R
razredge
Guest
Well, I’m not afraid to call a spade a spade - frankly I do prefer the company of a reasonable non-believer to certain believers. It’s quite ridiculous that we’re 23 pages into a thread arguing for heliocentrism; are we really in the 21st century?
- Being wrong about geocentrism may not in heliocentrics be treason to the faith. But calling people names or referring to them s undesirable company, even if otherwise Christian, and right on this issue, is a kind of treason. Of the brother in Christ, of his faith or charity if he gets into trouble, and of the possibility of conversion in an atheist.
So what, you’re saying is that there is no optical observational evidence that the Earth goes around the Sun?
- It does NOT look the way that the earth goes around the sun. This is not a prima facie impression, but a counterintuitive interpretation.
Rossum posted two questions, one of which is revealing of this mindset: “what keeps the big mass of the sun in orbit around the small mass of the earth” or he might even have omitted twice “mass of”. Now, he is a western buddhist and seemingly a kind of atheist. To him, then, it is basically smallness of one mass that keeps it in orbit around bigness of other mass. To him that kind of question makes sense.
Wait, if you believe that - you don’t need science at all, God can be posited as the answer to everything and anything.As I do believe in God and angels, it does not make sense to me, as an objectively pertinent question, once reiterated after the simple answer: “God or angels”. For daily rotation of universe around earth, the simple answer to that and to speeds involved is “God”. Which means I do not need earth to either rotate daily or to orbit a bigger orb to account for impressions that immediately say the opposite.
You might want to look into Intelligent Falling:
[Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New ‘Intelligent Falling’ Theory](Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New ‘Intelligent Falling’ Theory)
Scientists from the Evangelical Center For Faith-Based Reasoning are now asserting that the long-held “theory of gravity” is flawed, and they have responded to it with a new theory of Intelligent Falling.
“Things fall not because they are acted upon by some gravitational force, but because a higher intelligence, ‘God’ if you will, is pushing them down,” said Gabriel Burdett, who holds degrees in education, applied Scripture, and physics from Oral Roberts University.
Burdett added: “Gravity—which is taught to our children as a law—is founded on great gaps in understanding. The laws predict the mutual force between all bodies of mass, but they cannot explain that force. Isaac Newton himself said, ‘I suspect that my theories may all depend upon a force for which philosophers have searched all of nature in vain.’ Of course, he is alluding to a higher power.”
Founded in 1987, the ECFR is the world’s leading institution of evangelical physics, a branch of physics based on literal interpretation of the Bible.