You are reading a false sense of uncertainty into my words. I could just as well be talking about John 1:1 and say, "As BEST as I can tell, the Bible teaches that Jesus is God. Therefore, theological interpretations of experience that directly contradict the evangelical worldview must be wrong somewhere. I don't know where, and I can't answer that question."Philip wrote:And because of the necessary human insufficiency of Jac to validate his "BEST" analysis, the blue part of his quote cannot be known with confirmed accuracy and the green portion, including his "must be wrong somewhere" musing, is mere, debatable, speculation.As BEST as I can tell, the Bible teaches YEC. Therefore, scientific interpretations of experience that directly contradict the YEC worldview must be wrong somewhere. I don't know where, and I can't answer that question.
Or, closer to the actual OEC/YEC debate, I could say regarding Genesis 1:1, "As BEST as I can tell, the Bible teaches creation ex nihilo. Therefore, scientific interpretations of experience that directly contradict the creationist worldview must be wrong somewhere. I don't know where, and I can't answer that question."
It doesn't follow, then, that the second half is mere speculation.
You would only be right if Genesis 1 only had apologetic value. Since it does not, I beg to differ. The OEC/YEC debate has important ramifications on how you interpret other parts of Scripture. In fact, YEC and OEC have different theological interpretations of Genesis 1. I can promise you that how we understand creation has a massive impact on pastoral theology. One of the issues I'm constantly dealing with as a hospital chaplain is the place of suffering in creation. Sure, OECs have their theodicies. So do YECs. And in some places, those YECs overlap. But there are serious differences at very fundamental levels on this question. I, for instance, can and do say that suffering and death are intrinsically evil. OECs tend to disagree with that. Here's an anecdote that well illustrates a small part of the practical differences here.The bigger question is whether it truly matters whether Jac is right about the Days/time issue or whether OEC/Progressives like myself are. I say, NO! If you're an OEC and you come across unbelievers who only believe in a godless naturalism - your touting OEC views is not going to move them toward the Gospel. It might LATER help them reconcile some of the scientific evidence so that they don't outright reject the Gospel, but it's not an effective early conversation issue. Neither are YEC views. Now, presenting evidences showing the impossibility of our universe and the appearance of life without God may well be effective, but I really don't see the time issue being very important. Salvation doesn't require that we understand every aspect of Genesis or Scripture. But the detailed history of Jesus and the Gospel comes FAR after Genesis - and how one broaches THAT with an unbeliever is likely going to be FAR more important than making points about one's Creation time views.
With all due respect, you are begging the question. Of course you think it doesn't matter. You accept long ages as the meaning of the yomim. For those of us who hold YEC, however, there are much more important issues at stake. Put differently, the only way you can say it doesn't matter is if you have already concluded that YEC is wrong on those issues it regards as important (e.g., death before the fall, to take but one example).However, the only part of the time issue that is of practical importance to MAN has to do with God readying the planet for Adam, Eve and the rest of mankind - not HOW LONG, but THAT HE DID SO. Once God begins speaking and instructing about matters outside of the debatable time issues, that is what truly matters. Those YECs and OECs/Progressives who don't get this - especially those who wish to have constant, aggressive and hostile debates over it - are only causing division within the Body of Christ.