Bible, the truth of God's holiness and the coming judgment of sinners, etc.--is not something that could ever be taken away by any argument. The believer could no more honestly deny God's existence than he could deny his own.
You might, with a good enough argument and a lot of evidence, convince me that Abraham Lincoln never really existed. We only believe he existed because of the evidences that weigh in favor of it. But you could never--no matter how much evidence you bring or what your argument is--convince me that my son or my daughter or my wife do not exist. I might lose such a debate with you. You might make me look like a fool. But you could never take away the utter certainty that I have regarding their existence--not a certainty that is merely subjective, like a feeling of certainty, but an objectively justified certainty based on the fact that they do exist. Unlike Lincoln, I've met my family, so any question is invalid from the start. It's the same with Christian faith. I know the Bible's true because the Holy Spirit has confirmed that to my spirit. I know that God, in His three Persons, exists because I've met Him, and He has indwelled me, and any question about that is invalid from the start.
So what would happen if I encountered evidence for billions of years and maybe also for evolution, which seemed to me to be superior to anything Henry Morris and Ken Ham's people have come up with? What if there seemed to be no doubt that Scientific Creationism had no real leg to stand on? Even if that were to happen (and I don't foresee that happening), I would still see no reason to abandon the Bible's chronology of a recent creation. Even if it were proven to me that the earth is billions of years old, that would only prove how old the earth was at its creation about six thousand years ago. Who says God cannot create something that is already old? Did He create Adam and Eve as babies? Why, then, should my faith be damaged if it is proven that the earth is that old?
Evolution has so many problems that the next question is ridiculous, but here it is: what if evolution were proven to be true, insofar as the DNA and the fossil record are concerned? Again, the answer would be that whatever condition the earth was in about six thousand years ago, it was God who created it out of nothing at that time and in that condition. If that requires it to have been created with a fossil record supporting evolution already buried in the ground, then so be it. We can argue and speculate as to why God may have done it that way, but it is no speculation that He created it out of nothing about six thousand years ago. It is divine truth revealed in inspired Scripture.
For more on this, see:
Admonitions to a Disappointed Young-Earther
Hi, I'm new to this forum, and yours is the first post that I read. To your last paragraph I would add this comment. It is not possible for science to prove that the earth is older than the Biblical narrative, as empirical science requires observation and testing which cannot be done regarding past events. And while I absolutely believe that God created the world with the appearance of age, it would have been deceptive on His part to create evidence of death (fossils) before Adam sinned. Since God cannot lie the only rational explanation for those fossils is that those creatures died and were buried during the flood, just as God told us. I believe in science, and as long as it follows the truth it will eventually bring us to God.
Phillip
If science is a search for the truth, how can that ever be achieved when the "wild rash guessers" demand that the consensus opinion cannot be questioned? Doesn't that make them anti-scientists? And if that is so, then their pronouncements are religious dogma. I have known for many years a man who literally is a rocket scientist, and a believer, but if I broach the subject of Creation and evolutionism he won't talk to at all. Instead of reconciling science to the Word, he does the opposite. Science may be self-correcting, but it is never "settled".
And who was the brilliant evolutionist that who suggested that a lizard laid an egg and out hatched a bird. The term they use for this monstrosity is "Hopeful Monsters". Just when you thought evolutionism couldn't get any more ridiculous, they dig a little deeper in stupid pit.Yes, I am a piece of work, thanks, and definitely in progress.
Regardless, no you did not give the specific names, but thanks for the effort. I should have been more gracious. I steer away from the micro-macro language. Too confusing, and undermines the real issue.
From CMI's "arguments we believe creationists should not use."
- “Creationists believe in microevolution but not macroevolution.” These terms, which focus on ‘small’ v. ‘large’ changes, distract from the key issue of information. That is, particles-to-people evolution requires changes that increase genetic information (e.g., specifications for manufacturing nerves, muscle, bone, etc.), but all we observe is sorting and, overwhelmingly, loss of information. We are hardpressed to find examples of even ‘micro’ increases in information, although such changes should be frequent if evolution were true. Conversely, we do observe quite ‘macro’ changes that involve no new information, e.g. when a control gene is switched on or off. Importantly, the term microevolution will be seen by many as just a ‘little bit’ of the process that they think turned bacteria to people. In other words, it implies that simply given enough time (millions of years), such ‘micro’ changes will accumulate to amount to ‘macro’ changes. But this is not so; see The evolution train’s a-comin’: (Sorry, a-goin’—in the wrong direction).
Interestingly, even high profile evolutionists (e.g. Mayr, Ayala) disagree with the idea that the observed small changes in living things are sufficient to account for the grand scheme of microbes-to-mankind evolution.
As for evolution. They’re just wrong. But if some gullible person is convinced of evolution, I would tell them it had no bearing on the creation account in Genesis. If the universe is trillions of years old, and even if evolution appears to be how creatures developed, it still remains true that God stepped into the middle of a virtual trillions-of-years chronology, at the right moment 6000 years ago, and brought this world into existence out of nothing. He created the first man from the dust and the first woman from the man— and if that required them to have genetic evidence of a past evolution. Then that’s how God fashioned them when He made them. As for why, perhaps God purposely left naturalistic answers to be found by anyone hard-hearted enough to presuppose that He did not supernaturally create as He said He did. The whole point of this apologetic is to challenge those who fall for the scientific evidence that such is no reason to abandon faith in the reliability of Scripture or belief in a recent miraculous creation.
When I was a teen, a godly but uneducated Christian man was encouraging me to read good books on spiritual inspiration and growth. He lamented the fact that he knew few Evangelicals who were avid readers like him. Then in frustration, he added words that have greatly influenced my spiritual journey through the years: "You don't have to be stupid to be a Christian, but sometimes I think it sure helps!"