Philip wrote:What we have inherited through Adam is our sin NATURES - his fallen genetics that include a sin nature, a corrupted (post eating of the off-limits tree) nature/genetics that are inevitable to produce sin, as ALL with it WILL sin. We aren't condemned merely for the sin of Adam, but for our OWN sins. But the genetics that have been passed down through Adam also include our sinful natures, with which mean that we cannot/will not be able avoid sinning - as even believers still sin - an inevitability of being in the flesh/mortal/descendants of Adam.
That is factually wrong, genetics means something physical, not spiritual. That is the point that I don't understand, how is it passing on?
Or don't you believe anymore that man has free will. Free will by logic entails opposition.
Let me ask you this, is God free to do sin?
The way I see it, I see all men needing redemption, you see all men needing redemption. I say all man sin because they can, you say all man sin because that has been passed down from adam.
I say if there was an Adam he wasn't made perfect, therefore he sinned too. The potential to sin by logic was always in Adam. You say he was made "in God's image" therefore he was perfect and yet he sinned.
So my question is, can God sin too then? does God have the free will to sin? if Adam can sin, and he was in God's image, perfect, then God too can sin, for God is perfect too. I don't know how you can solve that.
The problem is, I am of the position where the capacity to sin is the result of being "not perfect". And my contention is that since we rose through evolutionary stages and are not perfect, we all are not eternal, for what is not divine can not be eternal hence we are given free will by God. We all sin, because we can sin, because we have the choice to do so and that ability makes us spiritually imperfect even if I don't rape, murder or steal. Sin is not that I commit this act, sin is a divine abnormality that I am not perfect, that I am not complete goodness, perfection. I am imperfect and will not see eternity. To be eternal is the goal. For what is eternal is divine and what is not eternal is mortal.
Because I don't think God can commit sin either, since he is goodness and is pure. I don't think God has the free will to sin or go against his divinity and nature. But we can and do, so we are infact not exact replicas of God, and evidence suggests neither were first humans.
Physical death was always on earth. Yes everyone needs saving because everyone sins, I don't deny that. So Rick, philip, I don't get your objection as to what I will tell any unbeliever about Christ. We all sin.
Philip wrote:Neo, I am not accusing you of anything, but I am asking you clarifying questions so as to understand how you decide which parts of Scripture to believe. You apparently believe in Jesus, a need to be saved, and yet you are rejecting very key elements from the very same books of Scripture that explain this key need (ESPECIALLY, salvation). You are elevating logic and reason over the miraculous - even though you say you believe in the miraculous - as you are also picking and choosing WHICH miraculous parts of Scripture you will accept. My question is, what is your criteria for doing so - as you are apparently accepting aspects of Scripture that aren't scientifically or humanly logical and other parts of such elements you reject? How do you know which is WHICH and what is WHAT? And if you don't know the answers to these, how is Scripture of any value to you?
One thing, for sure, you surely can't believe in an all-powerful God Whose Word is important to Him, Who DIED to fulfill it, for Whom the integrity of His Word is immensely important. To allow numerous chunks of Scripture to be blended in with fiction - whether or not the writers believed it to be true - means that God isn't concerned about His truths being mixed up with fabrications/untruths - which would necessarily mean we are going to develop some very wrongful beliefs and horribly evil practices by following these inauthentic parts. We might as well believe that all paths/all religions lead to God.
Again, God speaks a universe into being but SOMEHOW He can't do so unless He did it precisely this way or that or in such a way that we would have complete and logical understanding of. If there is a Creator God, that is EXACTLY what I WOULD expect - many things which don't match up with human logic. A God allowing the brutality and murder of part of Himself for beings He created? And BY the hand of these miserable creations? Wouldn't God know the evil they would commit if He gave them free will? What's this whole thing about substitutionary atonement? ANY of that HUMANLY logical? If human logic is the basis of determining whether or not various Scriptures (the originals) are true, then we might as well discard much of it that is not KNOWN history.
That second and third paragraphs parts are nonsensical reductio-ad-absurdum.
I have told you before, if I have evidence against something then that is my criteria for rejecting that part. In this case I have evidence against genesis 1. If if upsets established ideas then I can't help but feel sorry for it, but I can't revert my position. I have to be honest and let the chips fall where they may. If God is indeed the author of evolution then I do not think I am doing anything wrong, and if I am wrong (which is not supported by evidence) I don't think that God is being diminished or christianity is in peril just because I have rejected something on basis that I have good reasons to reject it. I didn't come to this position overnight, fellows. Its been more than a year for me to reach it and I have given it considerable thought.
Like you I want to reconcile all I can too, believe me I want that because it is bloody hard to let go of what you believe to be true. And painful as it is I am not going to cheat myself out of my own understanding. I can't believe something I don't find truthful, can you? And I have to bear the consequences of my ideas. If you guys are giving me a hard time on this, you who have seen me for almost 3 years here, how much of this will affect me when people around me go against this? I can visualize that. I am not going to reconcile scripture by being dishonest about my understanding and the scriptures. It is my respect for those same scriptures and the spirit that they carry that I haven't tried to pitch and patch it so that I can fit in with the rest of widely accepted christian doctrines.
If anything I am trying my best to be honest. I am willing to accept what my position entails. I have let the chips fall where they may and I have accepted the outcome however upsetting or unfavorable it seems.
Believing in the miraculous does not mean I go against reason even when it is merited. It is my contention that evolution has showed us our initial moments, I got to respect that. I am awed by the intricacy of the whole thing. To me its beautiful. Much beautiful than God himself creating and killing things off just to get man on board, what a strange waste of time and life? he could have straight made man if man was to be a special creation after all, that is rather strange about PC. Plus, we have genes that chimps and mice have, problem is it works in them but not in us, why would god do that put something in us that we know doesn't work? sounds least bit intelligent.
Unless God let evolution do its work, that is why we have deformities and defects, that is why we die, that is why diseases are born, that is the reason you see accidents of nature. But that is also how nature has a great balance of life, that is why the planet is alive and thriving, that is precisely why in the last 5 major extinctions, life has still found its way, it survives. It is because of death in this planet that earth has not gone barren, we get food and crops. Evolution answers all that in one framework. Infact all of modern biological research in genetics is based on predictions and postulations of evolutionary theory. It is near impossible to explain life without evolution.
So I am all ears if you can show me who God cannot sin or how spiritual death is passed on, or physical death or sin for that matter? How does nature (please define that term) goes in DNA molecule structure and where is the spiritual aspect that goes in, which genes carry those? More importantly you have to show me how Adam is "made in the image of God" is perfect? If Adam can sin, can God too? then weren't they both perfect or is there any difference and what I am saying makes more sense?