I did not make the statement that YEC has no direct scriptural support. I made a specific statement with regard to the position of death before the fall that no one passage leads to the common YEC position and that the conclusion requires the knitting together of passages that do not by themselves standing alone lead to that necessary conclusion. I stand by that.Jac3510 wrote:Danny,
You and I are in complete enough agreement as far as the point I'm trying to make. I fully respect your evaluation of the evidence for the precise reason that you are giving it the credit it deserves. Even as we reach different conclusions, at least we are being honest in what we are looking at.
Bart,
You completely lost me. I have no clue why you brought up salvation or soteriology, or where you seemed to get the idea that I was interested in either (in this thread). I'm asking you to conclude with me that DAs position on the validity of the YEC interpretation of Gen 1:30 and Rom 5:12 is logically fallacious. I'm asking you to conclude with me that DAs position, as he stated it, is an argument from silence, not that OEC as a whole is an argument from silence. I'm asking you to retract your statement that this particular aspect of YEC has no direct Scriptural support.
Where, pray tell, did you ever get the idea that I had in mind the salvation of anyone, OEC or YEC, or that I was asking you to comment on either?
I chose to expand the comment to soteriology because I've made statements to that effect many times and I felt it was relevant to note given that soteriology rests upon scriptural interpretation and is common within both YEC and OEC. If you don't see the connection, then feel free to disregard it. An argument from silence when it comes to revealed Scripture is more than an argument from silence when it comes to the rules for general evidence and logic. If you accept revealed Scripture as God-given and complete for its purpose, then that which is not addressed is relevant to note and then evaluate on a case by case basis, in my opinion.
We've had this converation before with regard to Rom 5:12 and Genesis and I'll state now as I've stated in the past that it begs the question as to whether individual scriptures support that position when the primary argument pushed repeatedly seeks to combine these passages which in my opinion takes Rom 5:12 grossly out of context. The continued appeal to the combination of those passages as the primary argument for that platform within YEC to me seems to illustrate a concession or admission of sorts that that position cannot be found within any one passage. If not, then why appeal to the more complicated platform as the primary argument? Hermeneutics certainly apply and confuse the issue from either side of the argument.
I certainly believe the YEC position is sincere and sincerely believes that is what Scripture says, in general.
blessings,
bart