Evolution and Creation: the Middle Ground?
Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 11:53 am
Hey everyone, Happy New Year
I've been away for the holidays so I've missed out on all the fun since mid-December. I have been reading some of the new posts and my old posts have kind of drifted down the page and I wanted to throw something out there.
You have two camps:
Evolutionists: believe in an old Earth and the currently accepted scientific theories on evolution. Species evolve into species and kinds evolve into kinds through mutation and natural selection. The idea has been developed over 200 years and is supported by numerous lines of convergent evidence from all fields of science. Evolutionists do not evoke a supernatural being in explaining the Universe.
Creationists (YEC): believe in a young Earth and reject macroevolution but accept speciation by microevolution. God created every kind in the Beginning and the Flood explains the fossil record. This idea has been around for 2000 years. The Bible is 100% literally true and all evidence we see must fit God's Word.
Now, we all realize that both camps have problems with their theories.
Evolution: Where did the Big Bang come from? What was the origin of life on Earth? What caused the Cambrian Explosion? What causes shifts in evolution? What is the path of human evolution from ape to man (kind to kind evolution)?
Creation: What created God? How do you find evidence for a supernatural occurrence? Why does the Bible contradict modern scientific theory in almost every field? Why has creationism declined with the rise of science?
In my opinion, it seems like the intermediate theories like ID, progressive creationism, Gap Theory, theistic evolution, and the like are the most effective ways of explaining both the natural world and the ways of God. I consider myself a theistic evolutionist in that I believe in an Old Universe and an Old Earth and also in evolution. I see all the lines of evidence from so many different fields and they all point to this conclusion. These are ideas formulated by some of the greatest minds in history and ideas that fit very well with the evidence before us. I think theistic evolution also involves an all-powerful God since He created the Universe (whether it be the Big Bang or something like it) and everything in it, and also the laws of nature (including evolution). Evolution was the mechanism for God's creation and it explains why we see new forms popping up throughout geologic time. I believe in all of the Bible literally except for the creation myth and the "globalness" of Noah's flood, which I take as glorified stories (Flood myths and creation myths are universal but none are exactly the same). I believe in the Bible as a moral and spiritual guide and I believe in Jesus as our Savior. Believe in science does not cause me to doubt God at all.
My question is why believe in atheistic evolution OR young Earth creationism if there are ways you can believe in both the existence of a Creator and also in the realities of modern science? If you are a believer in evolution, it allows you to explain some of the problems, If you are concerned with the existence of God, it allows for a Creator. I am not in favor of all of these "intermediates" but I think they are superior to the alternatives. I'd like to hear from creationists, evolutionists, and those in between when you believe is good or bad about believing in "both sides at once" and the reasons why those views may be right, wrong, or flawed.
I've been away for the holidays so I've missed out on all the fun since mid-December. I have been reading some of the new posts and my old posts have kind of drifted down the page and I wanted to throw something out there.
You have two camps:
Evolutionists: believe in an old Earth and the currently accepted scientific theories on evolution. Species evolve into species and kinds evolve into kinds through mutation and natural selection. The idea has been developed over 200 years and is supported by numerous lines of convergent evidence from all fields of science. Evolutionists do not evoke a supernatural being in explaining the Universe.
Creationists (YEC): believe in a young Earth and reject macroevolution but accept speciation by microevolution. God created every kind in the Beginning and the Flood explains the fossil record. This idea has been around for 2000 years. The Bible is 100% literally true and all evidence we see must fit God's Word.
Now, we all realize that both camps have problems with their theories.
Evolution: Where did the Big Bang come from? What was the origin of life on Earth? What caused the Cambrian Explosion? What causes shifts in evolution? What is the path of human evolution from ape to man (kind to kind evolution)?
Creation: What created God? How do you find evidence for a supernatural occurrence? Why does the Bible contradict modern scientific theory in almost every field? Why has creationism declined with the rise of science?
In my opinion, it seems like the intermediate theories like ID, progressive creationism, Gap Theory, theistic evolution, and the like are the most effective ways of explaining both the natural world and the ways of God. I consider myself a theistic evolutionist in that I believe in an Old Universe and an Old Earth and also in evolution. I see all the lines of evidence from so many different fields and they all point to this conclusion. These are ideas formulated by some of the greatest minds in history and ideas that fit very well with the evidence before us. I think theistic evolution also involves an all-powerful God since He created the Universe (whether it be the Big Bang or something like it) and everything in it, and also the laws of nature (including evolution). Evolution was the mechanism for God's creation and it explains why we see new forms popping up throughout geologic time. I believe in all of the Bible literally except for the creation myth and the "globalness" of Noah's flood, which I take as glorified stories (Flood myths and creation myths are universal but none are exactly the same). I believe in the Bible as a moral and spiritual guide and I believe in Jesus as our Savior. Believe in science does not cause me to doubt God at all.
My question is why believe in atheistic evolution OR young Earth creationism if there are ways you can believe in both the existence of a Creator and also in the realities of modern science? If you are a believer in evolution, it allows you to explain some of the problems, If you are concerned with the existence of God, it allows for a Creator. I am not in favor of all of these "intermediates" but I think they are superior to the alternatives. I'd like to hear from creationists, evolutionists, and those in between when you believe is good or bad about believing in "both sides at once" and the reasons why those views may be right, wrong, or flawed.