This is a false view. There are hundreds of examples I could list that we are sure did happen but we don't know how.But if you can't show how it occurred, you can't confidently say it DID occur.
Can you tell me exactly how God works miracles? How exactly did God raise Christ from the dead? How was Chris born of a virgin? How did Moses part the Red Sea? How did Christ turn water into wine? And on and on we can go.
Things we are sure happened (we believe in God's Word) but we have little to no idea how they happened.
Think about if this radical view was held in history: Unless we know exactly how someone did something it's not true! That's obviously not how any historian works
Or in science: "Agnosticism, of a kind, is an appropriate stance on many scientific question, such as what caused the end Permian extinction, the greatest mass extinction in fossil history. It could have been a meteorite strike like the one that, with greater likelihood on present evidence, caused the later extinction of the dinosaurs. But it could have been any of various other possible causes, or a combination. Agnosticism about the cases of both these mass extinctions is reasonable"
We have no idea how/why the extinction happened. But it happened.
Heck, I don't even know exactly how my body works. Does it follow that my body is not working? That would be absurd. We know many things happened in history, science, theolgoy even if we don't know exactly how they happened.
Not to mention we know almost exactly how evolution works and did work
Over 95% of scientist believe in evolution so it's simply not true what you said. If you mean within evolution there are discussions then I would agree. But the main tenets are solidified.Other than agreeing evolution occurred, scientists have been speculating and debating the mechanisms and what they think they know about it for a very long time.
Just like I think God makes the best sense of the fine-tuning I think the same could be said here about evolution.Of course, you can simply say that God guided its processes. Fine. But if you are trying to deduce evolution scientifically, that seems difficult to do, especially if every time you try to defend its insurmountable problems by simply saying, "God guided it."
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9h-hmlMz5c
This "stork bringing babies" kind of talk is not needed here. We can discuss these issues without having to go to that level. But to answer your question, yes. You realize Saint Augustine took an allergically view on Genesis 1-2? You seem to think this view is outlandish or completely radical when many hold to it.And so He's going to create on a level of astonishing detail, create a universe, but then He's going to give us some cosmic version of the stork bringing babies when He tells us about it? Whazupwitdat?
I think many people think this way. They have held a literal view of Gen 1-2 and when evidence for evolution comes up they disregard the evidence because it would change their theological view. You are welcome to have that view. Many well-respected theologians don't (especially recently).The story of Adam and Even goes far beyond figurative speech or allegory and metaphor, as it's specific truths are critical to the whole of Scripture. I'm guessing most who endorse evolution take a low view of Scripture.
But to say that many who endorse evolution take a low view on Scripture is absurd and many people would take offense to that ridiculous statement.
Who is doubting Scripture?! Since I read Revelation from an allegorical view I'm doubting God's Word? Come on nowAnd no one is saying that you can't believe in evolution and Scripture - clearly many do both. But if you doubt Scripture, you might as well throw most of the Bible out - as how do you know which parts are true and which parts are not?
But to elevate evolution to the point that you try to fit Scripture around it - especially as it has so many unproven unknowns - that's putting faith in something you just can't know.
No one is doing this. All I'm saying is that from a scientific stance, evolution is true. From a Biblical stance, I believe Gen 1-2 should be read allegorically.
Myself and 95% of scientists would disagree with youPlus the available data can be interpreted in a way that also refutes evolution.
But just about every Christian evolutionist is going to say what the Bible says about Adam and Eve's origins are allegorical. Why? Because it doesn't fit what they think they know about evolution. They are trying to interpret the Bible through the lens of unproven pseudoscience.
Again, this is just flat out wrong. Saint Augustine and many past and present brilliant Christians read Gen 1-2 allegorically. Don't assume things here. And calling evolution "unproven pseudoscience" is just an uninformed statement.
God creating humans from dust? I can think of a number of ideas off the top of my head. To show God creating life from non-life, to show that humans came from a lowly place, to show God is the creator of life/humans, etcAnd allegory or not, for what purpose is this strange tale of man from dust and woman from a rib? Please explain how that works as allegory, and yet fits with Scripture's teaching of the fall and its implications.
Woman from a rib? Maybe it's to show woman comes from man and therefore he has the authority, to show man and woman are a part of each other, to show that man and woman are "one in the flesh" etc
Honestly though, you should read up on some of the various interpretation of Gen 1-2 if this kind of stuff is unfamiliar or startling to you.