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07-10-2003, 07:02 AM | #11 |
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The YECs have the edge when it comes to the death question. The doctrine that Jesus Christ conquered death can only have meaning if death was brought into the world by Adam's sin. Old Earth positions (including OEC and TE), which hold that death existed prior to Adam's sin, make Jesus' resurrection from the tomb a bit meaningless. Under YEC, Christianity really turns out to be a meaningful, relevant religion; not so under OE positions. It is because I reject YEC that I reject Christianity as a whole.
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07-10-2003, 07:43 AM | #12 | |||
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Hello excreationist :
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The text says "and was evening and was morning...the first day". How can there be a solar day without a sun? The first three days were definately not normal solar days. You could say that God made some kind of non-solar light source, but this violates the principle set up in Genesis 2 of God sustaining the creation through purely natural means. Also.....the ancient Hebrews understood a 24 hour day to be an ordinary solar day, not some day produced by some arbitrary light source along with a rotating earth. Based on the ancient readers understanding of "day" the first 3 days (at the least) can not be viewed from the YEC viewpoint. Quote:
It could have used a different word, but it didnt. That does not mean the YEC view is correct. Russ |
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07-10-2003, 07:50 AM | #13 | |
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Hello again emotional:
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God never pronounces the introduction of animal death or carnivorous activity as a result of the fall. This is a signifigant omission, since it would represent a fundamental change. I believe the omission speaks volumes and reflects the fact that after Adam sinned there WAS NO change in the animal kingdom. After the fall the earth did not change, neither did the plants, animals, weather, physics, chemistry, etc.. Only one thing changed. Man. Man had changed and now needed to be "saved". Russ |
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07-10-2003, 08:37 AM | #14 |
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Hi Russ.
I didn't say death after the fall was an outcome of reading Genesis, I only said it was crucial for Christianity. The text of Genesis only mentions Adam and Eve being thrown out of the garden after they ate of the fruit. Judaism, which doesn't attach any value to the NT, holds as much: the fall from Eden wasn't Original Sin, but a loss of a world of real estate, and the gaining of the necessity to work for a living. The Qabbalah makes some mystical, symbolical dogma out of the Fall, but not a cosmic drama as Christianity did. So in contrast to Judaism (and Islam), which describe the Fall as a faux pas that had bearing on Adam and Eve alone, Christianity makes a whole human, cosmic drama out of it. I think it is in Romans of the NT that it is mentioned that death entered the world because of the sin of one man. There are Jewish and Islamic versions of creationism, but they're nowhere near so desperate as the Christian version. Jewish and Islamic creationists are incensed because the theory of evolution says we're related to apes. As one of my rabbis said to me when I was an observant Orthodox Jew: "evolution is impossible, because God did not give the Torah at Sinai to apes". And Islamic creationists bear similar sentiments - "man is not related to apes, man is something entirely else", as I read in one Islamic site. Christianity, on the other hand, derives its whole raison d'être from a literal reading of Genesis, because it makes such a cosmic drama out of it: one man, the First Adam, sinned and brought death to the world, so that another man, the Last Adam or Jesus, had to conquer sin and death on the cross. Evolution is offensive to Christianity not just because it links us to the apes, but because it means the First Adam never existed! No Adam - No Christ -- What happens When we Deny that Genesis 1 - 3 is History - from Diakrisis Ministries In the NT, Jesus also refers to Genesis as a literal text. It has Jesus saying that "from the beginning of the creation He made them male and female". Now this a YEC statement if there ever was one! From the beginning of creation, and not after billions of years of evolution or old-earth creation, a male and female human were made. I don't advocate YEC as science, of course, but I do find YEC theologically consistent. And since I don't take the claims of YEC seriously, I don't take Christianity seriously either. I have a deistic, spiritualist theology which is informed, among other things, by the fact of evolution. The God of evolution cannot be, I think, the God of the Bible, who is the God of special creation. I don't believe in non-overlapping magisteria of science and religion. |
07-10-2003, 08:42 AM | #15 |
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This discussion seems to be drifting off into theological topics -- perhaps it would be better off to continue in this vein in GRD?
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07-10-2003, 08:52 AM | #16 |
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It's still about the "sociopolitical ramifications of evolution", I think.
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07-10-2003, 09:16 AM | #17 | |
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I'm not doing anything about this yet, but I'm just offering up a hint: if you want to talk about what Genesis means, you will do so more productively and with contributions from more religiously informed people if you do so in one of the more theologically inclined fora. Here, we're more accustomed to having rocks or genes or bones appear in the argument at some point. |
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07-10-2003, 09:23 AM | #18 | |
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07-10-2003, 10:14 AM | #19 | |||||||
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Yo Emotional:
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So I am not so sure we can take Christs statement to be one of literal sequence, since "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. And the earth was without form and void............" Quote:
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Russ |
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07-10-2003, 11:10 AM | #20 | ||||||
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The NT seems contrary to this view: there was no death, either of people or of animals, before Adam ate of the fruit. Another source which can be drawn upon is the prophecy of Isaiah, about the lion eating straw like an ox in the restored world. Quote:
The main difference between Judaism and Islam on the one hand and Christianity on the other is about the effect of the Fall. Judaism and Islam hold that Adam and Eve's fall affected them only (and their descendants only indirectly, in that we are not in the Garden of Eden now), whereas Christianity holds that their fall affected all their descendants thereafter with inherited sinfulness. Judaism and Islam do not know of Original Sin; it's a peculiarly Christian doctrine. Quote:
If there was no literal Adam, how are we all become sinful? Who fell? What was the original sin? Without a literal Adam, the concept of sinful humankind, in need of a saviour, is rootless. Humans who evolved from ape-like ancestors can't be more inherently sinful than apes are. Quote:
I don't know, I find this AiG diagram to be very convincing: Quote:
OK, though I expect the thread will be move to another forum... Quote:
I don't see much possibility or even point in trying to salvage old theologies (of Judaism or Christianity) into the framework of evolution. It's so much like the proverbial "putting old wine in a new wineskin". The wineskin (fact) of evolution mandates new wine (theology), in my mind. I simply don't believe the God of the Bible is real, since His creation has been proved not to be. The God of evolution is the God of constant natural law, Who set the laws of nature in the beginning (15 billion years ago) and left them running freely. I don't believe prayer can change fate. |
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