The ones who first discovered that the earth was far older than mere thousands of years and that there was no evidence of a global flood were mainly scientists who were expecting to find otherwise.
You really need to investigate your history. James Hutton was one of the earliest proponents of millions of years. This, he claimed, was from a geological perspective and came before Darwin. Hutton, a uniformitarian, in letters to his peers, showed his remarkable disdain for Christianity and even outlined how he would systematically remove God from all fields of science. Hutton was a lawyer, not really a scientist and his strength lay in arguing, not in observation. It was Hutton's injection of millions of years that lead to Darwin's evolutionary theories. Moreover, Darwin wanted to do the same thing - write God out of the will... so to speak. He invisioned a world devoid of God's direct divine influence. When his daughter died he could not understand how a loving God could allow such a thing.
Also, I wholeheartedly agree that the universe is based on laws which are upheld by God, observable and repeatable. I do not take God's natural laws to in any way diminish his sovereignty over creation. Whether gravity is a result of God moving every object supernaturally or through some inherent property God endowed matter with, either way gravity only exists because God ordained and sustains it.
We can see from the accounts of Shadrach, Meshack, and Abednigo the result of God sustaining all things entirely. They were not consumed by the fire, and the smell of smoke didn't even get into their clothes. Spiritual and physical death both have their root in the abcence of God. If God does not sustain things, they die. We can see from the Old Testament that the Israelites shoes didn't even wear out. We see this is NOT the case under "normal" or natural circumstances now.
We understand from scipture there was no death before the Curse, and that there will once again be no death in the future. God will not be abscent, but present with His creation sustaining all things fully.
But here you contradict those founders of science you mentioned above. You try to make God's involvement antithetical to natural created forces. Newton didn't think his laws described phenomenon that were anti-God.
That's not what I was saying at all. I stated that God says He created everything directly by speaking in six days about six thousand years ago. You say that God created nature, which in turn created man over millions and billions of years. The two stories are contradictory. I choose to believe the one that is consistent with scipture.
Dr. Werner Gitt says it this way:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/1305.asp
The atheistic formula for evolution is:
Evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods.
In the theistic evolutionary view, God is added:
Theistic evolution = matter + evolutionary factors (chance and necessity + mutation + selection + isolation + death) + very long time periods + God.
In this system God is not the omnipotent Lord of all things, whose Word has to be taken seriously by all men, but He is integrated into the evolutionary philosophy. This leads to 10 dangers for Christians.
Scripture describes plainly that lightning comes through direct supernatural forces. Fetuses are knit together by God -- something quite direct and supernatural. The YEC is in the awkward position of writing off these kind of descriptions as "mere poetry" when they contradict with the natural forces the YEC accepts (such as electromagnetism) while accepting them as the plain and simple truth when they contradict with the natural forces the YEC doesn't accept (such as evolution).
Why don't you interpret poetry as poetry, literal history as literal history, prophecy as prophecy, etc? Clearly in writing or speaking the writer or speaker has an intended meaning. The whole Bible has been given by Inspiration from God Himself. You would do well to read it with a thought towards His meaning. Taking poetry literally is fallicy. Taking literal history allegorically is fallicy.
Why limit God to only non-natural involvement?
Therein lies your mistake. It is not YEC who have limited God. God Himself has put the limitations upon Himself. He says "I did it in six literal days" and He says "I am not a liar, I do not and cannot lie". So God has limited the possibilities of what happened to one - we have simply chosen to believe Him.
Did God start the four forces we know about (strong, weak, electromagnetic and gravitational) and let them do the binding of matter for him? How is God's creation less spectacular if he chose to endow it with such amazing capabilities?(emphasis mine)
Rom 1:25 Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.
The point of the matter is that God states that He was directly responsible for the creation of man. To then re-assign that role to nature (the
created rather than the
creator) is precisely what Rom 1:25 is talking about.
Yes, that's the simplest reading people are most likely to get if they read really quick without thinking too much or in any way challenging the assumptions of their 21st-century mindset.
It's not a question of how many words per minute one can read. It is a question of reading comprehension. Anyone reading it understands it's literal meaning. Moreover upon a hermenuetical inspection it can be further seen to corroborate a literal history. For example, the meaning of YOM when combined with modifiers like a number, evening, or morning. The only reason NOT to believe it literally would be an a priori committment to something else.
Why do you equate things like animal death and thorns with evil?
Gen 3:17 And unto Adam he said, Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife, and hast eaten of the tree, of which I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it:
cursed [is] the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat [of] it all the days of thy life;
18 Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field;
You seem to accept that some kinds of death aren't evil, such as plant death, but for some reason you insist on placing humans on the same moral level as animals.
Plants are simply biological machines built to provide food for us. Animals and people have been given soulish life (nephesh chayyah).
Nobody is claiming that God created a cursed world containing sin, or that the world somehow gave birth to itself. The presence of death does not make a world cursed, as you obviously accept since you've said elsewhere that you have no problem with plant death.
According to the Bible, plants are not alive (nephesh chayyah), so they cannot "die" as animals and people do.
I do not believe humans are merely animals since we share God's image while animals don't.
And you do well in that belief. In Genesis 1 (literal history) God specifies the moral relation between man and animals:
Gen 1:26 And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.
You've failed to point out any inconsistency.
Ok - wow. I don't understand how you can say that?
Six days or 13 billion years
earth, sun, plants or sun earth plants
discreetly created organisms or common ancestry
death is the result of sin or death came before sin
God determines truth or man determines truth
There is a world of contradiction between old earth views and young earth views.
I think I've shown how I use a consistent approach to the Bible to come to my conclusions.
If those views consistently contradict scripture (as I have shown them to), then they are still wrong. The consistency I was referring to is consistency with scripture. Does it agree with what God says happened? In the case of evolution, it does not. Moreover, evolution is inconsistent with the statements of Jesus, Paul, Peter, etc.
Check out this article on AiG (hey they re-designed their site... isn't it cool looking?):
http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/1305.asp
I'll start a thread with this article too.