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Neil_Anthony
Guest
Ignorance seems like a good word to use… but why superstition or paganism? I don’t see what creationism has to do with either.
Superstion is a type of psudo science. Baseball is full of it.Ignorance seems like a good word to use… but why superstition or paganism? I don’t see what creationism has to do with either.
Although I reject sola scriptora, I don’t buy the argument you just posited. Hugh Ross is an OE proponent and a sola scriptora adherant.What the fundies are doing in the botton is defending Sola Scritura because that doctrine melts if you have to look at Genesis as symbolical and their whole Bible start to melt eventualy.
Catholics have a Sacred Tradition to back them up and can look as Scripture in more symbolic ways.
I don’t know where to start with this. It has so many issues. Are you just putting this out, or do you want us to examine and coment on it? Are you willing to learn? Where did you get this ideology?Also it is not that Creationists are putting God ‘in a box’ nor have I ever encountered any literature or anything that even remotely suggests that Creationists are portraying God as the tangible sort that the pagans did. This more than anything goes to show Brother Guy’s complete ignorance on a subject he’s vehement against. I don’t think you’ll ever encounter a creationist that wouldn’t agree that God ‘could have’ used macro-evolutionary processes ‘IF He wanted to…’ The entire point is that God HIMSELF says in His OWN Scriptures that He inspired and in laws which He directly gave that He did not use macro-evolutionary processes. He supernaturally created the world in 6 days. Also He created the world ‘very good’ and things like death, diseases and all kinds of suffering and vulnerabilities that we witness in our world today are a result of mankind’s own sin, and not because of God! To believe in macro evolution means to also believe God is the author of death and suffering before man and sin ever came into existence, and God is a being who approves of a bloody survival of the fittest methodology from the beginning, which is heretical to God’s character and undermines Christ’s sacrifice on the cross and creates a big contradiction for our theology. Macro-evolution is a scientific philosophy that undermines all Christianity.
Yes, but probably not in our lifetime. For myself, a Catholic and an engineer, I find it more and more troubling the almost fever that grips America regarding the blind locking on to a 6 day/6000 year creation.Ah will we ever come to a conclusion on this topic.![]()
I disagree. The paganism problem he’s talking about is reading passages at face value. If someone was to read the bible and take the descriptions of God at face value, they’d end up beliving in a god with very pagan qualities. A god who holds onto the ‘earth’ with his hands? A god who rests his ‘feet’ on the earth? A god who created the world by ‘talking’? That sort of ‘god’ belongs in the archives of National Geographic because a “giant man in the sky” god is essentialy a pagan god – even if he is constructed from the first glance meanings of bible passages.Also it is not that Creationists are putting God ‘in a box’ nor have I ever encountered any literature or anything that even remotely suggests that Creationists are portraying God as the tangible sort that the pagans did. This more than anything goes to show Brother Guy’s complete ignorance on a subject he’s vehement against.
Luke 8:22-25I disagree. The paganism problem he’s talking about is reading passages at face value. If someone was to read the bible and take the descriptions of God at face value, they’d end up beliving in a god with very pagan qualities. A god who holds onto the ‘earth’ with his hands? A god who rests his ‘feet’ on the earth? A god who created the world by ‘talking’? That sort of ‘god’ belongs in the archives of National Geographic because a “giant man in the sky” god is essentialy a pagan god – even if he is constructed from the first glance meanings of bible passages.
Instead, when we read those passages we believe in the truth that they teach: God is greater than the world he created and that our understanding will never encompass him or his ways. His ways are not our ways. His hands are not our hands.
But are his days our days?
:bible1: 2 Peter 3:8
But do not ignore this one fact, beloved, that with the Lord one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.
So I agree that to believe that God’s days are my days is paganism, just as it would be paganism to say that God is a large earth grabbing man.
We are not saying that God could not speak the world into being as fundamentalists claim. We are saying their understanding of the mechanisms that happened to make what came into being.Luke 8:22-25
One day he got into a boat with his disciples and said to them, “Let us cross to the other side of the lake.” So they set sail,
and while they were sailing he fell asleep. A squall blew over the lake, and they were taking in water and were in danger.
They came and woke him saying, “Master, master, we are perishing!” He awakened, rebuked the wind and the waves, and they subsided and there was a calm.
Then he asked them, “Where is your faith?” But they were filled with awe and amazed and said to one another, “Who then is this, who commands even the winds and the sea, and they obey him?”
If Jesus can do that, why is it the equivalent of paganism to believe God the Father can do that with the creation of the earth?
Knowing a number of creationists as a former Protestant, its not that they are reading Genesis at face value without thinking about it. Instead, its the fact that they are highly suspect to the thought of taking Genesis figuratively, when the language used in account in their view does not lend itself to a figurative interpretation. Hardly a Pagan or Uneducated view.
Also, they would have to question the use of 2 Peter 3:8, since the context of that verse doesn’t refer to the days of creation, and it says a day is As or Like a thousand years, which is the not the same thing as saying a day with the Lord IS a thousand years.
I don’t mean in terms of timing. Obviously both Jesus and the Father “can” get instant results. What I was hinting at is that there’s more to the word who was with God and who was God and through whom all things were made than a giant man talking super-loud. By that I mean, the pagan answer to the question “What is the logos?” is “human talking.”If Jesus can do that, why is it the equivalent of paganism to believe God the Father can do that with the creation of the earth?
The act of having a view does not disqualify it from being pagan, nor does being wrong disqualify one from being educated.Knowing a number of creationists as a former Protestant, its not that they are reading Genesis at face value without thinking about it. Instead, its the fact that they are highly suspect to the thought of taking Genesis figuratively, when the language used in account in their view does not lend itself to a figurative interpretation. Hardly a Pagan or Uneducated view.
Let me put it another way, let’s say that someone else you know has yet another personal view about how to read the bible and based on their view they believe that God has human nostrils. Then they cite the following verses:Also, they would have to question the use of 2 Peter 3:8, since the context of that verse doesn’t refer to the days of creation, and it says a day is As or Like a thousand years, which is the not the same thing as saying a day with the Lord IS a thousand years.
The response would be based on whether the language used in the verses cited lends itself to a more literal or figurative interpretation. The books of Wisdom, Psalms, and Job in their view would do so. Genesis would not, especially based upon language used in Genesis 1. Regardless of what view is actually right, it is simply inappropriate and a foolish statement for that Jesuit say that the ‘fundies’ (a number of my former colleagues and friends who are passionate followers of Christ) view is similar to believing in some backwards uneducated folk belief, when it is simply a difference in hermeneutics.I don’t mean in terms of timing. Obviously both Jesus and the Father “can” get instant results. What I was hinting at is that there’s more to the word who was with God and who was God and through whom all things were made than a giant man talking super-loud. By that I mean, the pagan answer to the question “What is the logos?” is “human talking.”
The act of having a view does not disqualify it from being pagan, nor does being wrong disqualify one from being educated.
Let me put it another way, let’s say that someone else you know has yet another personal view about how to read the bible and based on their view they believe that God has human nostrils. Then they cite the following verses:
Exod.15
[8] At the blast of thy nostrils the waters piled up,
the floods stood up in a heap;
the deeps congealed in the heart of the sea.
2Sam.22
[9] Smoke went up from his nostrils,
and devouring fire from his mouth;
glowing coals flamed forth from him.
[16] Then the channels of the sea were seen,
the foundations of the world were laid bare,
at the rebuke of the LORD,
at the blast of the breath of his nostrils.
Job.41
[20] Out of his nostrils comes forth smoke,
as from a boiling pot and burning rushes.
Ps.18
[8] Smoke went up from his nostrils,
and devouring fire from his mouth;
glowing coals flamed forth from him.
[15] Then the channels of the sea were seen,
and the foundations of the world were laid bare,
at thy rebuke, O LORD,
at the blast of the breath of thy nostrils.
(I included this last one since it shows that idols don’t have nostrils, much to their detriment.)
Wis.15
[14] But most foolish, and more miserable than an infant,
are all the enemies who oppressed thy people.
[15] For they thought that all their heathen idols were gods,
though these have neither the use of their eyes to see with,
nor nostrils with which to draw breath,
nor ears with which to hear,
nor fingers to feel with,
and their feet are of no use for walking.
What’s the correct response to that? I personaly, don’t know how to outscripture such a person. They’ve already sealed their own fate by dictating to God how his scriptures will be understood. They believe that nostrils are literal but God’s transendence is figurative.
But is their belief the Bible’s fault? Read my sig (below) to see what I think.