Rorinthas wrote:
DE-
Nothing in the bible contradicts what we readily observe.
Not necessarily. However, we have made certain observations about the state of existence that do not readily conform to a literalist reading of the first 20% or so of Genesis.
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We haven't observed one kind of animal turning into another or how old the universe is (as Nephyr aluded to).
Not directly, no. Of course not. However, we can look at the available evidence and make deductions based upon that. I do not believe science has answered the questions that exist about how the universe works terribly well as of yet. I think that one of the biggest weaknesses of scientists (not science) is that they are entirely too eager to talk about what they do know or what they think they have figured out, and wildly overestimate the level of understanding we actually have. I feel that science is in its very earliest stages right now; it has just barely begun being science. That, however, is not a reason to reject observations and deductions that follow from the available evidence.
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People who believe in Creationsim look at observable reality through their own biblically based assumptions, and draw certain conclusions. Those who support the theories follow certain assumptions as well (That certain things have always behaved in certain ways for example) and draw their own conclusions from that.
This is true. However, all assumptions are not created equal. The assumption that the universe adheres to its own laws and that those laws are constant is one we have no choice but to make. Because we are beings of the universe, we are entirely at the mercy of those laws, and we cannot assume that if they DID change that we could observe that they had done so, as even our memories function only according to those laws.
By contrast, the assumptions of those who look at reality in a "biblicly based" way not only make that same assumption regarding the universe, but also assume that the Bible is necessarily a literal document.
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For example, observable reality tells us that their are billions of dead things, laid down in rock layers all over the earth. The evolutionary scientist says that certain of these things lived at certain times in the past and tries to use tests (based on assumptions) to determine how old these different things might be.
The assumptions that this scientist makes are those necessary to conduct observation in the first place.
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Those of us who believe in a literal Genesis believe this supports the idea of a global flood, a catalismic event the likes of the which the world had never seen before or since. Its possible that such an event could have changed the face of the earth in ways we can't begin to understand.
The problem with this lies in the fact that while the flood certainly could have changed the earth, it could not have changed the universe outside the earth, and the laws according to which that universe operates. Furthermore, just the fact that something is possible, in the sense that we can imagine that it could have happened, is not a good reason to think it DID happen.
Cesium 137 may not have existed on Earth prior to human action but it very well may have existed elsewhere, and in any event, human action did not change the laws that made that isotope possible, we only exploited them.
Now, its possible to argue that the flood really meant some major change in universal laws entirely, but that would make the flood precisely what I have stated: allegorical.
I tend to agree with Kaffis and Mookhow in this regard, but frankly, I think that the entire debate over creation is silly. Being a Christian is about Christ, and Christ did not come to Earth and lecture us on how the world was created. That is not what being a Christian is about. As to the idea of it being a test of faith, I think that the idea that God would create a test based on believing, in the face of everything to the contrary, that Genesis is literally true, is utterly contradictory to the message of salvation through Christ, and furthermore, necessarily creates the idea that God invented a test of faith that would only pertain to those people unfortunate enough to be born in times where scientific knowledge was sufficient for literalism to be called into question at all.
I think the real "test" of faith is really that one must recognize the ability of science to explain the universe, but at the same time not fall into the trap that God is bound by the universal laws He created. In other words, we should focus on Christ, and what it means to follow Him, rather that tie ourselves to the idea that we must obstinately insist that the literal accuracy of 11 or so chapters of Genesis somehow is the foundation of our faith.