I respectfully disagree Neo. Believing in The GT does make him a heretic.neo-x wrote:Nah, you're just a little too strong on the GT that's all, GT doesn't make you heretic.
Just kidding ACB*
*Really not kidding.
I respectfully disagree Neo. Believing in The GT does make him a heretic.neo-x wrote:Nah, you're just a little too strong on the GT that's all, GT doesn't make you heretic.
Annette,Storyteller wrote:
Leaning towards OEC, just can`t see how the earth could be as young as it would be if YEC is true, OEC fits better for me.
Evolution has been what I have been brought up with, it has been my default position for my entire life but it just doesn`t sit quite right with me now.
So......
Any suggestions on what my creation stance is?
Let's hope not! Hopefully it's just a case of you not having all the facts.ST wrote:
P.S. Agree with pretty much everything ES posted (another hint that perhaps Catholicism is for me?)
K? Was that directed at me?Kurieuo wrote:You are saying lots about you, and you is sounding like me.
I'm not sure if you've read different expositions of Genesis 1 (i.e., YEC, OEC),
but have a read of it and let me know what you read about what is being said is created, etc.
I think you are quite right ST. I believe our stances are very similar...Okay, here is where I am.
Genesis describes the Big Bang and how the universe "evolved" I don`t think it was in literal days, it`s seven stages, if you like.
God created, possibly we have a common ancestor but I`m not totally convinced.
DNA points to intelligent design, were we designed from scratch or are we the result of some tinkering? Not sure. If I absolutely had to decide I think I would be leaning towards God creating man from scratch but then our DNA is so similar to other animals so is the DNA the building block?
God being pro active, even now, makes more sense to me than Him just starting the ball rolling and sitting back and going with the flow. Mind you, if the laws and everything that govern reality were, and are, that precise even God starting it all off and letting things progress make sense.
Leaning towards OEC, just can`t see how the earth could be as young as it would be if YEC is true, OEC fits better for me.
Evolution has been what I have been brought up with, it has been my default position for my entire life but it just doesn`t sit quite right with me now.
So......
Any suggestions on what my creation stance is?
P.S. Agree with pretty much everything ES posted (another hint that perhaps Catholicism is for me?)
Hi A -- yes, that was directed at you.Storyteller wrote:K? Was that directed at me?Kurieuo wrote:You are saying lots about you, and you is sounding like me.
I'm not sure if you've read different expositions of Genesis 1 (i.e., YEC, OEC),
but have a read of it and let me know what you read about what is being said is created, etc.
If so,
When I read Genesis, it describes how our universe came into existence, it all fits in with the Big Bang and how life progressed.
Are there any good articles that look at it with a YEC or OEC view?
If I go with YEC, how do I explain the fact that the universe is apparently older than it woiuld be if it was YEC? OEC seems to make more sense to me.
I think we were either created as we are or perhaps created with the ability to become what we are. Either way God is behind it. God, to me, is just as active in shaping the world now as He was.
I would have been happy to go with progressive creation but I`m not sure, hundred per cent, about evolution now, which kinda just leaves theistic.
K... would the direct intervention look the same as that of the process of evolution ? I firmly believe that everything is in the hands of God, even evolution if I could ever get a handle on exactly what evolution is. Generally, I believe evolution is the advancement of processes for the benefit of life as God has ordained. I very much feel an affinity towards PC but can also see the validity of TE, but under the auspices of my own definitions. I haven't come across the defined creation stance that completely fills the bill. I'm going to read the articles you gave ST (thanks for that) and return.As for evolution, well you need to make to decision on whether the science really supports it?
I believe the science doesn't support it, especially with convergent evolution which to me more points towards direct intervention (like we'd expect in Progressive Creation).
I don't, but that was what Moses wrote and believed, and it is what the Bible says. So whatever we may or must believe in order to satisfy our own intellect, shall we say, it is also always good to see what the text intended to say.Storyteller wrote:neo?
Do you believe God created the universe in 6 literal 24 hour periods then?
By direct intervention I simply means that God is directly involved in the creation process.EssentialSacrifice wrote:K... would the direct intervention look the same as that of the process of evolution ? I firmly believe that everything is in the hands of God, even evolution if I could ever get a handle on exactly what evolution is. Generally, I believe evolution is the advancement of processes for the benefit of life as God has ordained. I very much feel an affinity towards PC but can also see the validity of TE, but under the auspices of my own definitions. I haven't come across the defined creation stance that completely fills the bill. I'm going to read the articles you gave ST (thanks for that) and return.As for evolution, well you need to make to decision on whether the science really supports it?
I believe the science doesn't support it, especially with convergent evolution which to me more points towards direct intervention (like we'd expect in Progressive Creation).
Everywhere actually, once you stop reading in between the lines what is not there and read what it says. This is called exegesis - the process of drawing out the meaning from a text in accordance with the context and discoverable meaning of its author, as opposed to eisegesis which is a reader's interpretation, forced on a text.Storyteller wrote:Thanks neo
Where will I find it in the Bible, just out of interest?
Because, based on evidence, I think its in error there (just like when it says that the sun stopped moving not knowing that its the earth which revolves around the sun and not the other way around). The author believed it to be and so that is what we get from it. That story is not meant to be taken as an allegory at all. It is pretty clear from the text that it was very much written to be taken as is and also be told to the people and their generations so they could remember it and preserve it.Storyteller wrote:If the Bible states it as happening in 6 literal days then why do you not believe it?
(And all I am doing here is trying to understand what people believe and why)