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Stunning victory of Creation

Scott J

Active Member
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Originally posted by lchemist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Scott J:

Can you demonstrate that the words delivered to the children of Israel by Moses after having spent time in the presence of God Himself were in some way equivalent to ancient mythology?
But we are talking about Genesis, not about Moses' words to the children of Israel at Sinai.

Luis
</font>[/QUOTE]Who do you think the initial recipients of Genesis were? Moses gave his writings to the people of Israel to establish their nation. Those writings detailed who they were, where they came from, and commandments for conduct in light of their special position with God.
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Phillip:
My whole point has been and is that you are trying so hard to convince yourself something is true you have to base it on something you can see, feel or touch.
I think you misundesttod the issue, we are not infallibles, we are doing the opposite of what you said, we are not fixing on one interpretation,God's Word is true not our humble approch to it.

Notice that you cannot JUST rely on what the Bible says. You MUST rely on something historical, that in your opinion, can be proven. For example you place a requirement on the study of Genesis 1:11 right in your last sentence: "considering the studies done in the last 200 years of biblical scholarship."
We rely on the Bible, but in order to understand it rightly we have to use all the tools God has made available to us, what I was trying to say is that we cannot ignore the achievements of the people who studied the bible before us, specifically I was talking about literary genres and form criticism.


In fact, I am not sure exactly what you are asking for (YEC is not a Biblical possibility.)?
I was referring to a way of reading the bible that misses a lot of its richness and turns it into a wooden supposedly historical account

The Bible wasn't just written for people from 1800 until now. Obviously, people from 1500 to 1800 would have to interpret it in a certain way also. Should we study how most Christians interpreted it?
Yes, that is call the "analogy fides"

You say that the number of Christians interpreting this a certain way (example: this poll) does not have anything to do with the translation of the Bible. Obviously, after thinking about this, maybe it does.
I don't understand that statement, people hold differnt interpretations for a variety of reasons, and I do not think it matters much wich traslation you use, KJV, NIV, NRSV or even the Hebrew text.

In using your own point that the early people who read the Bible would have interpreted it one way. Today, most Christians interpret it a certain way. Since God is not a God of confusion then the massive interpretion method without having to add outside evidence is most likely to be the legitimate way God wanted it to be understood.
Where is that interpretation? Probably most contemporary christians do not hold Gen 1ss as historical accounts.

Without outside evidence? What does it mean? If you are reading a text, any text, you are bringing your lifetime experiences with you, and if you are a christian, I hope you will look for the illumination of the Holy Spirit.

There are very few of you who are trying to change the interpretation to fit your world view. The remainder of the Christians seem to be interpreting it as a literal story. Therefore, maybe God wanted us to interpret literally since the Bible is meant for all generations from the ancient man through the 21st century person.
Actually only a minority of christians are literallist, (except in this forum), but you are reinforcing my point here, because the bible is for all generatiuons, it cannot be fixed to any age view of nature, its message is eternal.

Blessings,

Luis
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Scott J:
Who do you think the initial recipients of Genesis were? Moses gave his writings to the people of Israel to establish their nation. Those writings detailed who they were, where they came from, and commandments for conduct in light of their special position with God.
Obviously it was Israel, but Genesis is not a part of the laws given at Sinai.

Luis
 

Scott J

Active Member
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Originally posted by UTEOTW:
"God could have chosen whatever starting point He willed including making everything exactly the way it is now."

Agree. We should not put God in little boxes of our own creation. We cannot understand His ways.
So you acknowledge that if God in His sovereignty decided to create the world fully fitted for His purposes including what would appear to natural, fallible, carnal men to be an appearance of age in 6 days- there is no reason why He couldn't?

"I am open to the idea that God recently created all living things in such a way that they would adapt and populate the world as He divinely ordained."

Closer. You are willing to admit that God could have allowed the present diversity of life to come about through adaptation. But you are still constructing a box into which you place God.
You have that backwards. I have no problem accepting any theory of origins that can be reconciled to God's inspired special revelation in written language without twisting, distorting, and ultimately denying the meaning of what was said.

But it is still stunning that you do not seem to have problem with ALL artiodactyls possibly being one "kind."
I have identifed my standard. I do not believe that species arose over millions of years by accumulated genetic complexity for two reasons. One, we don't observe that in nature- changes and adaptation but no increased complexity resulting in the formation of new species. Two, (and more importantly) it does not conform to the outline nor details of what God's Word said happened.
That is a lot of speciation!
Or not. I am not placing a box around God as you appear to be attempting again.

God could have done it in a millisecond or a million years. He could have made things fully mature or they could have matured over millions of years or He could have matured them in a short period of time.
Once you allow for that much change, then you really do not have a basis to claim that such change falls under minor variations with a "kind."
So? I don't think I ever said that the changes were necessarily minor. I said they occurred relatively recently according to the biblical time frame and that the animals created reproduced after their "kind"- meaning that they inherited all traits and abilities to adapt from their parents.
There is no wall preventing higher groups from coming about through the same purposes.
Not so long as you are talking about them coming about descendents of equal or less genetic complexity. It is the idea that ascent, not descent, that I have a problem with... both biblically and evidentially.

We are ALL interpreting things about which we cannot be fully certain.
True.
Now the question is which set of interpretations are correct. As I see it, there are two possibilities. The first is that the creation account IS literal and that God for some unknown reason made His creation just look like he used inflation and billions of years of geology and common descent to create. The second is that God really did use long periods to create and the the creation account is meant to convey truth through non-literal means.
Let me rephrase for accuracy. One, what God said is literally true and man's interpretations based on the assumption that everything occurred by a long string of natural processes is inaccurate.

Two, what God said in no way represents what actually happened and He could not have created the world with more ease than one of us could create a doghouse even though He is infinitely more capable of creating the world in 6 days than we are capable of building a doghouse in 6 days.

As someone pointed out above, it is close to heretical to suggest that God would deceptively create as some sort of test.
That is ridiculous and offensive. You think that we are failing just such a test for looking what the word of Genesis actually say and accepting it. God said it. It would be far more deceptive to say something knowing that someone would presume it to be literally true while it wasn't even a close parallel to the truth than to build something knowing that someone could possibly misunderstand your method of construction.

Whoever is wrong on this subject, it is because of our fallibility, not dishonesty on the part of God. You presume that human interpretations of nature are true. I presume that what God divinely inspired is literally true. One of us is wrong.
It just does not seem to be in His nature.
But it is in His nature to say something knowing that almost everyone who believes in Him for 4000+ years would draw a false conclusion from it?
Second, we do see that God has used non-literal language in other parts of the Bible to convey truth.
Reference? What context? What are the cross-references used to determine the interpretation? On what basis is it thought to be non-literal? Was it said in a way that the audience knew that it was non-literal or could they have believed it was literal?
Saying that the sun stood still for Joshua rather than the earth.
This was miraculous event and we have absolutely no idea what the mechanics were. Poor example. Further, isolated figures of speech and metaphors are not on par with a detailed passage that gives every internal indication of being literal and was accepted as literal throughout the rest of scripture.

This parallels what evolution does to microevolution. It expands it beyond the limits of context and application.

But, if your suggestion were true, then we would expect to find in the lad dwelling artiodactyls pseudogenes and atavisms of all those genes that were necessary to make the whales crop up occasionally.
Or environmental conditions on land were much more effective in purging these things out... or they don't all go back to the same ancestor.
I'll also remind you of something unpleasant. Over the coming years, we will be genetically sequencing the genomes of much of earth's life. Right now we cannot point to the genes that make whales different. But that may not always be the case. You are hanging you hat on a brabch that is likely to be cut off in a couple of decades.
Not unless this occurs without the influence of intelligence.

"I did. You simply didn't like it."

No, you simnply made a genral statement about genetically rich adaptable initial populations. You never tried any explanation of what this meant until now.
Which is exactly what the proponents of macroevolution do except they couch their unsubstantiated claims in technical jargon and blend it with microevolution by obscuring the difference even though there is no evidence anywhere that microevolution ever results in macroevolution.


First, most young earthers realize that if the flood were global, then there would not be ebough room for all the species to fit so they say that only "kinds" were carried aboard and they later speciated.
I don't presume naturalism so I don't presume this to be a problem for God.

Or immature animals were taken, or only the best examples of the "kinds" were taken on board and many species perished completely.

They also say that the flood created essentially all of the fossils.

Do you see a problem here? I do. How could all those various species get drowned and fossilized in the flood if they did not speciate until afterwards?
Just gave you a way.

Nope. I have the observed mechanism of duplication and mutation to generate new information. Did you know that the recent human geneome project had to reduce by thousands its initial estimate of the number of human genes because there were so many duplications? Did you know that many diverse families of genes can be traced to repeated duplication events?
Did you know that all of these capabilities were inherited and that none of them arose spontaneously? Did you know that the result of all of these duplications and mutations was never the evolution of a new species or anything like such a transition?

"If what happened is completely different from what He said happened then truly how can we know what is real about us?"

God can convey truth non-literally. He does so in other parts of the Bible. You limit God.

"Then you turn around and propose that He did exactly that in Genesis... except it isn't potential information, it is actual.
"

God can convey truth non-literally. He does so in other parts of the Bible. You limit God.
No limits on God... limits on man. I believe God's ability to accurately represent what He wants us to believe is infinitely more effective than man's ability to interpret nature or to expand those interpretations into a factual history of what must have occurred.

Once you accept God and His creative ability, you do not have to presume/favor naturalistic processes... and I don't.
 

Scott J

Active Member
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Originally posted by lchemist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by Scott J:
Who do you think the initial recipients of Genesis were? Moses gave his writings to the people of Israel to establish their nation. Those writings detailed who they were, where they came from, and commandments for conduct in light of their special position with God.
Obviously it was Israel, but Genesis is not a part of the laws given at Sinai.

Luis
</font>[/QUOTE]Genesis was part of the writings delivered by Moses to the Israelites prior to their entry into Canaan. For proof, I would refer you to "The Fundamentals" collated by RA Torrey.

Whether it was written before or after Moses visitation with God, it should be apparent that God had an opportunity to correct him.
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Scott J:
assume a direct creator, an omnipotent, omniscient, intelligent, willful Creator.

Now, if He were going to create the world, what reason would He have for not creating it just as He needed it to be (ie. fully mature)?
We wouldn't know his reasons, but we know that he did what he did, becauses he so desired. He is Lord and he doen't owe us any explanation.

What reason would He have for using an allegory that doesn't even accurately parallel what actually happened (assuming evolution true)?
His Word tell us what he did exactly as he wanted it, not for us to have "an account", but for every generation to understand his love and the message of salvation through Jesus Christ.

Can you give me a reason why you have more difficulty believing that God spoke everything in existence exactly as it needed to be to accomplish His will than believing that Christ literally died and arose?
Both are true, no difficulty here.

I am not asking for the standard "appearance of age else deceptive God response" but rather why you find one of these propositions less possible than the other.
Because YEC is not supported by the evidence.

Naturally speaking, resurrection is impossible... heaven and hell are impossible... prayer is impossible... Spirit guidance is ridiculous...etc. but no more nor less so than the idea that God created by a simple act of divine will.
Again, that is what we believe.

Blessings,

Luis
 

Scott J

Active Member
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Luis, UT, et al.

Is a literal reading of Genesis possibly true? If you say it is not, in what way is God not able to create everything according to the outline and timeframe detailed there?
 

Scott J

Active Member
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Because YEC is not supported by the evidence.
And another thing...

Here is my evidence:

What is, is. Nature is not dependent on either of us being right. If creation is true or evolution is true... nature will not change one iota.

God is.

God could have created through natural processes. God could have created by a supernatural act of will- neither is beyond Him.

God said He created by a supernatural act of will.

I am not sure what evidence could be stronger than an eyewitness account by the Creator of something whose very nature precludes deception or flaw.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
I am not about to wade through all six pages of this thread. I do know this: evolution and creation do not, and have never mixed. You cannot be an evolutionist and a believe the Bible at the same time. If you assert anything to the contrary then you are just plain confused and do not know your Bible very well. There is absolutely no possibility (theologically speaking) that God, in His Word, has left any room for evolution.
Evolution is an atheistic system, a philosophical system of thinking designed for those who do not believe in God. Julian Huxley, one of the greatest advocates of evolution, said: "I do not believe in evolution because of it credibility; rather, I believe in it because to believe in God is far too incredible."
Huxley knew that evolution was a flawed system from the beginning. He believed in it because he did not want to believe in God, and he could think of no other alternative. He wasn't religious. When one admits belief in God, he automatically admits that God is his creator and master, and that he is his servant. Huxley could not bring himself to admit to this.
Perhaps some of the evolutionists on this board don't want to admit to the same thing.
DHK
 

just-want-peace

Well-Known Member
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Julian Huxley, one of the greatest advocates of evolution, said: "I do not believe in evolution because of it credibility; rather, I believe in it because to believe in God is far too incredible."
Very misguided individual, but at least an honest one!!
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Scott J:
Luis, UT, et al.

Is a literal reading of Genesis possibly true? If you say it is not, in what way is God not able to create everything according to the outline and timeframe detailed there?
It is able, that is not the question. How he did it is.
We claim that a good interpretation of Genesis does not exclude evolution.

Luis
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Scott J:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Because YEC is not supported by the evidence.
Macroevolution is not supported by the evidence. It is an extrapolation of the evidence at best. </font>[/QUOTE]May be, but the weight of the evidence points towards evolution rather than to YES, specially regarding the idea of a very young earth, which is ridiculous in view of the geological data.

Luis
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by Scott J:

God said He created by a supernatural act of will.

I am not sure what evidence could be stronger than an eyewitness account by the Creator of something whose very nature precludes deception or flaw.
We do not deny that, we just disagree on the method.

Luis
 

lchemist

Member
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Originally posted by DHK:
You cannot be an evolutionist and a believe the Bible at the same time. There is absolutely no possibility (theologically speaking) that God, in His Word, has left any room for evolution.
That is not true, the bible is absolutly silent on the issue, as it is on electronics, or biochemistry.

Evolution is an atheistic system
DHK
Again with the atheists issue, we do not care about what atheists think, this is a debate between baptists believers. By the way, evolution is no more atheist than the law of gravity.

Blessings,

Luis
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by lchemist:
We do not deny that, we just disagree on the method.
Luis
If you had any knowledge of the Hebrew language and the precise words that are used in the first chapter on Genesis one, then you would know that God didn't leave any disagreement for the method of creation. He told us exactly how he created the world in six literal days. There is no other interpretation. There is no allegory here, and no proof of one. The Hebrew does not allow for one; only man's wishful thinking and his unbelief.
DHK
 

Bro Tony

New Member
I have never understood this fascination with some that a "mature" creation could explain things.

First off, it is obvious to concede that there would of necessity be a certain level of maturity in a literal six day creation. The ground would need to be fertile, the plants and animals would need to be a variety of "ages," the man would have to be an adult (or at least not an infant), the sun would need to be stable, and so on. But many of the things cited as evidence of an old earth have absolutely nothing to do with maturity or functionality. All those inserts of viral DNA in your genome, for instance. This adds nothing to the functionality of the human body but does indicate a long period of time for all those inserts to be incorporated.

Second, it is a perplexing admission that a "mature" creation should appear to have been shaped by billions of years of change. What a strange concept. A normal, functioning universe would take billions of years to form. Our universe shows signs of having taken billions of years to form. And therefore it is young? It is an admission that all the evidence is against you yet you still deny it.

Very perplexing.
Nice job evading my whole post. If you don't want to deal with the reality of the fact that God created things mature, then just say so. Say you don't want to deal with it, but your being perplexed doesn't change anything. It just shows you are unwilling to consider this possibility.

Bro Tony
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by lchemist:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by DHK:
You cannot be an evolutionist and a believe the Bible at the same time. There is absolutely no possibility (theologically speaking) that God, in His Word, has left any room for evolution.
That is not true, the bible is absolutly silent on the issue, as it is on electronics, or biochemistry.</font>[/QUOTE]The Bible is not silent on evolution.

Exodus 20:11 For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.

In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth.

Evolution starts with the origin of the earth, with things like the "Big Bang" taught as fact in public schools. This is a denial of Genesis chapter one. "In the beginning God was." God is eternal; not gases, not matter, but God. Evolution is not science but a religion based on faith. One must choose between the religion of evolution and the religion of Christianity. Both require faith. Christianity is backed up with the Word of God, i.e., the Word of Christ, who rose from the dead to demonstrate that He is who he said he was--God. Evolution has nothing to back it up. No one was there at the Big Bang. No one saw it. No one heard it. It is pure speculation. It is by faith that one accepts it. It is pure religion and fancy fairy tales.
Evolution is an atheistic system
DHK
Again with the atheists issue, we do not care about what atheists think, this is a debate between baptists believers. By the way, evolution is no more atheist than the law of gravity.
Blessings,
Luis
Check the history of evolution. That is why I gave you a quote from Huxley. It originated, not from men of science--but from men of religion who had rejected God. It is an atheistic system of religion that takes more faith to believe in than any religion I know of. True science is observable facts, recorded, and then classified. No one has observed evolution taking place, and it still does not take place today. Who observed the Big Bang take place?
DHK
 

lchemist

Member
Site Supporter
Originally posted by DHK:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by lchemist:
We do not deny that, we just disagree on the method.
Luis
If you had any knowledge of the Hebrew language and the precise words that are used in the first chapter on Genesis one, then you would know that God didn't leave any disagreement for the method of creation. He told us exactly how he created the world in six literal days. There is no other interpretation. There is no allegory here, and no proof of one. The Hebrew does not allow for one; only man's wishful thinking and his unbelief.
DHK
</font>[/QUOTE]I took three classes of Hebrew, we used the inductive method and read and analized Genesis 1-11 in Hebrew. But I have to strongly disagree with your statement about your interpretation, which is only one of man's wishful thinking in trying to fit God's Word and creation into a narrow interpretative scheme.

Blessings,

Luis
 

lchemist

Member
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Dear Brother DHK:

First of all let me say that I checked your profile and I deeply respect your calling as a missionary.

Originally posted by DHK:

In the beginning God created the heaven and
the earth.

Evolution starts with the origin of the earth, with things like the "Big Bang" taught as fact in public schools. This is a denial of Genesis No one saw it.
The Big Bang is a cosmological theory that has nothing to do with evolution which is a biological theory. It is not a denial of Genesis. Obviously no one saw it but we have plenty of evidence pointing to irs reality.
By the way if you think that the Big Bang is hard to swallow, wait to read about String Theory.


Check the history of evolution. It originated, not from men of science--but from men of religion who had rejected God. It is an atheistic system of religion
DHK
Actually it is simply a biological theory that explains the diversity of life on Earth, it is not accepted due to the authority of any man, but because the body of scientific evidence supporting it is enormous.

In Christ,

Luis
 
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