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Can an Evolutionist be Saved?

LadyEagle

<b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>
Originally posted by Plain Old Bill:
Dear Lady Eagle,
I am with you on YEC. I also know Dr. Walter Martin is a Baptist.I was just pointing out the rest of the site to you.By the way I really enjoy your entries.
Thanks, Bill.


LE, your post presumes that, if someone here on the BB believes in evolution, then they are denying that God created everything.
Oh, you're right, Johnv, I'm sorry. Please explain how God created everything through evolution. Please show us how Darwin and God are on the same team. Then I'll take back calling Darwin a pipsqueak.

My question still stands to any evolutionist who wants to take a stab at it: How did Jesus evolve?

If the creation account in Genesis is a myth, if the Great Flood is a myth, then the Bible is not true. If the Bible is not true, then Salvation is a myth. That's what is at the crux of the whole discussion and the OP, the way I read it. But maybe I need new bifocals.
 

Johnv

New Member
Originally posted by Mike Gascoigne:
Yes we should.

Scripture expressly forbids us from questioning a person's salvation.
If someone doesn't believe that death came as a consequence of sin, what do they think they are saved from?
From every post I've read, everyone here seems to agree that death is the result of sin.
 

James_Newman

New Member
Originally posted by Johnv:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Mike Gascoigne:
Yes we should.

Scripture expressly forbids us from questioning a person's salvation.
</font>[/QUOTE]I missed that commandment.
 

Mike Gascoigne

<img src=/mike.jpg>
Originally posted by Johnv:
Scripture expressly forbids us from questioning a person's salvation.
Not according to Acts 19:1-7 where Paul finds some "disciples" and says "Unto what then were ye baptized?"
From every post I've read, everyone here seems to agree that death is the result of sin.
Not the evolutionists. They believe that there were millions of years of death before sin.

Mike
 

Johnv

New Member
Originally posted by LadyEagle:
Oh, you're right, Johnv, I'm sorry. Please explain how God created everything through evolution.
The C/E debate notwithstanding, God is creator. He is free to create as he wishes. If he did it in 6 days, each day being 24 hours long, 6000 years ago, he is still creator. If he did it in 6 periods, each period being longer than 24 hours, more than 6000 years ago, he is still creator. If he did it over millions of years, he is still creator.

The reason I typically steer clear of the C/E topic is because most of the posts debate how we believe this-and-that happenned, and as a result, we take our eyes off our creator.

Quite honestly, how I got here is inconsequential. No matter how I slice it, the price of my sin is death, and only my Creator come to earth can pay that price in full. My creator gave me that gift freely. When we argue over the receipt in the box, we belittle the giver.
 

Johnv

New Member
Originally posted by Mike Gascoigne:
Not the evolutionists. They believe that there were millions of years of death before sin.
You completely miss the point. It is MY sin that reslts in MY death. Christ alone pays the price for MY death. Whether one is YEC or non-YEC, one can (and often does) completely miss that point in the process.
 

Bro Tony

New Member
You completely miss the point. It is MY sin that reslts in MY death
Yes and no John. You and I were born in sin. Our death was certain the day we were conceived. That death is a result of original sin not just our personal sin. If death is the result of sin, physical and spiritual, then no death could have occurred before man sin. That being the case no one could have lived or died in any "pre-human" form before Adam.

Bro Tony
 

LadyEagle

<b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>
The C/E debate notwithstanding, God is creator. He is free to create as he wishes. If he did it in 6 days, each day being 24 hours long, 6000 years ago, he is still creator. If he did it in 6 periods, each period being longer than 24 hours, more than 6000 years ago, he is still creator. If he did it over millions of years, he is still creator.
That is correct, but what you just described is not the theory of evolution. You just described the young earth/old earth debate with God as the creator.

The theory of evolution denies Intelligent Design by a Creator. The theory of evolution theorizes that certain gases came together with the right amount of heat and light and one day a simple cell was formed by chance which later turned into an amoeba which later evolved and adapted to survive (by natural selection) and eventually developed into a low life form which then eventually (through billions of years, yet) turned into a higher life form that flopped out on dry land one day which then grew legs and a bigger brain which then turned into a mammal one day which then turned into an ape which then turned into a primitive man which then turned into a homo sapiens - all by chance, the right elements, the right timing, by natural selection and survival of the fittest.

The whole theory is about as ridiculous as the ninkompoop pipsqueak who dreamed it up by "demonic design." Funny thing though, humans don't get more and more perfect with time. Our teeth decay, our joints get arthritis, we go blind, our organs give out, our bodies droop and sag and by the time we are old and infirm, we are stooped over like Neanderthal man. Ha!
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
The opening post started out as a promotion for the book, “Impossible Theology”. I read the book, "Impossible Theology". It's not surprising to me that it has not received an outpouring of acceptance even in the YEC community.

The book spends over sixty pages explaining the "Real Gospel" which the author describes as a dispensational, pretrib, pre-mil. belief system (wow, a particular set of beliefs that I share). I do fear though that once the author converts those that don’t accept a young earth, he will start aggressively disenfranchising those that believe in other twisted pseudo-theology systems.

The author accepts death before sin, but explain that it only occurs within a limited subset of life. The set that doesn't die is the nephesh. In a long study on the word nephesh, he explains that the word nephesh can mean: breath or soul...fish...blood...pleasure, pain… various emotions …sometimes it even means a dead body. He writes,
"The association of nephesh with consciousness might suggest that certain types of primitive animals do not have nephesh life in the true sense of the word, and their deaths are inconsequential. In that case, some of them could have died before the fall, and the creation would still be considered "good", because there was no pain or suffering.
So is death “good” now? The arguments that have been promoted for years in the YEC community that any form of death is evil are being changed. It’s not death that’s bad it’s “pain”, it’s the “years”, it’s those evilutionists!

One insightful description of the difference between true YEC belief and the pseudo gospel was that the author says that YEC's believe: "Everything will return to its former state of perfection, as it was in the Garden of Eden before the Fall." He offers the conjecture that Adam's "resurrection body" was capable of changing from one form to another, disappearing and re-appearing somewhere else, just as Christ’s resurrection body.

Then the author describes the belief of the pseudo-gospel:
The Lord will make a New Heaven and a New Earth as an eternal dwelling place for the believers...and the saints will live forever. This world will be a sinless paradise, as it was in the Garden of Eden. In that case, the new Garden of Eden is even better than the old one, because in this place we have immorality which we never had before, so it's a good job that we sinned, otherwise we would never enjoy this happy state.

Clearly it's an absurdity to have a Gospel that leaves us better off than we would have been if we had never sinned. The purpose of the Real Gospel is to cancel altogether the effects of the curse and restore us to our former state. (p. 73)
In this, you have found a true point of difference! I believe that I will be in a better, more excellent state following Christ’s death and resurrection work that if it never happened.

It's not hard to know who the book was written for. An OEC would laugh at the mischaracterizations pointed at them. I’m not trying to be harsh or rude but I would not recommend it.
Rob
 

Charles Meadows

New Member
So Mike you don't think that Christ's blood alone is powerful enough to save someone?

Not unless a person believes this or that doctrine TOO?

And a man who believes he is a sinner and asks Christ for forgiveness is not saved until he renounces his belief in evolution?

So much for sola fide...

Dominus fobiscu my son.

So I guess that you have no quarrel with the papist who asserts that you must also take the sacraments to be saved huh?
 

Matt Black

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
For the sake of clarity here, can someone please define what they mean by 'evolutionist' in the context of a Christian holding to this position? Many posters here seem to equate that stance with an atheistic, 'God exclusionary' , 'it all happened by chance' stance. I don't think anyone here is adopting that position; rather, there are some of us who are asserting 'theistic evolution'/ OECism. There's a world of difference between the two...

Yours in Christ

Matt
 

Mike Gascoigne

<img src=/mike.jpg>
Originally posted by Deacon:
I read the book, "Impossible Theology".
At last, after 68 responses to this topic, we have a comment from someone who has actually read the book.

The book spends over sixty pages explaining the "Real Gospel" which the author describes as a dispensational, pretrib, pre-mil.
No, I have not described the pre-trib, pre-mil position as exclusively correct. I consider it to be the position that makes the most sense, and I have included it in my book for the purpose of showing how it falls apart if you accept the doctrine of death before sin. The impartial reader will understand that all other eschatological positions will fall apart in the same way. I have recognised that there are other positions in a section called "All Together in the End", where I have explained that however you arrange the events, you start off with the Garden of Eden and you end up in a restored paradise called the New Jerusalem.

The author accepts death before sin, but explain that it only occurs within a limited subset of life.
I have accepted the death of unconcious lower life forms, but only as a possibility. The other possibility is that they were genuinely immortal.

So is death “good” now? The arguments that have been promoted for years in the YEC community that any form of death is evil are being changed.
None of this is really new. The death of plants can be considered good because they were created as food for animals and humans. The question of consciousness and the death of lower life forms was discussed in an ICR paper in 1989, where it was argued that plants and lower life forms do not really possess "life" in the Biblical sense. See Death before Sin, Impact Paper 191 by James S. Stambaugh.

Mike
 

Brett

New Member
Originally posted by Brett:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Phillip:
Apparently, craig has not been listening to very much news lately. News that many, many evolutionary scientists are starting to back away from the theory in just the last few months.

Can you cite a source on this? </font>[/QUOTE]I'm still waiting.
 

Plain Old Bill

New Member
Dear Brett,
Please type "institute for Cration Research" in your search window and go take a look.You will find many Bio-scientist and physical scientists there old as well as new.You will also find many interesting articles from the creation science point of view.

You want to know the truth, you can't handle the truth. (that's my best jack Nickolson impression hope you liked it).Anyhow it will give you a hint about some of the things creationist read and who we are.
 

Mike Gascoigne

<img src=/mike.jpg>
Originally posted by Phillip:
Apparently, craig has not been listening to very much news lately. News that many, many evolutionary scientists are starting to back away from the theory in just the last few months.

News that says there HAS to be intelligent design behind our universe and therefore without the theory of evolution the billions of years are NOT a requirement.
Phillip,

Do you mean the new science standards that might include Intelligent Design in the school curriculum. See the following article:

www.ljworld.com/section/stateregional/story/190406

In American schools you have a rather quaint rule that you can't mention God, so you can't discuss Creation, so you have to call it Intelligent Design instead.

Mike
 

Craigbythesea

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by Plain Old Bill:
Dear Brett,
Please type "institute for Cration Research" in your search window and go take a look.You will find many Bio-scientist and physical scientists there old as well as new.You will also find many interesting articles from the creation science point of view.

You want to know the truth, you can't handle the truth. (that's my best jack Nickolson impression hope you liked it).Anyhow it will give you a hint about some of the things creationist read and who we are.
Christians should be very wary of this sight, and especially of the older material.

The philosophy of this organization from the beginning is that the end justifies the means, and that any amount of distortion of the facts in order to prove their personal and extra-biblical conviction of a recently created earth is justified. I know this to be the case because, as a biologist, I have read much of their literature over a period of about 30 years and have continued to be appalled by their blatant lack of academic and Christian ethics in presenting and discussing scientific data. And of course they have come under severe fire from both Scientists and mainstream educated Christians for their junk science and willful distortion of the facts. Therefore, in more recent years their science has improved and they have become more careful in presenting their data, but they still have a long way to go to be considered scientifically credible or ethically acceptable.

For those who are not trained scientists and who desire to know for themselves whether or not competent scientists believe in a young earth, type into your computer search engine the names of the “scientists” who believe in the a young earth. If you will do this, you will find for yourself that NONE of them are employed ANY university that is noted for academic excellence in the sciences. Check out their degrees and where they got them and what their degrees are in and compare this information with what they are claiming to have knowledge of. Don’t take my word for any of this. Check out the facts for yourself!

saint.gif
 

Phillip

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Plain Old Bill:
Right on Charles! JohnV you are correct. The point being some say that the YEC movement was started by Ellen G. White through special revelation. Things still need to be looked at very closely becuase she still has some influence on some of thier teachings.
Uh, 'scuse me, but I think the Bible makes YEC very clear. Only those who do not wish to take Genesis as literal have to throw it out.

If we take Genesis as allegory, why don't we take Mathew, Mark, Luke and John as allegory? Who is in charge of what is "real and what is smoke and mirrors?"
 

Deacon

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by Plain Old Bill:
Sorry Brett I forgot the "E" in creation.
We understood the mistake
laugh.gif
It's just that most people leave out some other letters when talking about those who participate in the discussions on origin issues... "Cretins" not crations.
laugh.gif


Rob
 

Phillip

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Mike Gascoigne:
Originally posted by Phillip:
[qb] Apparently, craig has not been listening to very much news lately. News that many, many evolutionary scientists are starting to back away from the theory in just the last few months.

News that says there HAS to be intelligent design behind our universe and therefore without the theory of evolution the billions of years are NOT a requirement.
Phillip,
Mike, this is only a part of it. Quite a few scientists are questioning, in particular, the fact that the big bang does not work very well with the laws of physics we accept. Besides, they are also admitting that the universe is simply too complex to have been a randomly caused event. Many are admitting that without some sort of "intelligence" behind everything, that it will NOT work.

Therefore, many are questioning evolution as a concept because evolution is "after all" just another theory. I will try to find you some quotes and sources of material where these articles and stories have been seen. All too often, I read something good and simply erase it, rather than saving it.

With their permission, I can put you into some contact with secular scientists (Phd types) who are brilliant, and Christian, who believe in Creation. If God can send His Son to Earth as a man, why can He not create a universe in six days? Or 2 microseconds, for that matter.

Evolution not only defies the laws of Thermodynamics, but the odds are just impossible. It takes more faith to believe in evolution than it does a Creator. But, this just shows you what mass brainwashing can do. Look at Germany during World War II.
 
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