How do you define God's timelessless?Jac3510 wrote:I don't understand the question.
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How do you define God's timelessless?Jac3510 wrote:I don't understand the question.
Seems like a rather smug response, Jac. As if YOU find taking Scripture seriously important but I and others who disagree with your take on the age issue do not, as if we'd rather buy into what makes us feel comfortable. Your assertion that others are not "interested in facing the truth as squarely as I'm capable of doing" shows arrogance and pride. How incredibly insulting and pride-filled: "Honesty is more important to me." Really, Jac, that about sums up your attitude you often show toward people who don't agree with you over this issue. And so you've slandered their views to assert that anyone who doesn't agree with YOU on this doesn't view honesty or facing the truth as important as your highness. Please, spare me the posturing - you're not fooling anyone but yourself! Do you not realize how UNNECESSARILY insulting such statements are? You'll not convince anyone of things they might possibly to learn from you if you don't first learn how to lose your attitude and arrogant posturing! Do you not care about people more than pressing your arguments with insulting statements. That's not to say you shouldn't articulate how you view something - you SHOULD - but your attitude and insulting style totally stinks!Jac: Feel free to downplay the problem, Phil. Seems like a typical response from you and a couple of others. If it lets you continue comfortably in your cognitive dissonance, that's your issue. I've no interest in such cold comforts. I'm more interested in facing the truth as squarely as I'm capable of doing. Honesty is a little more important to me.
I have given Jac many chances to show where the bible says the earth is young and although he gets angry and demands we believe him he has never shown biblically why YEC is right biblically,and if he had? I would have accepted it but instead of showing where and how YEC is right biblically he just tells us he is right and expects us to believe him based on his knowledge. I show biblically why I accept the GT and I wish Jac would do the same thing. Even without the bible it seems awefully weird that our eternal God waited until just 6-12,000 years ago to finally create the universe and us.Jac3510 wrote:Feel free to downplay the problem, Phil. Seems like a typical response from you and a couple of others. If it lets you continue comfortably in your cognitive dissonance, that's your issue. I've no interest in such cold comforts. I'm more interested in facing the truth as squarely as I'm capable of doing. Honesty is a little more important to me.
You're right,it doesn't matter what we think or how weird it might seem,it matters what God's word says but it is hard to believe that our eternal God finally decided to create the universe and us just 6-12,000 years ago. It is possible that even man and science is wrong even about a 14 billion year old universe and that nobody really knows,it could be even older than that considering God is eternal.I go by God's word and I can show biblically how the bible teaches the heavens and earth are old even if it doesn't tell us specifically how old it is. The bible does not teach the heavens and earth are young though despite so many that believe it does.Usher's chronology does not in no way prove it does either and it was not even about the age of the earth but when God created Adam,this in no way proves the age of the earth.crochet1949 wrote:abc -- Considering that God is the creator -- Isn't God's timing to create the universe up to Him and Not us? Just because some people think His timing is awefully weird --well -- is suggesting that somehow 'we' are better / more qualified to determine when the universe Should have been created?
ACB,abelcainsbrother wrote:I have given Jac many chances to show where the bible says the earth is young and although he gets angry and demands we believe him he has never shown biblically why YEC is right biblically,and if he had? I would have accepted it but instead of showing where and how YEC is right biblically he just tells us he is right and expects us to believe him based on his knowledge. I show biblically why I accept the GT and I wish Jac would do the same thing. Even without the bible it seems awefully weird that our eternal God waited until just 6-12,000 years ago to finally create the universe and us.Jac3510 wrote:Feel free to downplay the problem, Phil. Seems like a typical response from you and a couple of others. If it lets you continue comfortably in your cognitive dissonance, that's your issue. I've no interest in such cold comforts. I'm more interested in facing the truth as squarely as I'm capable of doing. Honesty is a little more important to me.
abelcainsbrother wrote:I have given Jac many chances to show where the bible says the earth is young and although he gets angry and demands we believe him he has never shown biblically why YEC is right biblically,and if he had? I would have accepted it but instead of showing where and how YEC is right biblically he just tells us he is right and expects us to believe him based on his knowledge. I show biblically why I accept the GT and I wish Jac would do the same thing. Even without the bible it seems awefully weird that our eternal God waited until just 6-12,000 years ago to finally create the universe and us.Jac3510 wrote:Feel free to downplay the problem, Phil. Seems like a typical response from you and a couple of others. If it lets you continue comfortably in your cognitive dissonance, that's your issue. I've no interest in such cold comforts. I'm more interested in facing the truth as squarely as I'm capable of doing. Honesty is a little more important to me.
RickD wrote: ACB,
If you did a little research on this site, you'd see many different threads where Jac makes arguments for YEC from scripture. He gives detailed reasons why he believes scripture says the earth is young. So, please don't say that he has never shown biblically why YEC is right. Jac actually makes a very good argument for YEC, from a biblical standpoint. He has made a much more detailed argument about YEC, than your GAP argument.
Your lack of searching for threads in this site, is not to be confused with Jac's lack of biblical arguments for YEC.
And no, it doesn't seem weird that God would have waited until 6-12,000 years ago. Whether God created billions of years ago, or thousands of years ago, there was no time. God is eternal. He didn't "wait" as we understand waiting. Compared to eternity, 15 billion years is a blip as small as 6,000 years.
Guys, you haven't negated Jac's argument. He has made a very good defense of his argument. I haven't seen a real challenge to it thus far. The kind of comment above while generally is true of anybody, in this case, the argument is backed by proper logic.And I can guarantee you that Jac doesn't have a perfect understanding of it either
THE problem is NOT Jac's argument - it's his totally unnecessary and provocative, insulting, arrogant and prideful accusation that other Christians (who he KNOWS take Scripture very seriously AND believe in inerrancy) don't take Scripture seriously and that truth is not as important to HIM as it is to others. My ticked off response to Jac's above post has absolutely NOTHING to do with his creation beliefs - which I believe he has defended well, at least from a YEC point of view. Obviously, he has defended it exceptionally poorly as to the scientific findings - which he wears, almost as a badge of honor, as it is quick to dismiss that as a liability. And let's be clear, if he has missed one critical point - are the DAYS in Genesis normal ones, was God speaking to the science, or perhaps rather to correct recently liberated Israel's wrong THEOLOGICAL understandings, gained through four centuries of absorbing pagan Egyptian and ancient Mesopotamian religious beliefs. Because if he's incorrect what was truly meant on that one issue, then all of his typed words and detailed arguments fall apart. But I've no problem with any of that - really, I respect his viewpoint. What I don't respect is his occasional child-like insults that are uncalled for. And he NEVER, EVER takes responsibility for these, as he'll always go back to talking about other stuff in a normal manner, as if it really doesn't matter that he's insulted people so unnecessarily.Guys, you haven't negated Jac's argument. He has made a very good defense of his argument. I haven't seen a real challenge to it thus far.
Neo, that is because you realize he is ONLY making an argument from Scripture - of which so much of you don't believe to be true or factual - at least as I've understood your past assertions.Neo: Guys, you haven't negated Jac's argument. He has made a very good defense of his argument. I haven't seen a real challenge to it thus far. The kind of comment above while generally is true of anybody, in this case, the argument is backed by proper logic.
I mean I don't understand how God's timelessness is related to the question we are discussing. Would you please elaborate?B. W. wrote:How do you define God's timelessless?Jac3510 wrote:I don't understand the question.
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Meh. Seems you've degenerated into personal attacks. Not interested in that type of nonsense. Let me know if you have any interest in actually discussing the question rather than just calling me names.Philip wrote:Seems like a rather smug response, Jac.
I don't understand your distinction between growth and age. The word growth is necessarily a process. To say someone looks grown is to say that they have been through a process of growth, and such processes necessarily involve time. So to say that Adam looked fully grown would be to say that he looked like he was a certain age. So I don't understand what you mean when you say that Adam wouldn't show any signs of age. The fact that he had adult teeth would be a sign of age. The fact that he had legs he could walk on, an ability to speak, that he was a certain height, and so on, are all signs of age.RickD wrote:To your first question, if I were competent enough to examine Adam by going back in time in the DeLorean, I would say that Adam looks fully grown, but not old. So, I guess I'd say he looks more grown than a newborn, but not necessarily older.
Instead of saying, "why does this old guy not have aspects of his age?", I'd tend to think we'd ask why this fully grown man doesn't show any signs of age. To help you understand better, think Mearth or Benjamin Button.
On this, you are scientifically mistaken. I did my clinical residency in a geriatric hospital. The fact of the matter is that the entire phenomenon we call aging or "growing old" is nothing more than the wear and tear on the body, that is, of the body decaying. The reason you get wrinkles and age spots and grey hair is because your body is decaying. You are confusing the decomposition of the corpse with the decay your body goes through as we age. Or we could use the word "degeneration" if you prefer. Here's an article you might find helpful on the subject:I know science isn't your specialty, but wrinkles, age spots, grey hair, etc. happen as people age. Therefore, they are signs of age. And living people usually don't decay. That happens when we die.
No question begging involved. It's called looking at the evidence of aging, then concluding someone has or has not aged
And I hope you don't hold to that. But Rich does, and he's the one I was raising as the specific example of the type of argument commonly leveled against YECs. To be clear, there are some YECs themselves that think the argument has validity. I did myself at one point. Jason Lisle, in one of the articles I already linked you to, says he thinks it has force. I just don't, for reasons I've already offered and for others I haven't.I'm not sure I've ever said that I believe YECs worship a different God, just because they make God out to be deceptive.
Again, I don't think your age/growth distinction holds up. To look closer at your specific example, if a dentist were able to see that Adam never had baby teeth, that would not be a sign he hadn't aged. It would just be a sign he never had baby teeth. Thus, as I said before, "[The dentist] wouldn't say, 'Hmm, how does this new born look really old?' [HeYou do realize that typically, humans are born, and then age, right? Which typically means we all have baby teeth before they fall out, and adult teeth replace them. If we assume Adam was created as a fully grown man, he probably didn't have baby teeth. Ever. I don't think that's too unreasonable to surmise. In fact, if a competent dentist examined Adam, I bet he would see that there was no evidence that Adam ever had baby teeth. Which would just be more evidence for Adam not aging.
Of course he did. If he didn't, he couldn't have functioned properly. And so another false history on Rich's stupid argument.I have no reason to assume he was or wasn't. I really have no idea.
Of course we are. But I'm showing you how Adam's being created fully grown, just like Jesus creating the wine to appear aged, disproves Rich's stupid argument against the appearance of age. If God created the world fully functional, that accounts for A LOT of the so-called evidence that the earth is old, and those who use it to try to disprove YEC are just begging the question. And when Rich questions the appearance of age argument because it makes God liar but then accepts that Jesus turned water into (good) wine and says that God made Adam fully functional, he's being a self-contradictory hypocrite.That's how humans who are conceived, come to be. Are you arguing for Adam being conceived and born? Aren't we in agreement in at least the idea that Adam was created fully grown?
The article doesn't contradict what I said. It says that children's immune systems are stronger than we give them credit for. It did not say that our immune systems don't develop in response to our environment. And so I continue to press the case. If Adam was created with a fully functional immune system, especially if he existed in a world that already had death as you say, then Adam was created with a false history. So Rich is, again, wrong.Just not true. At least according to this.
I didn't overlook it. You overlooked what I said. Read it again:Doesn't smell fishy to me. Smells kinda fruity. Like the fruit of the tree of life that Adam ate to keep him from dying physically. Who needs an immune system, when one has fruit from the tree of life? Sheesh Jac, how could you overlook that one?
Yes, puberty is another good example. If God created Adam as a fully functional adult, then the fact that he was created sexually mature means that God created him with a false history of having gone through puberty.If Adam was created fully grown, do you think God would've given him the neck strength of a newborn? Oh wait, you forgot about Adam's penis and sexual maturity. Adam must've gone through puberty, in order to be able to father children right? So, is that false history too? Or do ya think that maybe God created Adam as an adult?
You misread me again. I didn't say fingernails were alive. I said the cells that fingernails are made out of used to be alive. That's what a dead cell is. As you note, keratin is made out of dead cells. So when you looked at Adam's fingernails the day he was created, you would find dead cells--cells that used to be alive. But, of course, they never were alive because Adam had no such history. Another false history.Um...not quite Jac. Fingernails and hair are made of keratin. Which is a protein made of dead cells. Fingernails are not alive, AND NEVER WERE. The cells that make the fingernails are alive.
A simple google search would've shown you this stuff Jac. It's not rocket surgery.
Yes, by definition, wine presumes grapes. That's what wine IS--it is fermented grape juice.Wine presumes grapes? Even wine that was instantly turned to wine, from water, miraculously by Jesus?
There's no appearance of age in the jugs of wine that were miraculously turned from water. There's only appearance of wine, where there used to be water.
At least TE is self-consistent. It's definitely a more respectable position (in my view) than Day-Age Creationism. I think it's wrong, of course. I think the Bible meant exactly what it said. But, yes, better to be a TE than DA OEC.But I will say one thing. Your points have gotten me thinking. Some of the things you brought up, got me thinking that TE may not be so wrong. Not that you were trying to, but you actually made some pretty good arguments for Adam actually being born.
And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
Thank Philip, I check often what's going on and occasionally comment.Philip wrote:Neo, that is because you realize he is ONLY making an argument from Scripture - of which so much of you don't believe to be true or factual - at least as I've understood your past assertions.Neo: Guys, you haven't negated Jac's argument. He has made a very good defense of his argument. I haven't seen a real challenge to it thus far. The kind of comment above while generally is true of anybody, in this case, the argument is backed by proper logic.
Glad to see you're still lingering about, Neo!
I think it's quite condescending to say that and it irks me. Why would you say that when you clearly know that from Jac's POV God is not a deceiver at all? That is what his argument and his defense has shown clearly. So I am baffled that if you follow his line of thought you end up on that conclusion. You can't. You'd have to change the terms of the argument to reach that conclusion. He has already shown that.abelcainsbrother wrote:I still believe that it makes God into the deceiver when we know Satan is the deciever.