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07-10-2003, 09:16 PM | #21 | ||||||
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There are parallels in Revelation: Revelation 21:23 - "The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp." Revelation 22:5 - "There will be no more night. They will not need the light of a lamp or the light of the sun, for the Lord God will give them light. And they will reign for ever and ever." Quote:
BTW, the initial light-source wouldn't be arbitrary... it would provide the day and night (in its absence) and therefore mornings and evenings, until the sun appeared. BTW, here it says that the date of creation for the earth and the rest of the universe, according to ancient Jewish scholars is 3761 BCE. It also says "this became the basis of the Jewish Calendar". It also says: "3616 BCE: Estimated by the Jewish Rabbi Lipman (1579 - 1654)." There are later Jewish dates too: "5586 BCE: This date appeared in the Septuagint (LXX), a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament) produced in Egypt in the 3rd century BCE." "5555 BCE: A data produced by Josephus, a Jew from the 1st century CE." "5481 BCE: A second date estimated by Josephus in the 1st century CE." He probably based a lot of it on the Septuagint though, which seems to add about 130 years to the genealogies. He would have been influenced by Greek or Roman thinking too. (The Septuagint date - which actually seems to be calculated by Greeks [or Greek Jews?] was quite far back) I think those dates would simply just be based on dating the flood, etc, later - but still having 6 literal creation days. (If they weren't literal days then they only lasted a short time - e.g. 300 years or less) Quote:
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Anyway, what do you believe as far as creation goes? Do you think Genesis 1 is just a poem that doesn't correspond to the order that things were created? Or does it correspond to the order they were created (the day-age theory)? Did fruit trees (day 3) appear before the sun did (day 4)? Did birds (day 5) appear before land animals (day 6)? |
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07-11-2003, 07:26 AM | #22 | |
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excreationist:
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07-11-2003, 07:46 AM | #23 | |
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07-11-2003, 08:37 AM | #24 | ||||||
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Hi emotional:
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1. The reason such a place as the garden was needed in the fist place 2. The purpose for the tree of life 3. God telling Eve He would "increase" her suffering 4. The reason why the light source on day 1 was replaced by the sun, since they both served the same stated purpose and were "good" 5. The reason why God does not mention a change in the animal kingdom as a result of the fall 6. How Adam and Eve knew what the word "die" meant if they had no concept of death 7. Why there is a verb change from "bara" in verse 1 8. Why the phrase"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth" would imply the earth was present before day 1, but the stars were not Okay I had more but I had to do some work so I got interupted. Ill just leave it at that since I have lost my train of thought. Derned electrical engineering work Quote:
Russ |
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07-11-2003, 09:26 AM | #25 | ||||||||||||
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Hello Excreationist:
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Secondly, you say there was evening and morning. Okay. Show me where the ancient readers would have interpreted "evening and morning" to be something other than an ordinary evening and morning. They understood these terms with respect to the sun rising and setting, so if these are ordinary days then the sun must already be in existance. Otherwise, it does not make any sense internally. Here is another thing to consider......God says He seperated the "light" from the darkness and then describes the light as 'good". Then on day four He "makes" the sun and states its purpose is to seperate the light from the darkness. He calls the sun "good" also. So what is the deal here? Is not the light on day 1 "good"? If it was so good then why was it replaced by something else which did the same basic job? My answer is the light was not replaced by anything because there never was a non-solar light source. I see three possibilities here..........1.The framework view is correct to say that Days 1 and 4 are actually the same "day" 2.The days of proclamation view is correct to say that we have two things happening during the creation "week". The proclamation of events and later the fulfillment of those proclamations. The time for the proclamations is specified, while the fulfillment is not. 3.The OEC view of Dr Ross is correct to say that the sun is not being created on day 4, but is simply made visible from the surface of the earth. Any one of these views has more explanatory power than the YEC view of the text. The non-solar light source explanation has too many problems. Quote:
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The idea of a non-solar light source is contrary to the general principle implied by Genesis 2:5. Quote:
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Russ |
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07-11-2003, 10:27 AM | #26 | |
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I am surprised Rufus hasn't moved this yet, but I couldn't wait any longer . . .
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Day 1 (1:3-5): "light" Day 4 (1:14-19): "lights" Day 2 (1:6-8): "Waters" and "Sky" Day 5 (1:20-23): "living beings" (to the fill the waters) and "birds" (to fill the sky). Day 3 (1:9-13) separation of the dry land from the sea / fruit and grain to grow on land Day 6 (1:24-31): land animals (to roam the dry land) / human beings (to till the fruit and grain) Finally, Day 7 culminates in rest, being set apart as a day for rest. Remember, if the history at the time of the writing is true, then the writer is writing to a people who were commanded to mirror this day of rest in the land that they were about to enter. Therein lies the maint point of this framework account of creation. It is hardly scientific, nor was it even intended to be. At the very least, I think the literary qualities of Genesis call into question a rigidly chronological reading of the creation account (which, BTW, would mean that I am reading it "literally"). Oh, and emotional's contention that there is a one-to-one corollary between YEC and Christianity is entirely indefensible. Regards, CJD |
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07-11-2003, 02:25 PM | #27 | ||
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Gentlemen,
The chief reason why I consider Christianity a great religion and got interested in it in the first place is because Christianity purports to have answers to the death question, and there is nothing that interests me more than the death question. Why we die, what happens when we die, and what we can do about it - those are questions that I've delved into since I was a little kid, and Christianity certainly has answers for them. The Christian view of death is a novel one: that death is not the natural order of things, but an aberration. That death is the "Last Enemy", an intruder into an otherwise perfect world. It certainly had an enticing ring for me, who, upon first learning about the fact of death, thought it was what spoils an otherwise perfect world. And Christianity brings the promise of defeating this enemy called Death. All I had to do next is to find out whether this scenario was true. Now evolution sets forth an entirely different view about death: that death is the natural order of things, ever since the beginning of creation and the beginning of life on earth. Death is not an intruder, but an inevitable stage. There is actually nothing we can do about it, and there is no possibility of "triumph over death". When the Christian scriptures call death the "Last Enemy", they refer generally to death, not just to human death. Death is an intruder that wasn't in this world originally in the beginning. The old-earth creationist or theistic evolutionist teaching that death was the natural order of things before the Fall of Adam is really an odd scene to contemplate, when the overarching message of Christianity is considered. If death existed in the world before Adam's Fall, then the world was created with an imperfection from the beginning. If death was there from the beginning, then it is a great wonder what Christ was triumphing at. Only the young-earth creationist position, that of no death at all before the Fall, keeps the overarching message of Christianity intact. The question, to remind you again, is: what is death? Is it the natural order of things, or an enemy that intruded into a perfect creation? The OEC and TE Christian positions have the answer be that death is the natural order of things. Thus the main thrust of Christianity, the thing that would make it an all-relevant religion, is annulled. The YEC position maintains the important tenet that death is an intruding enemy, so that the message of Christianity is as I understand it to be: a religion that concerns itself with overcoming the enemy called death. Now for that message to be true, YEC has to be true. There must be one literal Adam and one literal Eve from whom we are all descended. There must not have been any death before their fall. Anything less than the YEC position dilutes, in my mind, the whole Christian mission. Since I do not believe YEC to be true, I do not take Christianity seriously. Though I no longer death as the end of all as materialists do, I also do not view death as an enemy that intruded into a once perfect creation, but as a natural order of things, a consequence of primeval natural law. I simply don't see Christianity competing as a relevant religion, as a religion of truth, except under the YEC position. OEC and TE Christianity simply throw the central Christian message (again: that death is an enemy that needs to be overcome) over the water. Still, I'll be glad to hear from you OEC/TE Christians how this is not so. Quote:
How can Morton believe in both a literal Adam and biological evolution? For biological evolution means Adam never existed! Biological evolution says "ape-like ancestors were our fathers" and not "Adam our father". Also, the boundary between apes and men, in evolutionary thinking, isn't at all clear-cut, but it's a continuum. An ape-like ancestor didn't directly give birth to a man. I have this problem with the Pope's assertion that God inserted a soul into the first man. What first man? Or what first men? When was the border-tape cut with God's scissors? Since I believe in both evolution and souls, I can't believe that only mankind has a soul - I believe all conscious animals have a soul (or more accurately a duplicate astral body, since I'm a spiritualist). Quote:
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07-11-2003, 10:33 PM | #28 | |||||||||||||||||||
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CJD:
What about: Exodus 20:11 - "For in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, but he rested on the seventh day. Therefore the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy." Exodus 31:17 - "It will be a sign between me and the Israelites forever, for in six days the LORD made the heavens and the earth, and on the seventh day he abstained from work and rested." It doesn't say "according to the creation poem..." it talks in a literal sense - that it is a historical fact that God created the universe in six days. Also, this http://www.ualberta.ca/~dlamoure/EvCr3.jpg shows that the Noah's Flood story seems to have an even more sophisticated poem-like structure... does that "prove" that the authors of the Bible didn't intend it to be viewed as real history? emotional: Quote:
See these verses about the tree of life: Genesis 3:22 And the LORD God said, "The man has now become like one of us, knowing good and evil. He must not be allowed to reach out his hand and take also from the tree of life and eat, and live forever." Revelation 2:7, 22:2, 22:14 and 22:19 talks about the saved people being allowed to eat from the tree of life. It doesn't seem to say directly that the act leads to eternal life though... On the other hand, sometimes in the Bible eternal life doesn't seem to be related to death - e.g. when torment is involved, such as in hell, and even on earth: Revelation 9:6 During those days men will seek death, but will not find it; they will long to die, but death will elude them. steadele: See what I just wrote... though you seem to have a good point about the tree of life as far as Genesis and a lot of Revelation goes, what about things like Revelation 9:6? And BTW, do you think hell involves eternal torment? If so, it would be without the tree of life, since Revelation only talks about the saved being able to eat from the tree of life. BTW, for this thread, when I refer to a YEC, it will mean someone who believes in 6 literal days - i.e. that the universe is about 6000-8000 (or 10,000) years old. According to that definition of a YEC, they don't necessarily follow AiG or ICR and don't necessarily believe the earth is round or that there was no animal death before the fall. Those YEC's could be ancient Hebrew people. Now, using that definition of a YEC: Quote:
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http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/1132.asp Quote:
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Also, in Genesis 1, days and nights are explicitly defined as there being light or an absence of light - rather than it being defined as there being a specific light source (the sun) or the absence of the light source. Quote:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/docs/1203.asp "This would have been very significant to pagan world views which tended to worship the sun as the source of all life. God seems to be making it pointedly clear that the sun is secondary to His Creatorhood as the source of everything. He doesn’t ‘need’ the sun in order to create life (in contrast to theistic evolutionary beliefs.)" [also see Rev 21:23 as an example which shows that God doesn't need the sun and moon - and for eternal life it would remind you of time a lot anyway] Quote:
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Anyway I'm just concerned with whether the writers of Genesis intended it to involve six literal days or whether they intended it to involve longer periods of time, such as billions of years. Quote:
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07-12-2003, 08:02 PM | #29 |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by emotional
[B]Lamoureux's page is interesting. He recognises the ancient science in the Bible (flat earth, waters above the firmament) and calls it an "incidental vessel", but then he proceeds to say that the "faith message" of the Bible (eg humans fallen and sinful) is correct. Why should one assume it is so? If the Bible is wrong about visible things (science), why should it be right about invisible things (theology)? I have much more respect toward the YECs. Hi, This is a fair response, but I have to comment. Your hermeneutical approach is similar to that of YEC--it's steeped in a concordist assumption. The Bible is NOT "wrong about visible things" if YOU would respect its historical context. 3500 yrs ago, that was the science-of-the-day. Think about it. If you were God, and you were revealing to a nomadic tribe you were the Creator. Would you talk about HOX genes, transitory forms, Big Bang, etc, etc,? No, of course not. Thus, the Bible HAS to have an ancient science, and it behooves us 3500 yrs later to read past it. With regard to the "invisible things (theology)", just look around you--its spiritual message continues to change the lives of men and women ever day . . . me included. Best, Denis |
07-12-2003, 08:24 PM | #30 | ||
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Genesis could begin something like this: "A long, long, long, long time ago, the whole universe was so tiny it could fit on the point of a needle. It was also very, very, very, hot. But then it started getting bigger and bigger. After a while, some stars started appearing. Eventually, our sun appeared and the earth come out of the sun. And the moon came out of the earth (something like that). Many, many, many, years later, some very tiny living things appeared on the earth. They had babies and over the years these changed into different kinds of living things like fish and dinosaurs. There were dinosaurs, then birds and mice started to appear, then later, monkeys and apes started to appear. Then many, many years later, the apes' great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-children gradually changed into ape-men and then into people." If a 5 year old can understand that, then a nomadic person should be able to too. That story I just told would be much closer to science than Genesis - which has fruit trees being created before the sun and birds being created before land animals, etc. Quote:
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