Audie wrote:Much as Dr K Wise, paleontologist put it.
if all the evidence in the universe turned against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate. (emphasis added)
Either that or I would have to seriously consider how else to reconcile what I am persuaded is true about Jesus Christ with what it seems He believed and taught concerning the nature of Scriptures.
I have felt what i take to be a tug toward Christianity. Im not here to parry and thrust, to argue or convert. Im trying to see how this works.
I dont have any theology in my background. I an, tho, trained as a scientist. I dont do certainties, I do probabilities. I do data and logic.
As my (ex) father in law, petroleum geologist and Catholic put it, saying there really was a flood is like saying a herd of buffalo went through your house, yet left not a hair, a footprint, left all in good order without so much as a lingering ldor. What are the police to think when they respond to the 911, and find nothing amiss, and aerial surveillance fails to discover the rampaging herd in its tens of thousands? The police nor I feel we are warranted against what we are allowed to think of this!
As I said, I'm not a scientist, and I don't have your training. All I can say is that there are people who not only see evidence for a global flood, but they see it to be extremely compelling. For instance, there's this guy
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwGgSNDPhO0
Thta's part one of his presentation. If you get that interested, you can go on to part two. Regarding training, he received a BSc in Applied Geology at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, in 1975 (First Class Honors) and a PhD in Geology The University of Sydney, Australia in 1982. He's just one of many I could name. Now, I am highly skeptical of popular science, and what Snelling offers in his presentation is just that: popular science. I find it interesting. I can't argue for it. I can't argue against it. I certainly don't argue with it (in either of the two senses you can take that). Perhaps he is totally wrong. Perhaps he is a con-artist. My point is merely that there are men of his caliper who present evidence that there was, in fact, a global flood. And I have no doubt that there are men of equal credentials who challenge his scientific claims on scientific grounds. I'll leave that nuanced debate to them. Now, were Snelling and others like him to come out and declare that there is just no scientific evidence, then I would have to reconsider my position on the inerrancy of Scripture. But as it stands, I'm willing to trust him and those like him. Perhaps you can watch his presentation and read his technical/non-popular articles and perhaps you, with your training, can find out where you think he is wrong. But that's on you and your training. It's beyond me, and I'm okay admitting that.
Not at all. The Bible cant just be "Wrong". Poetry cant be wrong; Egypt is real; the history may be incomplete and at times inaccurate but its history, its not "wrong". The list goes one.
Of course poetry can be wrong. Poetry is nothing more than a style of writing. You can say anything incorrect in any style of writing. Observe,
- I wanted to let you know
That oddly I have no toes
So I can't count past ten
With no help from my friends
Unless I start counting the hairs in my nose
Cute? Yes! (Well, maybe no, but you get the idea!) True? Not the slightest. And if I wrote that trying to inform you of the "facts" in that poem, I would be very wrong. And it doesn't make it less "wrong" just because it uses the names of real places. I could write a "history" of the life of Abraham Lincoln. I could put the whole thing in verse, if I so chose. And I assure you, that life would be a wrong account, since I don't know much about his life! It wouldn't just be incomplete. And I know you agree, because I know that you wouldn't be too inclined to accept the idea that
Lincoln was really a vampire hunter.
No, the fact remains that the Bible is either true or false as it is written. We don't get to play silly word games to get around that fact.
As for inspiration, how do I know? I dont do certainties; what you took to be obvious is not so at all.
But it is obvious. The Bible says things that you do not believe are true. Now, perhaps you aren't going to go out there and argue with conviction that its claims are false, but there are things it affirms as true that you do not affirm. That is, you think the Bible is wrong. You've done well enough so far that you should continue your trend and just admit that. I mean, consider some of its claims:
- The Bible claims that it is the inspired Word of God, that is, that its very words are the product of the breath of God (see 1 Tim. 3:16)
The Bible claims that God created the universe (Gen 1:1)
The Bible claims that Jesus rose from the dead (1 Cor 15:3ff)
The Bible claims that Jesus was and is God--the same God who created the universe (John 1:1-3)
The Bible claims that Moses parted the Red Sea and that the Israelites crossed over on dry land while Pharaoh's army chased them (Exo 14)
Do you think those claims are true? If not, then you must hold them to be in error. If I say "X is Y" and it turns out that X is NOT Y, then I cannot not be mistaken. An atheist, therefore, necessarily believes that the Bible is wrong in at least some of its claims.
If one JUST went by the Bible, one could think Pi is 3, and that there actually are unicorns.
Its not unreasonable at all to cross reference with what one can observe. You need a different word than "disingenuous", which I take to mean "false innocence".
The Bible does not say that pi is three, and it certainly says nothing about unicorns. And of course it is not unreasonable to cross reference with what one can observe. I gave you two ways in which we can and should do that in my first comments to you in this thread.
And I think "disingenuous" is absolutely the correct word. It does not mean "false innocence" but rather it means "lacking sincerity." It is completely insincere to take a text, claim that it was revelation to a particular person, and then deny that very revelatory status by saying it means something that the original recipient (not to mention the author) could not in principle be aware of. To use a silly example, suppose I said to you:
"I have decided that I am now an atheist."
And now suppose in ten years, I say to a friend, "Ten years ago, I used the phrase 'I have decided that I am now an atheist' while talking to an atheist. Now, I didn't tell her at the time, but I am going to tell you now, friend, that I was speaking in a special code. To properly understand my meaning, take the last word in every sentence and reverse its meaning. But only do that with sentences I stated ten years ago today!" I could, of course, do that. But then my original statement to you would be disingenuous, and it would be disingenuous for me or anyone else to claim that I was having an honest conversation with you now. And that is precisely what reinterpretations of Genesis 1 in light of modern science do. They take ideas that the original authors were completely unaware of and force them on the text. In our field, we call that eisogesis, and it
is disingenuous. My fellow posters on this board, many of them OEC, would obviously disagree with my assesment. On that, they would say that I am wrong (remember what I said above -- you can't say something that turns out not to be true and not be wrong!). But that's a matter of disagreement between us. I don't doubt that they really believe OEC is true. But I do doubt that they get it from Scripture. I don't doubt their salvation or their Christianity. But I do doubt the veracity of their theology on this point.
How would you go about doing that? I read you as saying that is unthinkable, out of the question to actually face this. I must have misunderstood.
Of course it isn't unthinkable. I gave you some examples of what that might look like already. Perhaps we would just have to deny the inerrancy of Scripture. Perhaps we would have to read the books mythologically and rely on critical history studies to try to figure out what kernals are really true and what is just a nice idea. The really interesting discussion there would be on what that would mean for Jesus' own mind. If He was God, then how could He have been mistaken on the nature of Scripture? What might that look like?
Those are the sorts of questions we would need to ask. I'm just saying I have no reason to ask them right now because I think the Bible is true. You don't. And that's fine with me, because, for me, it's a matter of authority. I trust me that God told the truth, even when I don't understand it. You seem to trust your interpretation of observational evidence (or the interpretation of other human beings of observational evidence). I figure we'll find out who trusted the right source when history is over (or, if you are right, and there is no God, then we'll actually never figure it out, because to die is just . . . the end . . .).
But if not..
I hate to see this as a bright line over which one cannot step. IF i have to think the flood was real, it would require of me intellectual dishonesty of the most profound sort. I dont see that happening.
Plenty of Christians deny the inerrancy of Scripture. I don't think they can be logically consistent and do so, but they do. Talk to neo-x. He is a theistic evolutionist. He denies that Adam and Eve were the parents of all humans. He has declared plainly on these boards that he thinks the Bible is wrong
as it is written on this count. But he's still a Christian, and he's a Christian because he believes the gospel of Jesus Christ. All these debates over creation and the flood are interesting, but frankly, they really ought only be interesting within a Christian context. I couldn't care any less than I do what the Koran says about the miracles Jesus did as a baby (and it speaks to that). I don't believe the Koran, so it just doesn't interest me. It isn't even a curiosity. But if I were Muslim, I would suddenly care a great deal. Now, I'm not telling you (on purpose, anyway) what to be interested in and not. But frankly, I don't know why it matters to you one way or the other what the Bible says or what Christians say about the Genesis Flood. Perhaps you could care about the politics of it, as in, perhaps you could care about public policy as it relates to the Flood (e.g., teaching creationism in public schools). But even that isn't an interest in whether or not Noah's Flood is canonical or inspired. That's a question about the relationship between Church and State.
But I digress. The point is, again, it's not a bright line you can't step over. You are free to question it all you want, and that as either a believer or an atheist. Not everyone is as convinced as I am about the nature of the Bible or how it ought to be read and understood.
It is a concern to me, though. Im not going into science after all, I was in that to please my father. My training now talks about things like "due diligence", and I have great concern for that.
The way a scientist works, a lot of it is just tedium, meticulous work, like an accountant going over the books, say, looking for where there might be error or fraud.
Then as they go along, they say, hmmmm, that looks isnteresting. Lets see where that takes us.
I cant leave things alone.
Im not writing this well, sorry. Too much else on my mind.
What if you, in your due diligence, were to find as the geologists etc have, that there just could not have been a world wide flood. What would you really do?
And what am I to do, if I must accept it, or reject the whole thing?
I get due dilligence, and I appreciate that. So let me put it this way. When it comes to considering Christianity, there are primary doctrines and there are secondary doctrines (and there are even tertiary doctrines!). If you go back to my reasoning for accepting the Genesis Flood as being true, you'll find I START with Jesus Christ. Were it not for Him, I probably wouldn't believe it to be true today. So the primary doctrine is the gospel of Jesus Christ. You need to decide whether or not you believe THAT. Once you come to a conclusion on that issue, then you can examine the theological and scientific questions relating to the Old Testament. There is an entire field of study on the relationship between the two testaments (the New and the Old). But before you get to it, you have to know whether or not Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing in Him you have life in His name (John 20:31). That is a matter of historical studies, believe it or not. If I were you, I would say that to do your due dilligence, the first thing you need to do is read about Jesus. Who do scholars say He was? What do we know about Him when we think about Him historically? If you want to do your due dilligence, read books like
Jesus Under Fire by J. P. Moreland. That is what
I did when I was doing my due dilligence about fifteen years ago. I wanted to make sure that I believed what I did because it was true and not because I was taught it. I decided to keep an open mind and go where the evidence lead. And the evidence, so far as I understood it and so as my subsequent training proved to me, lead me to the Cross.
Second, to do you due dilligence, you need to read philosophy. Science is important. It has taken an outsized role in our lives today, not because it is unimportant, but because science is not identical with logic, and because lots of illogical people have made illogical conclusions about the world based on the work of scientists. The very best book I can recommend to you is Edward Feser's
The Last Superstition. Beyond that, go to the Philosophy Forums here and ask, "Can someone walk me through the philosophical proofs for God's existence?" You'll have a lot to learn, but if you want to do your due dilligence, you'll get far.
But if you continue to try to ask theological questions and try to use science as your tool in answering them, not only will you fail to get your answer, but you'll fail to see why your answers are both incorrect and unhelpful, precisely because the questions you are asking are not scientific but theological and philosophical. And being theological and philosophical, your own answers will be theological and philosophical answers. Yet your training is not in those areas, and so you will think you are giving a scientific answer when you are not. As the cliche says, when all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail!
Now, I've written far more than enough . . . too much, I'm sure. But I hope SOMETHING in this wall of text I've offered you is at least similar to helpful. And if it isn't, forgive me for wasting your time. And I mean that sincerely, because you only have one life to life, and I hate to waste a single second of it. I've only said all of this because I have far too high opinion of myself, and somehow, I'm under the impression that something here might actually be worth a bit of your attention!