To the skeptics: what evidence would convince you?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Black_Rose
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
I’m not saying the religions are the same, I am saying the evidence for them is very similar. Claims made by people to have spoken with God, or representative of God, miracles, ancient holy books.
The universality of religion is a sign of its authenticity. Cultural and social differences affect the interpretation and practice of spiritual truths.
Why should I believe the claims of Christianity but not Mormonism or Hinduism, for example?
It is not for me to tell you what to believe. You should examine the claims of all philosophical beliefs and decide which corresponds best to the realities of your daily life.
If for example the Bible had the equations of General Relativity in it, at a time when people had no physics and very little math. Then if I read it now, I would think, wow, maybe God really spoke to these people.
The purpose of Scripture is not to convey scientific but spiritual and moral truths…
 
Science is not the cause of the universe and everything. Religion is the belief in *the cause *of the universe and everything.

A religion is a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe,… - wiki.
There are many superstitions [as in hinduism] about elements *within *creation, but these do not satisfy the above definition of a religion. Buddhism does not have a creator god of the universe and everything, that I know of, so it is not really a religion either, I think.
There is only one religion.
I don’t know. It seems like you’re using a personal definition of the word “religion” that most people (including those who make dictionaries) would not agree with.

The academics who spend their lives studying religions do include Hinduism and Buddhism in the category of religions. It seems like you’re talking more about what you believe to be the “correct” religion, and for you there is only one such religion.

Also, science does attempt to find out the cause of the universe, the reason it is as it is and so on. It might not have “complete” answers like religions do, but frankly speaking, the answers of science are supported by experimental evidence and have enabled us to build technology (including computer and internet we’re using to discuss this). The answers of religion have no supporting evidence, and frankly quite a few religions go against observed evidence.
The purpose of Scripture is not to convey scientific but spiritual and moral truths…
I disagree with this. If you read the first chapter of the Old Testament, it does provide an explanation for the origin of the universe and of man. This explanation is not supported by science. If the chapter of Genesis talked about the Big Bang say, or evolution, specifically mentioned DNA etc. and I read it today I would really be astonished and would become a Christian again.

With respect to moral truths, if for example the Bible had a moral code that was unlike what the people of the time had, but called for example for the elimination of slavery, for women to be treated at the equals of men I would think it was at least ahead of its time. However, it reads like the moral values human beings of that time held anyway.
 
What would convince the atheists and agnostics that God exists? Is there any evidence that would convince people that a God exists Furthermore, for the converts what evidence convinced you that a general God exists (or even your specific deity such as the triune Christian God for most people here.) I am not sure anyone who was born Catholic was convinced by any evidence because most of their “proofs” seem to be developed post hoc to justify their religion after they acquire it.
God showing up in person, in front of every human being on earth at the exact same moment, every week, for an entire year…then every year after that on the same date…for the rest of time.

While God was present, God would carry a kind of performance appraisal on how the persons’s year went.

That’d convince everyone and the world would be 100% God fearing Christians.
 
God showing up in person, in front of every human being on earth at the exact same moment, every week, for an entire year…then every year after that on the same date…for the rest of time.

While God was present, God would carry a kind of performance appraisal on how the persons’s year went.

That’d convince everyone and the world would be 100% God fearing Christians.
I can see this ending badly. What if the appearance happened while someone was at work?

‘You should probably work on the fornication thing, and the porn thing, and the fantasizing about your boss thing. Oh! And stop stealing pens from the office.’
 
I don’t know. It seems like you’re using a personal definition of the word “religion” that most people (including those who make dictionaries) would not agree with.
…religion is a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe,…

This is the definition I gave you which I had found on the Wiki article on Religion. See, I am being very fair and impartial, I used wikipedia as a source for this. Wikipedia used as its source Dictionary.com, an online dictionary whose definition of Religion was; …religion is a set of beliefs concerning the cause, nature, and purpose of the universe, …
Dictionary.com used as reference the Online Etymology Dictionary, and the other following sources;

About Dictionary.com
The dictionaries that appear on Dictionary.com include:

Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1), Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Webster’s New Millennium Dictionary of English, Preview Edition (v 0.9.6) Copyright 2003-2006 Dictionary.com, LLC
Dictionary.com Word of the Day
Dictionary.com Crossword Solver
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer. Copyright © 1997 by The Christine Ammer 1992 Trust. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
The American Heritage® Stedman’s Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University
Investopedia.com. Copyright © 1999-2005 - All rights reserved. Owned and Operated by Investopedia Inc.
Wall Street Words: An A to Z Guide to Investment Terms for Today’s Investor by David L. Scott. Copyright © 2003 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law,© 1996 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
Merriam-Webster’s Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, © 1996, 1998 MICRA, Inc.
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, © 1993-2005 Denis Howe
Jargon File 4.2.0
U.S. Gazetteer, U.S. Census Bureau
😃
The academics who spend their lives studying religions do include Hinduism and Buddhism in the category of religions. It seems like you’re talking more about what you believe to be the “correct” religion, and for you there is only one such religion.
There is only one religion which satisfies this definition.
Also, science does attempt to find out the cause of the universe, the reason it is as it is and so on. It might not have “complete” answers like religions do, but frankly speaking, the answers of science are supported by experimental evidence and have enabled us to build technology (including computer and internet we’re using to discuss this). The answers of religion have no supporting evidence, and frankly quite a few religions go against observed evidence.
Science itself did not create the universe. It is a description of the creation of the universe. As Christianity and the jewish faith provides a description of the creation of the universe.
In Christianity and the jewish faith God created everything in the beginning with the words ‘Let There Be Light’. 2000 years later science describes the same creation event; “10 seconds after the Big Bang the universe was dominated by photons,” - light. The Big Bang theory was originally proposed by the Belgian Catholic priest Fr. George Lemaitre.
I disagree with this. If you read the first chapter of the Old Testament, it does provide an explanation for the origin of the universe and of man. This explanation is not supported by science. If the chapter of Genesis talked about the Big Bang say, or evolution, specifically mentioned DNA etc. and I read it today I would really be astonished and would become a Christian again.
Let There Be Light - and there was light. 10 seconds after the **Big Bang **the universe was dominated by photons, light.

God also said: Let the waters bring forth the *creeping *creature having life,…
Creatures that were brought forth in waters would have had to be *swimming *creatures, yes? The waters brought forth creeping creatures; were these creatures creeping onto land from the waters.

In Genesis the progression of creation is;
  1. The waters brought forth the creeping creatures*.
  2. Birds were created**** - reptilian animals**.
  3. Sea mammals***,
  4. birds multiply, .
  5. land animals multiply according to kind
Science categorizes it like this;

1 billion years of multicellular life,
600 million years of simple animals,
570 million years of arthropods (ancestors of insects, arachnids and crustaceans),
550 million years of complex animals,
  1. 500 million years of fish and proto-amphibians*,
    475 million years of land plants,
  2. 400 million years of insects and seeds, flying insects *** [the fowl that may fly over the earth under the firmament ?!]360 million years of amphibians,
  3. 300 million years of reptiles**,
  4. 200 million years of mammals***,
  5. 150 million years of birds*****,
    130 million years of flowers,
  6. 65 million years since the non-avian dinosaurs died out, mammals overtook them
 
There is only one religion which satisfies this definition.
It is your position then that Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam are not religions?
Let There Be Light - and there was light. 10 seconds after the **Big Bang **the universe was dominated by photons, light.
Your standards would have to be pretty low to accept “let there be light” as a description of the Big Bang.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Big_Bang

(Not to mention that only a small part of the electromagnetic spectrum is considered “light”.)

I personally am not impressed by this, and it wouldn’t require any scientific knowledge for a simple stone age individual to begin a creation myth with these words. It wouldn’t make me think God must have been involved in writing this.
In Genesis the progression of creation is;
If you really want to go there, here’s New Revised Standard Version’s (accepted by Catholics) Genesis 1:

bible.oremus.org/?passage=Genesis+1
1In the beginning when God created* the heavens and the earth, 2the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God* swept over the face of the waters. 3Then God said, ‘Let there be light’; and there was light.
Here the heavens and the earth were made before light. Or at the very least water existed before light.
9 And God said, ‘Let the waters under the sky be gathered together into one place, and let the dry land appear.’ And it was so. 10God called the dry land Earth, and the waters that were gathered together he called Seas. And God saw that it was good. 11Then God said, ‘Let the earth put forth vegetation: plants yielding seed, and fruit trees of every kind on earth that bear fruit with the seed in it.’ And it was so.
14 And God said, ‘Let there be lights in the dome of the sky to separate the day from the night; and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years, 15and let them be lights in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth.’ And it was so. 16God made the two great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars. 17God set them in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth, 18to rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19And there was evening and there was morning, the fourth day.
So I guess God made the sun and the stars after he made earth and light? And plants were made before the sun, moon, stars?

I could go line by line through the entire Genesis account, but there’s no need. I don’t see how you can maintain that Genesis is an accurate account when it has the Earth made before stars. That’s a pretty big thing, considering you couldn’t even have a planet like Earth until the heavier elements were cooked inside stars.

You also don’t need divine guidance to write a general account that would make sense. For example, you would need seas before you had sea creatures, you would need land before you could have land creatures, you would need plants before you could have animals that eat plants and so on.

Now, go back and read the Big Bang timeline. Imagine that was in Genesis 1. 🙂
 
If you read the first chapter of the Old Testament, it does provide an explanation for the origin of the universe and of man. This explanation is not supported by science. If the chapter of Genesis talked about the Big Bang say, or evolution, specifically mentioned DNA etc. and I read it today I would really be astonished and would become a Christian again.
Genesis is mythology which conveys important truths - like the Creation of the universe. Only fundamentalists interpret it literally.
With respect to moral truths, if for example the Bible had a moral code that was unlike what the people of the time had, but called for example for the elimination of slavery, for women to be treated at the equals of men I would think it was at least ahead of its time. However, it reads like the moral values human beings of that time held anyway.
Primitive people cannot develop intellectually or morally overnight. There would have been no point in the Bible being too far ahead of its time. The Jews were certainly more advanced than the pagans who surrounded them - as the Ten Commandments demonstrate - but their society was patriarchal. Look how difficult it is get the equality of women accepted even today - and virtual slavery still exists in our Capitalist society.
I’m not a Marxist but I recognise the existence of wage slaves…
 
Genesis is mythology which conveys important truths - like the Creation of the universe. Only fundamentalists interpret it literally.
But we’re talking here about the kinds of evidence that would convince skeptics. I am saying that if the Big Bang timeline was in Genesis 1, this skeptic would be convinced.
Primitive people cannot develop intellectually or morally overnight. There would have been no point in the Bible being too far ahead of its time. The Jews were certainly more advanced than the pagans who surrounded them - as the Ten Commandments demonstrate - but their society was patriarchal. Look how difficult it is get the equality of women accepted even today - and virtual slavery still exists in our Capitalist society.
I’m not a Marxist but I recognise the existence of wage slaves…
Are you honestly going to claim that the Jews were more advanced than the Greeks? They weren’t. The Greeks far surpassed them.

Aristotle lived nearly 400 years before Christ. And nearly 1600 years after his death, Aquinas adapted his ideas into his Summa, a document revered by Catholic theologians to this day.

But again, we’re talking here about the kinds of things that would convince skeptics to believe. The fact that ancient people’s wrote down their beliefs about how the world should be (which included treating the female half of humanity as somewhat less than human) does not inspire me to believe that God had anything to do with what they wrote down.

If God really exists and has communicated with us through a religion, why has he made it seem as though he hasn’t?
 
Oh you of little faith…🙂
It is your position then that Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam are not religions?
Not according to the definition we are both discussing.
Your standards would have to be pretty low to accept “let there be light” as a description of the Big Bang.
Yet the universe was dominated by photons from 10 seconds after the BB right through the following 300,000 years. If it works…
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Big_Bang

(Not to mention that only a small part of the electromagnetic spectrum is considered “light”.)
Photons dominated the universe… go photons!
I personally am not impressed by this, and it wouldn’t require any scientific knowledge for a simple stone age individual to begin a creation myth with these words. It wouldn’t make me think God must have been involved in writing this.
This is the only Creation account which approaches satisfying observed facts, observed by scientific instruments thousands of years after the story was committed to papyrus.
If you really want to go there, here’s New Revised Standard Version’s (accepted by Catholics) Genesis 1:

bible.oremus.org/?passage=Genesis+1

Here the heavens and the earth were made before light. Or at the very least water existed before light.
1 In the beginning God created heaven, and earth. 2 And the earth was void and empty, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the spirit of God moved over the waters. 3 And God said: Be light made. And light was made. 4 And God saw the light that it was good; and he divided the light from the darkness. 5 And he called the light Day, and the darkness Night; and there was evening and morning one day.

6 And God said: Let there be a firmament made amidst the waters: and let it divide the waters from the waters. 7 And God made a firmament, and divided the waters that were under the firmament, from those that were above the firmament, and it was so. 8 And God called the firmament, Heaven; and the evening and morning were the second day

(1) In the beginning God created heaven, and earth - introducing what is to happen.
(2) The earth was void and empty - void being, not there, basically.
(3) Darkness was upon the face of the deep - the deep is the time before creation, all is ‘dark’.
(4) and the spirit of God moved over the waters - Gods Spirit begins the act of Creation.
(5) And God said: Be light made. And light was made. - Creation sprang form His command; after 10 seconds photons dominated His Creation.
(6) And God saw the light that it was good; and he divided the light from the darkness. - After 300,000 years His Creation divided into Photons, electron, protons, neutron etc., in other words, Creation was divided into light and dark [particles]. He saw the light was good.
(7) And he called the light Day, and the darkness Night; and there was evening and morning one day - God names the light and darkness thus fixing them as stable quanta, as they are good. - End of first phase.

(8) And God said: Let there be a firmament made amidst the waters: and let it divide the waters from the waters. - The ‘waters’ is His Creation. The firmament is space. He creates space between and within His Creation.

(9) And God made a firmament, and divided the waters that were under the firmament, from those that were above the firmament, and it was so. - At Gods command the universe expanded creating firmament [space] between His Creation ‘the waters’. And it was so.

(10) And God called the firmament, Heaven; and the evening and morning were the second day. - God named the firmament thus fixing its properties, its expansion and mechanics.
 
So I guess God made the sun and the stars after he made earth and light? And plants were made before the sun, moon, stars?
And God said: Let there be lights made in the firmament of heaven, to divide the day and the night, and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years: 15 To shine in the firmament of heaven, and to give light upon the earth. And it was so done.

16 And God made two great lights: a greater light to rule the day; and a lesser light to rule the night: and the stars. 17 And he set them in the firmament of heaven to shine upon the earth. 18 And to rule the day and the night, and to divide the light and the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19 And the evening and morning were the fourth day. 20 God also said: Let the waters bring forth the creeping creature having life, and the fowl that may fly over the earth under the firmament of heaven.

(1) And God said: Let there be lights made in the firmament of heaven, to divide the day and the night, and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years: - The stars and planets were created already but their positions were not finally fixed into their proper place yet. The earths rotation slowed to give the length of day He wished for earth. This also allowed the stars a set path to later aid man in calculating time for sowing etc., etc.

(2) To shine in the firmament of heaven, and to give light upon the earth. And it was so done. To give a particular lenght of light or day-length.

(3) And God made two great lights: a greater light to rule the day; and a lesser light to rule the night: and the stars. 17 And he set them in the firmament of heaven to shine upon the earth. - All of these lights He ‘set’ by fixing earths rotation and angle to the sun and the moons orbit about the earth. The balance of the planets motion was set.

(4) And to rule the day and the night, and to divide the light and the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19 And the evening and morning were the fourth day. 20 God also said: Let the waters bring forth the creeping creature having life, and the fowl that may fly over the earth under the firmament of heaven. - And when God had fixed and set the planets motion to His likeing He then stared to bring forth the creatures and animals.

From the National Geographic we find that;
According to the “giant impact” theory, the young Earth had no moon. At some point in Earth’s early history, a rogue planet, larger than Mars, struck the Earth in a great, glancing blow. Instantly, most of the rogue body and a sizable chunk of Earth were vaporized. The cloud rose to above 13,700 miles (22,000 kilometers) altitude, where it condensed into innumerable solid particles that orbited the Earth as they aggregated into ever larger moonlets, which eventually combined to form the moon.

• By measuring the ages of lunar rocks, we know that the moon is about 4.6 billion years old, or about the same age as Earth.

From ExtremeScience [a Geology site] we hear that;
Scientists are still trying to unravel one of the greatest mysteries of earth: When did “life” first appear and how did it happen? It is estimated that the first life forms on earth were primitive, one-celled creatures that appeared about 3 billion years ago. That’s pretty much all there was for about the next two billion years. Then suddenly those single celled organisms began to evolve into multicellular organisms. Then an unprecedented profusion of life in incredibly complex forms began to fill the oceans. Some **crawled from the seas **and took residence on land, perhaps to escape predators in the ocean.

So to recap; the impact that would form the moon occured about 4.6 billion years ago. The moon would finish forming 4 billion years ago. Whilst simple single cell plant life existed for about half a billion years before the moon was finished forming.

The account in Genesis has plant life created before the moon was ‘set’ in the firmament.
After the moon was ‘set’ in the firmament animal life was created or called forth.

“These new results push back the possible beginnings of life on Earth to well before the bombardment period 3.9 billion years ago,” said CU-Boulder Research Associate Oleg Abramov. “It opens up the possibility that life emerged as far back as 4.4 billion years ago, about the time the first oceans are thought to have formed.” - physorg.com
I could go line by line through the entire Genesis account, but there’s no need. I don’t see how you can maintain that Genesis is an accurate account when it has the Earth made before stars. That’s a pretty big thing, considering you couldn’t even have a planet like Earth until the heavier elements were cooked inside stars.
“In the beginning God created heaven, and earth…” - is an introduction to the story; in the beginning God made everything, and this is how He didit;…
You also don’t need divine guidance to write a general account that would make sense. For example, you would need seas before you had sea creatures, you would need land before you could have land creatures, you would need plants before you could have animals that eat plants and so on.
They did what no-one else did.
Now, go back and read the Big Bang timeline. Imagine that was in Genesis 1. 🙂
ditto:D
 
(4) and the spirit of God moved over the waters - Gods Spirit begins the act of Creation.
I imagine this is one of those “agree to disagree” situations. You’re trying very hard to fit an ancient creation myth with modern physics, I don’t think it’s working. Here’s an alternative that works better:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_creation_myth
The worldview which lies behind the Genesis creation story is that of the common cosmology of the Ancient Near East:[30] **To civilizations of the Ancient Near East, the Earth was conceived as a flat disk with infinite water both above and below. The dome of the sky was thought to be a solid metal bowl (tin according to the Sumerians, iron for the Egyptians) separating the surrounding water from the habitable world. **The stars were embedded in the lower surface of this dome, with gates that allowed the passage of the Sun and Moon back and forth. The flat-disk Earth was seen as a single island-continent surrounded by a circular ocean, of which the known seas—what we call today the Mediterranean Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Red Sea—were inlets. Beneath the Earth was a fresh-water sea, the source of all fresh-water rivers and wells.[30]
In the context of believing that everything starts out with water, these passages make a lot more sense:
"Genesis 1:
darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God* swept over the face of the waters.

6 And God said, ‘Let there be a dome in the midst of the waters, and let it separate the waters from the waters.’ 7So God made the dome and separated the waters that were under the dome from the waters that were above the dome.
You can jump through all sorts of hoops to try to reinterpret Genesis to correspond to physics. I even saw one interpretation that tries to make it work by saying that Genesis is not an account of how God did it, but how an observer on earth would have seen it.

This kind of thing would be convincing only to someone who is already convinced and is trying to reconcile the faith they hold dear and the science they know works.
So to recap; the impact that would form the moon occured about 4.6 billion years ago. The moon would finish forming 4 billion years ago. Whilst simple single cell plant life existed for about half a billion years before the moon was finished forming.
I’m not uneducated. Notice however the main point I made wasn’t about the moon, I said nothing about the moon because I saw that coming.
Genesis 1:
16God made the two great lights—B and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars. 17God set them in the dome of the sky to give light upon the earth, 18to rule over the day and over the night, and to separate the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19And there was evening and there was morning, the fourth day.
What kind of hoops would you have to jump through to have plants on earth forming before the sun and the stars? The book says God made the two great lights etc., after he already made the plants. You say he only set them in place but were already made? I guess the sun wasn’t “in place” before the plants started to grow? And when Genesis said God made the “two great lights” and the stars and set them in the firmament it means they were already made, but God adjusted the angle/earth’s rotation?

You’re really stretching here. I don’t see how anyone who is not already a faithful believer would feel anything other than surprise that this much interpretation can be laid over a narrative.

The point of the thread is not whether you can interpret Genesis in a way that doesn’t contradict modern science. The point is whether reading Genesis on its own would be enough to convince a skeptic that the author is God. It’s not enough to convince me. But if it had precisely the Wiki timeline, I would have been convinced.
 
We aren’t related to even the same species, that’s what it comes down to, do not call me brother, it’s an insult here…I know, sounds harsh, but it’s the truth and no negative connotations at all conveyed, the facts are the facts.
Not only harsh…but not what Jesus taught.
 
I imagine this is one of those “agree to disagree” situations. You’re trying very hard to fit an ancient creation myth with modern physics, I don’t think it’s working. Here’s an alternative that works better:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genesis_creation_myth

In the context of believing that everything starts out with water, these passages make a lot more sense:

You can jump through all sorts of hoops to try to reinterpret Genesis to correspond to physics. I even saw one interpretation that tries to make it work by saying that Genesis is not an account of how God did it, but how an observer on earth would have seen it.

This kind of thing would be convincing only to someone who is already convinced and is trying to reconcile the faith they hold dear and the science they know works.

I’m not uneducated. Notice however the main point I made wasn’t about the moon, I said nothing about the moon because I saw that coming.

What kind of hoops would you have to jump through to have plants on earth forming before the sun and the stars?

The point of the thread is not whether you can interpret Genesis in a way that doesn’t contradict modern science. The point is whether reading Genesis on its own would be enough to convince a skeptic that the author is God. It’s not enough to convince me. But if it had precisely the Wiki timeline, I would have been convinced.
You did’nt say anything about how stone-age man knew plants were formed before the moon formed and animals were formed after the moon formed.😉 You did not say anything about the inspiration stone-age man claimed was the source of this information.

I doubt Moses would have understood the Wiki timeline for the BB. But he could understand things in his own language, Genesis serves as a foundation for the history of man, not a a science lesson for ignorant stone-age man.

16 And God made two great lights: a greater light to rule the day; and a lesser light to rule the night: and the stars. 17 And he set them in the firmament of heaven to shine upon the earth. 18 And to rule the day and the night, and to divide the light and the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19 And the evening and morning were the fourth day.

The stars and planets were created earlier but were then later made as ‘lights for the earth’ in a more refined way they were ‘set’ to give ‘seasons and times’. The last of these lights to be made was the moon, which was created not long after the earth, (and the moon was also created after the plants were created). This gives Earth the full compliment of lights, the lesser light, the moon, its greater light the sun, and the stars.
 
Genesis is mythology which conveys important truths - like the Creation of the universe. Only fundamentalists interpret it literally.
Two thousand five hundred years later! If you had lived then you would have needed a scientific education to understand its significance. One sentence would not be enough. And even today the Big Bang is not universally accepted as the starting point. So it would hardly have been a convincing proof that God exists…
Primitive people cannot develop intellectually or morally overnight. There would have been no point in the Bible being too far ahead of its time. The Jews were certainly more advanced than the pagans who surrounded them - as the Ten Commandments demonstrate - but their society was patriarchal. Look how difficult it is get the equality of women accepted even today - and virtual slavery still exists in our Capitalist society.
Are you honestly going to claim that the Jews were more advanced than the Greeks? They weren’t. The Greeks far surpassed them.

Where did I make that claim?! I am simply pointing out that there would have been no point in the Bible being too far ahead of its time.
Aristotle lived nearly 400 years before Christ. And nearly 1600 years after his death, Aquinas adapted his ideas into his Summa, a document revered by Catholic theologians to this day.
So?
But again, we’re talking here about the kinds of things that would convince skeptics to believe. The fact that ancient peoples wrote down their beliefs about how the world should be (which included treating the female half of humanity as somewhat less than human) does not inspire me to believe that God had anything to do with what they wrote down.
Treating the female half of humanity as somewhat less than human is contrary to the ten commandments which make no distinction between male and female. Even though it was a patriarchal society the Jews were told to honour their father **and **their mother…
If God really exists and has communicated with us through a religion, why has he made it seem as though he hasn’t?
Since the vast majority of people in the world believe He has communicated with us the onus is on you to justify your opinion that He hasn’t…
 
You did’nt say anything about how stone-age man knew plants were formed before the moon formed and animals were formed after the moon formed.😉 You did not say anything about the inspiration stone-age man claimed was the source of this information.



The stars and planets were created earlier but were then later made as ‘lights for the earth’ in a more refined way they were ‘set’ to give ‘seasons and times’. The last of these lights to be made was the moon, which was created not long after the earth, (and the moon was also created after the plants were created). This gives Earth the full compliment of lights, the lesser light, the moon, its greater light the sun, and the stars.
I mean, I don’t know what to say to this. The same passage that says the moon was formed after plants formed also says the sun and stars were formed after plants formed.

Yet, in one breath you say that the sun and stars were really formed before plants formed, but the passage simply means God set the earth’s rotation/angle but the moon actually was formed after the plants 🤷.

(I guess those plants would have had the sun shining on them, but afterward God adjusted the earths rotation and that’s what the passage is really talking about when it says : "God made the two great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars.)

Yet the moon is excepted from this, and was supposedly the last to be formed (it’s not listed last in the passage, the stars are listed last).

I guess you have to stretch some more and say that by “plants” the writer of Genesis really meant the single cells that used photosynthesis, and not the trees and flowers we generally think about when we say “plants.”

Even with that, you don’t get plants forming before the moon: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_evolution

Of course had any life formed before the impact thought to have created the Moon, we’d have no way to know because the impact would have wiped it out and altered the earth so significantly that evidence of possible beginnings of life would have melted away.

The fact is, you can devise ever more elaborate interpretations of Genesis, or you can just go with the simplest one and put it in the same category as the creation myths of the time and the location and recognize that folk believed it all began with water, that the “firmament” is an inverted bowl to separate the lower water from the higher water etc.

The true test is not whether you’re creative enough (and clearly you’re very creative), but whether a skeptic upon reading this would say “wow, there is absolutely no way man could have written this passage. It must have come from God.” Can I say that? No, absolutely not. Nothing about it says “God” to me. There are countless creation myths similar to it that were written by human beings.
 
Since the vast majority of people in the world believe He has communicated with us the onus is on you to justify your opinion that He hasn’t…
Fascinating position in that the onus on proving a positive claim, doesn’t fall upon the person making the positive claim.

So, if I happen to come across a group of people who all believe that they’ve been abducted by aliens, experimented upon and taken to the aliens home world and then returned back to earth…

You’re saying that because the majority of the people believe it, the onus is on me to prove that they weren’t abducted by aliens? :confused:

How do your reckon, as your position is firmly argumentum ad populum.

I’ll also remind you, in the words of Christopher Hitchens;

“What Can Be Asserted Without Evidence Can Be Dismissed Without Evidence”
 
reating the female half of humanity as somewhat less than human is contrary to the ten commandments which make no distinction between male and female. Even though it was a patriarchal society the Jews were told to honour their father **and **their mother…
It also tells men not to covet their neighbor’s wives. Polygamy was permitted in the Old Testament.
Since the vast majority of people in the world believe He has communicated with us the onus is on you to justify your opinion that He hasn’t…
Why? This thread is about evidence that would convince skeptics. The OP presumably wants skeptics to tell them what would be convincing.

I’m not trying to prove that God hasn’t communicated with man, I’m talking about the kinds of things that would make me a believer.
 
I mean, I don’t know what to say to this. **The same passage that says the moon was formed after plants formed also says the sun and stars were formed after plants formed. **
Yet, in one breath you say that the sun and stars were really formed before plants formed, but the passage simply means God set the earth’s rotation/angle but the moon actually was formed after the plants 🤷.

(I guess those plants would have had the sun shining on them, but afterward God adjusted the earths rotation and that’s what the passage is really talking about when it says : "God made the two great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night—and the stars.)

Yet the moon is excepted from this, and was supposedly the last to be formed (it’s not listed last in the passage, the stars are listed last).

I guess you have to stretch some more and say that by “plants” the writer of Genesis really meant the single cells that used photosynthesis, and not the trees and flowers we generally think about when we say “plants.”

Even with that, you don’t get plants forming before the moon: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_evolution

Of course had any life formed before the impact thought to have created the Moon, we’d have no way to know because the impact would have wiped it out and altered the earth so significantly that evidence of possible beginnings of life would have melted away.

The fact is, you can devise ever more elaborate interpretations of Genesis, or you can just go with the simplest one and put it in the same category as the creation myths of the time and the location and recognize that folk believed it all began with water, that the “firmament” is an inverted bowl to separate the lower water from the higher water etc.

The true test is not whether you’re creative enough (and clearly you’re very creative), but whether a skeptic upon reading this would say “wow, there is absolutely no way man could have written this passage. It must have come from God.” Can I say that? No, absolutely not. Nothing about it says “God” to me. There are countless creation myths similar to it that were written by human beings.
The stars were already created, after light was created in 1:3 and before plants were created in 1:11. The stars were, thus not created in 1:14.
What was created in 1:14 was was ‘light’ to light the earth in such a way that one light *ruled *day and the the lesser light ruled the night. Also the seasons were formed at this point. According to scientists the moon finished forming nearly half a billion years after the creation of plant life. And this is also the time in Genesis, after the creation of plantlife, that God set the lights one to rule the day and one to rule the night, in other words, He created the moon; and gave the earth its present sidereal-type rotation. The creation of the moon, or the lesser light to rule the night, had the effect of slowing the earths rotation quicker than would otherwise have happened. Earth would be rotating in 8 hours today without the moon, it would have near constant 100 mile per hour winds and only tiny tides from suns gravity to aid life.
This is also around the time [the formation of the moon] when the earth was given its tilt by collision. The tilt, obviously gives us the seasons. At just the right time too, when the moon was forming *after *plant-life had been created, as it says in Genesis; and let them be for signs, and for seasons, and for days and years: 15 To shine in the firmament of heaven, and to give light upon the earth. And it was so done.
Of course had any life formed before the impact thought to have created the Moon, we’d have no way to know because the impact would have wiped it out and altered the earth so significantly that evidence of possible beginnings of life would have melted away
Not so fast, you skeptic, you. There are those who say the collision which formed the moon actually aided the speedy formation of life forms which had already begun nearly half a billion years before. [as it says in Genesis]. The collision did not wipe out life it had the opposite effect on it. 🙂
 
Fascinating position in that the onus on proving a positive claim, doesn’t fall upon the person making the positive claim.

So, if I happen to come across a group of people who all believe that they’ve been abducted by aliens, experimented upon and taken to the aliens home world and then returned back to earth…

You’re saying that because the majority of the people believe it, the onus is on me to prove that they weren’t abducted by aliens? :confused:

How do your reckon, as your position is firmly argumentum ad populum.

I’ll also remind you, in the words of Christopher Hitchens;

“What Can Be Asserted Without Evidence Can Be Dismissed Without Evidence”
The evidence, clearly, is that the majority of people do believe in a Creator and, the majority do not believe they were abducted by aliens.
Clearly if nearly everyone thought they had been abducted by aliens that would be grounds for serious concern as it would be then true, more likely than not.😃
 
Fascinating position in that the onus on proving a positive claim, doesn’t fall upon the person making the positive claim.

So, if I happen to come across a group of people who all believe that they’ve been abducted by aliens, experimented upon and taken to the aliens home world and then returned back to earth…

You’re saying that because the majority of the people believe it, the onus is on me to prove that they weren’t abducted by aliens? :confused:

How do your reckon, as your position is firmly argumentum ad populum.

I’ll also remind you, in the words of Christopher Hitchens;
“What Can Be Asserted Without Evidence Can Be Dismissed Without Evidence”
  1. You are assuming there is no evidence whatsoever for Design.
  2. A group of people in one place at one time believing in a personal experience is vastly different from the majority of people all over the world throughout history believing in a Source of truth, goodness, freedom, beauty and love..
  3. The onus is on you to produce an **explanation **of the existence of rational beings in view of the fact that you are purporting to use a rational argument. Otherwise your argument is worthless.
  4. Your appeal to the words of Christopher Hitchens carries no weight with me since I know nothing about the man. What claim has he to be an authority?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top