The fascinating thing about this is that from the viewpoint of science, there is no difference between “appearance of age” and actual age. Also I would argue that from the viewpoint of God, there is no difference between appearance of age and actual age. The difference is entirely someting seen from the human perspective, and only from the perspective of those humans who live in the time period that is disputed to be “not real”.
That’s exactly right. Or, at least, it
could be exactly right.
In other words, if God created something with the appearance of age, this doesn’t imply that we can’t actually learn from this appearance and likewise know what “would have” happened in “real time” if such an event actually did have the time to exist the way God may have “presented it”.
Within this vein, the geological record “could be” merely “tautological” by virtue of what God reveals through the “appearance of age”, something which, although it may not have actually happened, can still nonetheless teach us something about what “would have” happened.
In other words, even if it was only “ficitonal”, it’s still nonetheless “true”.
Interestingly, I do find it a rather curious phenomenon that many people believe that God did indeed use this
very same kind of “mythologically true language” when allowing the Sacred Scriptures to recount the supposedly fictional story of Adam and Eve and their fall from grace--
and they don’t consider this deceptive at all.
However, if this same standard is applied to the physical creation itself via the scientific methodology – with it being suggested that God indeed used this
very same kind of “mythologically true language” when allowing the geological record to recount the supposedly fictional story of life’s development on earth and struggle for survival – this seems to be firmly rejected because it treads too closely to our own “reality”
and is believed to be highly deceptive.
Myself, I do accept that the universe has been around for a long time-- perhaps even longer than the 16 billion years that is commonly suggested.
I see no solid reason why God would not have allowed this much time to really pass by either.
I’m only noting how
many people on
many different sides of the argument will use these various arguments, arguments which can easilly be
reversed back on themselves without much difficulty when one looks carefully at what each side claims in defence of their own faith.
I’m noting this in an attempt to keep science and faith in their proper prespectives so that people look more carefully at the
purely scientific reasons why either side believes what they believe without going in the directions of the “Trickster God”, “Appearance with Age”, or “The Great Experimenter”-- all various opinions which really do
undermine people’s own arguments for their own faith whether they realize it or not.
