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I'de vote for this but what does the Lord think?Originally posted by HankD:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr /> - Do we acknowledge our differences and agree to get along, meanwhile having fun posting on forums like this?
Brett,Originally posted by Brett:
Terry,
This is how I view it: I start with the belief that everything in the Bible is true as literally written. But, if there is enough evidence to challenge that belief for a given topic (Creation, for example), then is it not possible that this particular thing is meant to be metaphorical? As travelsong stated, earlier Christian leaders thought that heliocentricity was wrong; if the "literal meaning" of the passages cited by UTEOTW isn't an unmoving Earth, the where would they get that idea?
I think this certainly lends support to the notion that some things in the bible are metaphorical. As Christians, the only things that we can argue are metaphorical are the ones where sufficient evidence contradicts a literal interpretation. This is the case with both heliocentricity and evolution.
Why do you think that God would not have put metaphors in the bible? Why must it be taken completely literally everywhere, even when the vast majority of the evidence would contradict a literal interpretation?
Brett is not avoiding telling the truth he's being honest in his belief Moses was using metaphor.In other words, you use the cloak of "metaphor" to avoid telling the plain truth which is that you think Moses was in error about the creation.
best wishes to you all , God bless and have a great weekend."remember when its all over were all on the same side"
I farmed an 80 acre farm for 15 years.Certainly certain forms of death existed before sin. Plants were given as food – but that means that plants had to die
So you are saying that the death of living tissue is not death? The cells of that tissue are alive by our standards are they not? There certainly is life on a cellular level. When ingested, these cells would die. Bacteria would die. But, these are not the same as the living creatures with the breath of life and with blood.Originally posted by HankD:
Grazing cattle eat the blades of the meadow grass which does not kill the plant. ...
When you eat an apple, you do not kill the tree.
Also, we don't know all the details of the nature of life and the maintenance of it (and there seems to be some need because Adam and Eve ate fruit).
We do know that death entered the world via Adam.
Personally, I believe it was universal:
Romans 8
21 Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.
22 For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now.
23 And not only they, but ourselves also, which have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body.
HankD [/QB]
.Originally posted by doug_mmm:
Talking then of literalism, St John when talking about Revelation states "behold the bride of the lamb" when talking about the Church. So you saying the Church is literally a bride?
The only mess here is for those who say that a statement which was historical or scientific is "metaphorical." [Snipped out by moderator for personal comments]See the mess that arises?
Brett,Originally posted by Brett:
Perhaps parable would be a better word - although I don't see what the point is of arguing semantics, since you know what we mean regardless of whether the word "metaphor" is being used incorrectly.
Hank, I also do not believe there was death before Adam's sin for most of God's creation (with the exceptions I noted). I think as a general statement, it is fine and I think that is the way it is used in scripture. When we read that "all in Bethany (or some other city) came out to see (or do such-and such)" does that mean that every single man, woman, and child in the city did this? No. A careful study of the Biblical use of the word "all" shows that "all" is sometimes not "all" literally but may be "all" representives, etc. By saying that, I am not arguing for the allegorical method of reading the Bible. Most conservative "literal" Bible scholars would agree with what I've said.Originally posted by HankD:
I don't believe that there was death before Adam.
He must have known intellectually at some level what it was or God would not have warned him not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
I can't give an answer to your valid objections about bacteria and cell death. Perhaps it is so but perhaps we are missing some additional unrevealed information.
HankD
[snipped by moderator for personal comments]The only mess here is for those who say that a statement which was historical or scientific is "metaphorical." {snipped by moderator]
Mark Osgatharp
Mr. Osgatharp -Originally posted by Mark Osgatharp:
I'll be glad when the Lord issues His "personal comments" on these matters - and there won't be any speech police around to edit Him.
Mark Osgatharp
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Mark with your vast scientific background, maybe you can show me incorrect?
Another fundamentalist nutter who thinks that by speaking with incredible conviction he can convince me about his God.
If Christians fly in the face of scientific fact then how are we not blindly superstitious and dogmatic?
Mark, apologies if I come across a tad caustic, its not you. I've sadly come across some well meaning but very narrow minded, dogmatic YEC's who have done nothing but discredit Christianity and reduced us to a laughing stock.
Mark, I suspect, is pastor of a church with at most a few dozen members, most of whom probably are not well educated and are not well informed about science or evolution. So Mark probably can get by on what little he knows about the subject. But he won't make such a good impression if he has to discuss this issue in front of well informed and well educated laymen.
No you are hiding your head in the scriptures...
That phrase just made me laugh. Perhaps the other side knows more about God, and you just haven't "gotten to that point" yet. Either way, there is no excuse to be prideful, I don't think.
God will not bless anyone for being afraid of the truth, not will He bless people like Mark who seem to think their knowledge of the world somehow compares with God's. And neither will he bless someone who's primary goal at this board, as it seems to me, has been to cause anger and especially divisiveness among his fellow Christians by saying that it's his way or the highway, and that anyone who disagrees with him is unsaved and is a heretic. Divisiveness has no place in the brotherhood of Christ.
It would truly be a blessing from God if Mark's eye's were opened and he were able to see just how wrong his divisiveness is, don't you agree? Any time one comes to a greater understanding of Christian love and life, it is a blessing. I wish great blessing upon every contentious strife causing brother and sister in the body. I hope you feel the same way Brett.
Mark OsgatharpIt is almost an honor to be branded as an infidel by someone who is so sure of his own opinion that he is unwilling to even consider the evidence and can only put forward as reason his own thoughts, opinions and interpretations. Someone who can put no facts before the discussion and is proud that he is uninformed about the debate and intends to remain in the dark. Someone who can only hurl insults at fellow believers with whom he does not agree to the point of publicly doubting the salvation of those who do not share his opinion. To be branded an infidel and a heretic by someone who mocks and insults fellow Christians and fellow Baptists with whom he disagrees on a matter about which he willfully discusses while being willfully uninformed, bringing nothing of value to the table, must mean I am on on the right track.
There seems to be a track record, here. This is not the first time I have recently seen you doubt the salvation of someone who dares to disagree with you. It is divisive at the very least. Contrast this with what I have said on this thread. I have not doubted your salvation. I have not insulted you. I have not even intimated that you were ignorant or stupid, though I have dealt harshly with what are weak or nonexistant arguments. You refuse to even look at the facts to enable the possibility of informed debate and instead hurl insults. I surely hope that my discussions on this are not as disruptive.
Brett,Originally posted by Brett:
Mark,
Did you really think there wouldn't be a reaction after you call many of your fellow Christians "unsaved" and "heretics" merely because they disagree with your theology?