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Nor does accepting a literal translation of Genesis violate Genesis. Nor does accepting a supernatural Creator violate reason nor make God a liar because of man's interpretations of what he sees.Originally posted by Johnv:
Would he be justified in calling God a liar since what he interpretted about what he saw turned out to be false?
No, he'd have to understand that accepting the existence of quick sand does not violate the understanding of solid ground. In the same manner, the acceptance of evolution does not violate Genesis.
Please cite scripture that says this is the purpose or that Genesis is to be taken as allegorical. Please show that Christ or any of the NT writers considered it anything other than the actual events. Please explain why, if evolution is true, God was not being deceptive when He said that He formed man from the dust of the earth and breathed into him the breath of life so he became a living being- For this last one, please consider that the man who gave us this account was Moses... who spent considerable time with God and to whom God directly spoke.Nothing in the Bible describes the kind of origins you espouse.
That's because Genesis wasn't written to dictate the literal creation of origins. Rather, it was written to explain who God is, what he is in relation to Him, and why He made us.
The Bible does not make a declaration that contradicts these facts. Regardless, evolution is not a provable truth... you have already acknowledged that. All of the things you mentioned have been proven.So God would not disagree with the naturalistic explainations and theories of earth history that you accept but He would deceive literally millions that put their whole faith in Him through the Bible?
The same arguement was made when it was asserted that the world was round, and that the earth revolves around the sun, and when the sun revolves around the galaxy.
It does absent a valid biblical reason to do so.He would not have "altered" evidence in nature but requires you to "alter" His Word to see the truth?
Understanding that Genesis is not literal is by no means an "alteration".
This is not a matter of removing preconceived notions but of swapping biblical preconceptions with a human philosophical viewpoint. Evolution is based on assumptions and a modernistic philosophical mindset.When one removes preconcieved notions, the evidence supports an old earth with different life forms in different time periods, and does not support a young earth view.
I'm glad to hear it, and I agree with you wholeheartedly.Originally posted by john6:63:
...As Johnv points out, “no one here doubts that scripture is true.” Where we disagree is on the interpretation. I don’t hold this against anyone, even though it may seem as though I do, I truly don’t. We all see things differently and have different opinions, as long as we all agree on John 3:16, then we’re all brothers in Christ and will spend eternity together in His glorious Kingdom!
Yes you did. You said that if Genesis was literal then God was a liar for leaving evidence to make some people think evolution was true.Originally posted by Johnv:
Nor does accepting a literal translation of Genesis violate Genesis.
Agreed. Accepting a literal tralslation of Genesis does not violate Genesis, either. I never said it did. I'm simply saying that a non literal interpretation doesn't violate Genesis.
I didn't say that it did.Nor does accepting a supernatural Creator violate reason nor make God a liar because of man's interpretations of what he sees.
Believing in OEC does not violate reason, nor does it make God a liar.
But you did. You said that if the world is young then God is a liar.John, You can never.... never! validate the claim that because someone believes that the evidence in nature points to an unproven theory, God is a liar if their opinion is wrong.
Nope, I never said that. What I said that the evidence in nature points to a theory that does not violate an allegorical Genesis.
But these passages are demonstrated as such by their context and are not treated elsewhere as literal events.Please cite scripture that says this is the purpose or that Genesis is to be taken as allegorical. Please show that Christ or any of the NT writers considered it anything other than the actual events.
There are several places in the Bible that are clearly allegorical. Jesus' parables are good examples of non-factual narratives that are still truth.
John, This interpretation does not come from context nor from cross-reference. You are accepting something extrabiblical as the standard by which you will interpret the Bible.This is the explanation of God being created in the "image and likeness" of God. It was not until man was given a soul that he was such. This description was not intended to be a literal explanation of how man was physically created.
In Luke 24:44, Jesus attributed it to Moses....please consider that the man who gave us this account was Moses... who spent considerable time with God and to whom God directly spoke.
We don't know for certain who wrote Genesis.
Thus adding significant weight to its ancient source and acceptance as a literal account.We know that stories similar to Gen2 and 2 existed prior to Genesis being penned We also know that the creation stories in question (Gen1 and Gen2 are two separate creation stories) were popular among the Israelites prior to them being written down in Genesis..
This is absolutely unproven and should never be stated matter of factly. The same logic that used for this conjecture could be used to prove that a cover letter written by you and a technical standard procedure written by you were actually written by two different people. It neglects the fact that writers are able to employ different styles and diction based on the purpose of their writings.Also, Gen1 and Gen2 were penned by two different people.
So are the business letters I write at work and the directions to our home that I write to friends.If you look at the Hebrew writing style, they're dramatically different.
This would not add weight to any of your contentions.MY view is that Moses oversaw the writing of the pentateuch, but he did not necessarily write them himself. Considering that the Pentateuch talks about Moses' death, this is a likely scenario.
I just re-read Genesis 1. Which verse says that the earth was flat?The Bible does not make a declaration that contradicts these facts.
Genesis1 describes a literal flat earth.
What you listed are matters of comparing apples to oranges in great extreme. We used figures of speech intermittantly in literal conversations frequently. It is practically a rule of order for posters on the BB. This in itself doesn't make what we are saying non-literal. And, what you post, does not point to an allegorical understanding of Genesis in by any stretch.The Hebrews believed...
I agree (a provable fact outside the acceptance of a literal Genesis) since none of us were there.
Neither is a literal 6 day creation.
I disagree with both implications: that the evidence does not fit YEC and that it does fit evolution.What we have is evidence, which fits an evolutionary model.
At no point have I denied this.
A Biblical preconception is a preconception nonetheless.
This is a false statement. You have yet to show any reason for an allegorical understanding of Genesis other than your preconceived notion that evolution is true. It also indicates a set of modernistic preconceptions about what constitutes "truth".OTOH, a nonliteral understanding of Genesis makes no preconceptions at all.
If I am not mistaken those that speculated on an evolution like model for creation also held a philosophy similar in the pertinent respects to modernism. In particular, a rejection of any reality outside the materialistic realm.The ancient Greeks were hardly "modernist" by today's standards.
Radiocarbon dating isn't even proposed to be accurate past 40,000 years. It cannot be used to date anything millions of years old.Originally posted by Johnv:
let's assume that the only dating method we use is radiocarbon dating. Now, if we take ALL the know homonids and ALL the known dinosaurs, NONE of the dinosaurs will date to the same period as homonids. EVEN IF radiocarbon dates are incorrectly long, SOME of these fossils should date to the same period of each other IF they indeed existed on the earth at roughly the ssame time (6000 years ago). But they don't And they're not separated by a few hundred years, they're separated by millions of years.
I agree regardless of who is right or who the grandstander is. I believe what I believe with convictions based on the Bible as well as explainations from creationists. My interpretations are not infallible nor are the opinions of anyone who looks at the evidences in natural science.It is indeed unfortunate that this subject is so divisive amongst Christians. Indeed, the Devil must be loving it whenever someone like you chooses to grandstand rather than discuss the topic, evidence, or specific points.
LOL, I think my parents were wondering the same thing by the time I finally got a job!Meatros: What did you finally get your degree in?
I still fail to see why you can say God lied. God did not say "The earth is old" and then create it young. Was Adam full grown when created? Your conclusion seems absolutely unwarranted and strained at best to try to call God a liar if He created a young earth. Besides, all the 'evidence' does NOT point to an old earth. Quite the opposite many times.Because if God created the universe in 6 days, then made it look as though it was created over millions of years, then God was practicing deviousness. Nothing in the Bible describes this kind of God. On the contrary, it describes the opposite.
No, a truthful God, the God of the Bible, the God whom I believe in, would have created the world over time, and not have altered the evidence, or created the world in 6 days, and not altered the evidence. Either way, the evidence would point to what happenned.
Huh??????Take a good look at the description that Genesis 1 gives. It describes a flat earth.
Not really. You are still either missing or evading the point. God created the evidence exactly as we find it. He did not change it to appear like anything different than what it does.Originally posted by Johnv:
You said that if Genesis was literal then God was a liar for leaving evidence to make some people think evolution was true.
Let me clarify. If the earth waws created in 6 days, and God changed the evidence to appear that it was created in millions of years, then yes, God lied. But that's not what God did. It appears He created the earth over long periods of time, and left evidence that supports that.
You said that if the world is young then God is a liar.
Hopefully my previous clarification clears that up.
The point isn't what the Israelites believed or didn't believe. The science has overturned much of the scientific "fact" presented at the Scopes trial including the centerpiece "Nebraska man". Does this fact catagorically discredit evolution?Which verse says that the earth was flat?
Take a good look at the description that Genesis 1 gives. It describes a flat earth. Additionally, the idea that the Israelites believed in a flat earth is a matter of historical reality.
(I'm guessing that you meant for the NO to be in your quote!?)If you take the story literally, then that presents a problem. If there was no death and struggle before the fall, then what about carnivours? If there were [NO] carnivours prior to the fall of man, then the carnivours evolved into such after the fall, since carnivours today are not equipped to eat vegetation.
Gen 1:30 And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.
No. That is one interpretation of the evidence that lies within the realm of what God might have done. BTW, you said OEC. Is that your position or theistic evolution?Originally posted by Johnv:
You are still either missing or evading the point. God created the evidence exactly as we find it. He did not change it to appear like anything different than what it does.
I agree. God created the evidence exactly as we find it. And that evidence supports an OEC.
If we were turning up clearly human fossils like arrowheads in a burial mound then your question might have more merit.The problem isn't the evidence. The problem is the human interpretation of the evidence.
How does one interpret the fact (and I do mean fact) that homonid fossils do not appear anywhere in the timeline of jurassic, triassic, or cretaceous animals?
ICR gives one.I have yet to hear a credible creationist arguement for the scenario I described above.
I know you are not that naive John. Evolution is a dogma that establishes what is acceptable "scientific" thought and what is not. Certain rules such as, and maybe especially, the range of acceptable ages for the earth are not negotiable.Evolution is secular dogma.
Not at all. Evolution is a generic term to describe the process that appears in several theoretical models deveoped from the evidence.
Depends on the dogma and what it is meant to preserve. Even dogmas have latitude within them.If it were "dogma" the models would not change in light of new evidence.
They would disagree that they get academic money and creationists don't? If so, they would argue incorrectly.People accepting its paradigm receive all the secular academic money.
There are a lot paycheck-to-paycheck people in the field who would disagree with you.
Nope. Anyone who rejects evolution looks at the evidence and determines that it means something else. If it were as you say then evolution could rightly be called "fact" as no other explaination would be valid.Anyone who rejects evolution is believed to reject fact...
Anyone who rejects evolution rejects the evidence for it.
Again, what they believed is not the issue. What the text says is. You said that Genesis 1 says the earth is flat then cite interpretations of nature as the proof.I have read Genesis 1 and you must be reading into the text to derive a "flat earth" because it simply does not say it.
Click Here to view a diagram of the earth as understood by the Hebrews and Babylonians.
I think he meant what he said although the meaning is actually the same in its key point either way. He was asking what carnivores would have eaten before the fall. Carnivores do not have a digestive system that is capable of getting the necessary nutrients from plants. (It is not just the digestive system either. For instance, they do not have the teeth, either. Their bodies are meant for hunting. Their claws are useful for killing. And so on...) They must have meat. So either the carnivores had to have had a vastly different digestive system (and entire body plan) before the fall to be able to process plant material properly and then evolved the ability to eat meat in a very short time after the flood. Or the carnivores did not exist (if the "no" was supposed to be there) in the original creation and they evolved from some other animals after the flood. This is variation within "kinds?" I still haven't seen the fossil lion or t rex with teeth for masticating plants.Originally posted by just-want-peace:
(I'm guessing that you meant for the NO to be in your quote!?)
Gen 1:30 And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.