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Yes it does…Does “we” include me?![]()
Yes it does…Does “we” include me?![]()
As we learned from Monty Python and the Holy Grail, it depends on whether we are speaking about European or African angels.How great a ratio of wing size to body mass do they need to sustain flight?
Inocente, that’s very creative!For instance the cross-over notion that we physically evolved and then got a specially created spiritual add-on needs a separate name imho, such as the Evo-creationism Jazz Fusion.
Thank you for your detailed exposition of your beliefs - with which I largely agree. My questions are not intended to attack but clarify your position.![]()
I don’t see why that would be necessary, if God has chosen to work through secondary causes. For example, I don’t believe God needed to nudge the Chicxulub asteroid to crash into the Earth, wiping out dinosaurs and opening niches for mammalian development. In any case, divine intervention would by definition lie outside the scope of scientific detection.Do you believe God has never intervened in the process of human development?
Again, there is no way we could detect that. I assume God doesn’t need a scalpel to infuse a soul.Are these attributes bestowed solely by physical means?
If you accept the inspiration of scripture writers, then no, God’s self-communication radiates outside the immediate circle of the Incarnation. But presumably it’s all of a piece for Christians: the self-communicating God inspiring prophets and evangelists is the God who communicated Godself most fully in the Incarnation.Is God’s self-communication restricted to the Incarnation? Or does it occur in other ways?
I see no scientific or theological reason to assume we are the only rational, morally sensitive, and spiritually responsive species in the universe.Does this apply to beings throughout the entire universe?
What? You’ve never watched a herd of mule deer burn another mule deer at the stake for holding an incorrect theological opinion? You’ve never seen an elephant call another elephant a heretic for not accepting an opinion written in the Catechism of the Elephant Church, Second Edition?I have yet to see any other animals murder each other in the name of a God of love.
And rightly so. Only the Catechism of the Church of the One True Elephant (3224 AG Edition) contains the true word of Ganesh. Non-believers will be banished to the land of the Ivory Poachers!What? You’ve never watched a herd of mule deer burn another mule deer at the stake for holding an incorrect theological opinion? You’ve never seen an elephant call another elephant a heretic for not accepting an opinion written in the Catechism of the Elephant Church, Second Edition?
Hey, I’m exactly in the same camp…I agree word for word.I’m in the “human evolution definitely did happen, and there’s no evidence that a god had anything to do with it” camp, and the “if that is true, then it is ‘true for’ everybody” camp. Also the “I believe there may be a god but the Christian version seems very unlikely” camp.
Yawn. Unfortunately you will never witness science saying “hey, we were wrong and Genesis was right after all. Dinosaurs died out in the great flood when Noah built his ship. Gee, how could we have been so wrong all this time?”Well there are peer-reviewed papers that say soft tissue cannot last that long. That leaves a dilemma. A reconciliation is needed.
Lui, I don’t place the existence of God on a probability footing as you seemed to in the last post. Doing so has interesting consequences for theism, and that could be an interesting discussion for another thread.Yawn. Unfortunately you will never witness science saying “hey, we were wrong and Genesis was right after all. Dinosaurs died out in the great flood when Noah built his ship. Gee, how could we have been so wrong all this time?”![]()
So apart from the Resurrection miracles have never occurred?Do you believe God has never intervened in the process of human development?
Again, there is no way we could detect that. I assume God doesn’t need a scalpel to infuse a soul.Are these attributes bestowed solely by physical means?
Does God infuse the soul? Or is all human activity in principle scientifically explicable ?
If you accept the inspiration of scripture writers, then no, God’s self-communication radiates outside the immediate circle of the Incarnation. But presumably it’s all of a piece for Christians: the self-communicating God inspiring prophets and evangelists is the God who communicated Godself most fully in the Incarnation.Is God’s self-communication restricted to the Incarnation? Or does it occur in other ways?
Is inspiration limited to Christians?
I see no scientific or theological reason to assume we are the only rational, morally sensitive, and spiritually responsive species in the universe.Does this apply to beings throughout the entire universe?
Do you include other species on this planet - apart from the human?
Yes and yes!Yes it does…![]()
I’m not exactly sure why you mean. Can you explain this a bit more detailed?Lui, I don’t place the existence of God on a probability footing as you seemed to in the last post. Doing so has interesting consequences for theism, and that could be an interesting discussion for another thread.
Those are your words, not mine.So apart from the Resurrection miracles have never occurred?
I don’t understand the logic of these two questions being joined.Does God infuse the soul? Or is all human activity in principle scientifically explicable ?
Not if you think Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and the other prophets were inspired.Is inspiration limited to Christians?
Intelligence is emerging on this planet, probably because there is survival value to intelligence over and above speed or brute force. It would take millions of years to see whether intelligence was evolutionarily selected in dolphins, or elephants, or dogs, to the extent that it has been in Homo sapiens. So I don’t believe we will see in another terrestrial species – for a long time if ever – the suite of attributes we possess: rationality, moral awareness, spiritual sensitivity, etc.Do you include other species on this planet - apart from the human?
I’m sorry, Lui – I quoted from the wrong post. I meant to quote from your post # 16214. “I believe there may be a god but the Christian version seems very unlikely.”I’m not exactly sure why you mean. Can you explain this a bit more detailed?
I just figure IF there is a God why should the Christian version be the true version? I find a lot of Christianity doesn’t make sense to me. Life exists about 3.5 billion years, the Universe exists about 14 billion years, dinosaurs existed about 165 million years…why did God create all this life and then wait 3.5 billion years just to make humans who have souls and need to obey all these detailed rules or else they will suffer eternal punishment?I’m sorry, Lui – I quoted from the wrong post. I meant to quote from your post # 16214. “I believe there may be a god but the Christian version seems very unlikely.”
When you place it on the basis of God being likely or unlikely, it seems like you are looking at it probabilistically. I’m just not sure how you would evaluate the likelihood or unlikelihood of God existing.
StAnastasia
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Neurons in the part of the brain governing decisions, plus whatever other parts are involved (e.g. fight or flight reflex) send signals to the relevant muscles which perform their task.
If you have scientific evidence demonstrating the existence of a non-material soul that can somehow exert material force on material processes in the brain, kindly post a link. If there are non-material forces, substances, whatevers, that interact with matter in our brains, despite having no material components to do it with, we are thus far unable to detect them, until someone invents a spirit-ometerAlone, unaided and undirected!
By an amazing coincidence, I have just discovered and translated the Bible of the Ants, which begins “In the beginning, the Queen created the Hill and the Food. And She made Queens in Her own image, who then hatched out the Drones and the Warriors. And the evening and the morning were the first day.
Precisely. Either there is a fundamental demarcation between man and other animals, which allows him, through grace, to transcend his nature by sharing initimately with the divine, or there is not. If man does not signal a quantum leap from the rest of creation, then even his
are not particularly special and are subject to reduction and rationalization by cultural anthropologists as mere socialization tools (reactions) to ensure adjustment for the species group.
All of creation is glorious and awesome. (And in biblical terms, “blessed.”) But only man has the capacity to respond to his creator (not just to the social group) in dynamic, conscious relationship, and thus to magnify throughout all of creation the creator’s original blessing. That’s why man is ontologically apart from the rest of creation, meta-physically separate.
I have great news for you, then: some people can see further than that. Plus, others have even traveled the whole distance and left reliable records and maps for us to follow. Thus, knowledge can grow beyond our own limited horizon. We can even measure the distance to the stars and know by spectrum analysis what elements they contain, even if we can’t see them with the naked eye.If my horizon was limited to 100 yards then I can express the minimum. Beyond that I could not say.
Unlike revelation, peer-reviewed papers can be corrected by new discoveries, thus adding to the sum of human knowledge.Well there are peer-reviewed papers that say soft tissue cannot last that long. That leaves a dilemma. A reconciliation is needed.
May I direct you to Carl Jung on this. He says it far better than I could articulate. He basically said, when asked whether or not God existed, that as he could not prove it, or indeed engage in any study that would give him quantifiable data on the fact, he couldn’t say.I
Evidence is the magisterium of science. It is infallible but must be interpreted, just like revelation. Unlike revelation, it can be objectively confirmed by observation and testing, and adjusted to fit new observation. I find that refreshingly free of the subjective and emotion-driven dogmas I used to follow, using reason only to justify what I had already decided to believe on other grounds.
I have investigated the claims of Catholic revelation and find them unconvincing. Unless you can find some reason for me to change my mind, all you will do by your hints, implications, and irrelevant questions obviously designed to bring up a target for you to shoot down, is annoy me. That may be gratifying for you, but it puts me further from what you consider to be my salvation than I was before. Since you believe in a judging God who demands an account of every idle word, that may be of some concern to you. But that’s between you and him.