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I wish I had taken science more seriously in high school, and other subjects for that matter. I guess my train of thought has always been that all of the theories on Creation were formulated by created, flawed thinking human beings. I have always wondered what goes through the mind of the Lord who created everything when He sees the conclusions His created beings reach about Him creating us. All of the principles involved in the various theories of creation were also created by Him. Any knowledge imparted through us through scientific research came from God, in addition to Scripture.
Following is an article by the President of Southern Seminary, Dr. R. Albert Mohler, Jr.,in which he discusses the BioLogos movement. Emphasis is mine!
OT,
I have looked at some of this Congressman's voting record, and he appears to be fairly consistantly conservative. That is a good sign. I need to remember, and many on this board do, that each church has the right to make their own policies. If the congreagation of this local church felt it was ok to him to come and speak about Creation, then that is their right. Our objections would be limited to if a politician wanted to speak at our home church.
Call it what you will, Theistic evolution, punctuated equilibrium, intelligent design, old earth creationism, even BioLogos, any concept that introduces death into creation prior to the rebellion of Adam and Eve must be rejected as contrary to Scripture.
Jesus Christ Himself told us:
Mark 10:6-9
6. But from the beginning of the creation God made them male and female.
7. For this cause shall a man leave his father and mother, and cleave to his wife;
8. And they twain shall be one flesh: so then they are no more twain, but one flesh.
9. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man put asunder.
Now what is not to understand about the statement? But from the beginning of the creation God made them male and female.
From the beginning of creation God made. And that is the truth! Those who willingly embrace any concept that denies the persons of Adam and Eve deny the recorded words of Jesus Christ!
False Start? The Controversy Over Adam and Eve Heats Up
The denial of an historical Adam and Eve as the first parents of all humanity and the solitary first human pair severs the link between Adam and Christ which is so crucial to the Gospel.
Monday, August 22, 2011
Each generation of Christians faces its own set of theological challenges. For this generation of Evangelicals, the question of beginnings is taking on a new urgency. In fact, this question is now a matter of Gospel urgency. How are we to understand the Bible’s story, if we can have no confidence that we know how it even begins?
In terms of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the most urgent question related to beginnings has to do with the questions related to the existence of Adam and Eve as the first parents to all humanity and to the reality of the Fall as the explanation for human sinfulness and all that comes with sin.
A report from Barbara Bradley Hagerty of National Public Radio a few weeks ago is an undeniable sign that even the secular world now recognizes that this is a question central to Christianity. Hagerty, a skilled religion reporter, talked to me and several others about this subject. Her interviews were broadcast as a report on August 9, with Steve Inskeep of NPR as host.
Inskeep got right to the point: “For many Evangelicals, a historical Adam and Eve is a critical part of their theology, but now some conservative religious scholars are saying, publicly, that they can no longer believe it.”
<snip>
Ever since the challenge of Darwin and evolutionary theory appeared, some Christians have tried to argue that the opening chapters of the Bible should not be taken “literally.” While no honest reader of the Bible would deny the literary character of Genesis 1-3, the fact remains that significant truth claims are being presented in these chapters. Furthermore, it is clear that the historical character of these chapters is crucial to understanding the Bible’s central message — the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Apostle Paul, for example, clearly understood Adam to be a fully historical human who was also the genetic father of the entire human race. The fall of the human race in Adam sets the stage for the salvation of sinful humanity by Jesus Christ. But now, Professor Schneider is telling us that “in the moral experience of human beings, there never was any such paradise to be lost.”
Karl Giberson, who has also been affiliated with BioLogos and is the author of Saving Darwin: How to be a Christian and Believe in Evolution, goes so far as to argue that the biblical account of Adam and Eve “was never intended to be read as literal history.” But, he was asked, what does this then say about the Bible’s truthfulness and authority?
Giberson then wrote:
The Bible is not a book. It is a library — dozens of very different books bound together. The assumption that identifying one part as fiction undermines the factual character of another part is ludicrous. It would be like going into an actual physical library and saying “Well, if all these books about Harry Potter are fictional, then how do I know these other books about Abraham Lincoln are factual? How can Lincoln be real if Potter is not?” And then “Aha! I have got you! So much for your library.”
That is an amazing and deeply troubling paragraph. Giberson uses the metaphor of the Bible as a library of books — a metaphor popularized by author Brian McLaren. But Giberson then goes where many others lack the courage and candor to go — he is ready to identify part of the Bible as “fiction.” In his words, “The assumption that identifying one part as fiction undermines the factual character of another part is ludicrous.” What can his argument mean but that Adam is to be understood as like Harry Potter, a fictional character, while Jesus is like Abraham Lincoln, an historical figure who really existed?
The implications for biblical authority are clear, as is the fact that if these arguments hold sway, we will have to come up with an entirely new understanding of the Gospel metanarrative and the Bible’s storyline.
The denial of an historical Adam and Eve as the first parents of all humanity and the solitary first human pair severs the link between Adam and Christ which is so crucial to the Gospel.
If we do not know how the story of the Gospel begins, then we do not know what that story means. Make no mistake: a false start to the story produces a false grasp of the Gospel.
http://www.albertmohler.com/2011/08/22/false-start-the-controversy-over-adam-and-eve-heats-up/
OT,
I have looked at some of this Congressman's voting record, and he appears to be fairly consistantly conservative. That is a good sign. I need to remember, and many on this board do, that each church has the right to make their own policies. If the congreagation of this local church felt it was ok to him to come and speak about Creation, then that is their right. Our objections would be limited to if a politician wanted to speak at our home church.
Following are some thoughts of Dr. Albert Mohler on the essential connection of Adam and Eve with the Gospel of Jesus Christ!