Re: Fruit bearing plants before dinosaurs?
Posted: Fri Aug 30, 2013 11:41 am
My definition of fairy tales is that they are totally untrue. And yet the supposed "fairy tales" in Genesis are foundational to the rest of Scripture. So God chooses totally untrue stories, has His prophets and apostles believe them as factual, as He has based the entirety of Scripture upon totally made-up nonsense? Really?!!! Of course, if you don't believe that the Apostles wrote truth, not only as they witnessed it but also as inspired by God, then it is useless to debate. Again, even IF only some of it is true, or even most of it, but huge portions are not - how do you know which is which or what is what? How do you decide that? Please don't say, "I FEEL" or "by logic."Making up fairy tales, like the one about the rich man who stored up all his goods in his barn? or the man who spread cornseed on stony ground? or the one about the man who sold all his goods to buy a field with a jewel in it? Yes indeed, making up fairy tales is one of the few things that absolutely characterize God.
For clarity, I don't view Genesis as a science book, and its terminology was never meant to be understood as such. And I don't view it as necessarily telling how long the periods of time were (the "days"). One can sincerely debate the meaning of "days" and their lengths - doesn't bother me (I believe the universe to be ancient/billions of years old). There is good reason to believe that some of Genesis is not necessarily even chronological, and that creation sequences are meant as much to correct the false creation myths and pagan beliefs that Israel had before it received the Ten Commandments and The Law of Moses. That is not to say that the Genesis Creation accounts are mere allegory, nor is it to say they are not factual. It's just that they do not describe things in neat order or scientifically as we would. And so you can't view Genesis through your modern, 21st century, scientific world mindset. This is where many make mistakes. And you sure don't link/establish the chain in a lineage of men to the "Son of Man" by inserting a fictional Adam into His lineage.
If one is going to properly understand the Bible and Genesis, they had better understand theology and proper exegesis and interpretive methodology of Scripture. I would say this: If science and Scripture disagree and are in conflict, then either the science is wrong or we have totally misunderstood Scripture. Most whom question major parts of Scripture typically focus on doubting its miraculous components, just like Jefferson, whom believed in a Creator that is responsible for the universe but that He couldn't possibly have come to earth as a man and made a little water turn to wine. What kind of logic is THAT? And a Creator God Whom cannot do miracles - both small and huge - cannot truly be God the Creator.
Anyone with a "low" view of Scripture is not going to find the Bible of much use. And, yes, we all must decide these things as we understand them. But there are important rules of consistency (per Scripture) and interpretive analysis of texts that one must apply when trying to correctly understand Scripture. You can't just take verses out of their surrounding context and you can't take numerous, supporting/corroborating passages that line up on key doctrine and teachings our of the context of the entirety of Scripture. And you can't apply just a modern, scientific understanding to the original intent. Doesn't work that way, and it's a universal mistake people make when they bring modern understandings to ancient texts.