Re: AIG / Young Earth Geologic Age Positions Critiqued
Posted: Mon Jan 22, 2018 10:14 am
Ok, it seems I can't delete my posts anymore. so feel free to delete these and lets just continue.
"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)
https://discussions.godandscience.org/
Here we agree. As a matter of fact, you should know, as I've repeatedly stated, that I as well have questions about our origins – even to wonder whether there might have been a greater humanity created first. And you also know that I don't – nor does Scripture teach – that all things found within in it have a literal meaning, nor do they necessarily have a meaning as perceived by modern ears – this is where scholarship, ancient language experts, archaeology, and science can help to inform us. But you often seem to fight a straw man of asserting certain LITERAL meanings make the text untrue. But the questions we post SHOULD include where in Scripture is a meaning literal, or what other things might it refer to.Neo: Let me reiterate:
1. God can do anything.
2. I believe in miracles.
Neo: 3. There is evidence that certain things like Adam and Eve being the couple that populated the world as we see today, is not true. So then I conclude that it wasn't a miracle. The difference is, I am not negating miracles. I am simply saying this didn't happen as such.
I totally agree!Neo: Evidence, then, is important.
However, one must A) correctly understand the science – KNOW that it has determined such and such, and B) be certain that it is appropriately being applied to Scripture in a relevant manner.Neo: Science simply doesn't assert, it has data and evidence to show for it. To offhandedly ignore it, is intellectually dishonest in my opinion.
True: But the question needs to go beyond that – because the text can certainly be true IF it is correctly understood AND other data is correctly applied to it. HOWEVER, if other data is NOT correctly understood, and/or it's not appropriately applied to the Scripture, then one could have an incorrect understanding and thus wrong belief.Neo: So, God can do miracles and has done miracles. It's not a question of whether God can do miracles, but did he at certain points?
Great – so can I, but there are uncertainties surrounding other, potentially, previously existing people.Neo: I can totally believe that God seeded the first couple to raise all mankind
And I'm not sure either. But as for Christ's line from Adam, the applicable Scriptures are very clear as to how Adam and Eve were created, and how their line (to Christ and ALL believers) was preserved through those left alive on the Ark. Despite whatever residual humanity might have been alive elsewhere, there is a thread between Adam, Jesus - which He then imparts to all believers. And, of course, Moses and the Biblical writers' focus is Adam to Christ.Neo: … however, the evidence suggests he didn't do it that way.
Obviously!Neo: Now, Jesus' resurrection can't be explained by any known laws or mechanisms of nature, therefore it indeed is a miracle.
Neo: Especially, since TOE explains it, you don't need a miracle to get to Adam and Eve. And at this point, I believe many OEC's insist on the miracle angle needlessly, despite their obvious acceptance of other substitutions they have made in the Bible, like day being ages and accepting the age of the universe is billions of years.
Ridiculous comment – obviously, again, per your strawman of applying how you've applied literalism. BTW, this is the very same tactic which YECster Jac used to repeatedly attack OEC.Neo: If anything I should say you are the one who doesn't believe the Bible obviously.
Neo: You insist that creation didn't happen in 6 days. Why? because you also hold scientific data sacred and understand that if the data shows the earth is old then obviously this must mean the scriptures 6 days can't be true. But you cherry pick where you regard data and where you don't like. In the matter of days being ages, you do that because of scientific evidence but strangely don't accept other evidence which flies in the face of your belief.
And so there we have it – you don't like nuances that legitimately challenge your belief that man evolved. Your solution: The text cannot be true! And THAT is a very dangerous way of looking at the Bible. Because you well know it is quite possible, as you believe in the miraculous, that whatever pre-existing mankind could have evolved, but that Adam and Eve had origins independent of that (no, I personally don't believe mankind evolved, even though I see it possible that mankind outside/pre-existing Adam may have been true.).Neo: I have clearly stated before that the evidence doesn't match the bible and therefore I give up inerrancy. I can't make any sense of it. When you take TOE you can't be selective about it as to which parts you agree with and which you don't.
That's because you are only willing to perceive the Biblical narrative in a certain way, and you deny Biblical and ancient Hebrew scholarship that refutes your narrow view. So since you refuse to be open to scholars' views that the text has nuances of meaning that conflict with your view that ALL of humanity (including Adam and Eve) had to have evolved, you reject entire passages – including some in the NT, that conflict with what you THINK science has disproven about the Bible.Neo: I can see that scientific evidence is the backbone of OEC. Yet you call me out for regarding the same evidence. The only difference here is, I am taking the evidence completely and I can see it doesn't fit the biblical narrative.
To clarify, Neo, what I'm attacking as dangerous is your dismissing fundamental Bible passages as being fictitious (and because they are also crucially interconnected with other key passages) – not necessarily just your issue with greater humanity and Adam and Eve. If we correctly understand the textual meanings, and the perception of whatever science is at odds with that, then we must conclude we've got something wrong with the science, OR haven't correctly applied it to our Scriptural understandings. There is also the possibility that we have certain correct scientific understandings, but have misunderstood the text in some important way. And, again, there are nuances in which mistakes can be made in both ways. But dismissing the Bible as error-filled or false – ANY of it – Jesus and His hand-picked apostles didn't leave that door open to you!Neo: Are you saying that this is as impossible as saying that all mankind came from Adam and Eve?
thatkidakayoungguy wrote:What if Genesis 1 is a mix of poetry and literalism? I see a rough similarity between it and what we find in science, yet it also takes ideas from surrounding cultures to teach truths.abelcainsbrother wrote:Don't throw out the baby with the bath water.It is important to put scripture first over what man and science says.You often seem to put science first over what scripture says.Many Theistic Evolutionists seem to think Genesis was written more as poetry and read it that way,atleast some do,maybe not all.But I have a problem with this. I think the most important thing to notice about this is how they are trying in a Christ-like way to convince YEC's of their errors when it comes to Geology and how they try to make everything fit into Noah's flood.neo-x wrote:He lost me at the last part of the statement. I am fine with beliefs, the first two things in the above statement I can agree to. The last is simply not true.I believe in a real Adam and Eve as individuals—the first humans in the image of God—and that we are all descendants of this family
It suggests our subspecies was traveling much earlier than thought. Which doesn't surprise me.Philip wrote:Here, today - evidence of Homo Sapiens living outside of Africa 180,000 years ago?
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-42817323
If the fossil identification is accurate, what does it suggest?
#impossibletheearthis6000yoPhilip wrote:Here, today - evidence of Homo Sapiens living outside of Africa 180,000 years ago?
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-42817323
If the fossil identification is accurate, what does it suggest?
Well I did put them at about the time of Heidelberg man around 600K or so and Babel probably being around the same time along with the flood, but that is REALLY stretching the scripture and assumes things that science hasn't yet said about the cultures of those early humans (like Homo Sapiens Heidelbergensis) like that they farmed and experimented in metal and used bricks.Philip wrote:My point of the article is not merely how old it shows humans to be, but that they are FAR older and WAY outside of ancient Mesopotamian and Noah's floodzone. This means humanity had already spread far by the time of the flood, seeming to indicate that the flood had to be regional. It also makes me think that Genesis 1 might well be referring to the creation of the first of a greater mankind that came before Adam's creation. As that seems the only scenario that can fit humanity in apparently continuous cultures far outside of the flood zone, AND that the evidences for them date out far older than the best guesstimates for the time of Adam and Eve. While I've not read any of their materials in quite some time, I believe the YEC crowd always dismissing the dating techniques involved. Only problem is, there are so many correlations with these ages.
The other huge issue, is if these ancient cultures show no catastrophic disruptions (like by a huge flood), the very fact that we find intact evidences in which these ancient culture's contexts seem relatively undisturbed, then it just seems they absolutely have to be FAR older than Adam.
Anyone heard of any other ideas that can reconcile Adam coming first, and these seemingly far older early evidences of man?
Whether these fossils date to 90,000 years ago or 180,000 years ago, it appears that species homo sapiens sapiens had made unsuccessful efforts to migrate out of Africa prior to the successful migration that occurred around 50,000 years ago.Philip wrote:Here, today - evidence of Homo Sapiens living outside of Africa 180,000 years ago?
http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-42817323
If the fossil identification is accurate, what does it suggest?