Watermelons and Worldviews

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Twenty years ago or thereabouts, Christian worldview seminars for young people were all the thing. The erosion of centuries of cultural consensus had become generally apparent, and so a number of organizations and churches threw themselves into the task of helping young people—who were obviously going to be bringing up their children in bizarroworld—to know how to navigate said world. If you could call it a world.

But as time went by, and as things got weirder, a number of the cool kids began to sneer at the term worldview. As though life consisted of a cluster of conservative propositions! “Here, roll this thought around in your head. It will fix everything.”

And of course, as with all effective lies, there was an element of truth in this, as in, a smidgen of truth. A worldview does consist of more than just thoughts. We must include the way we worship, and the way we actually live, the symbols we use, and the non-Darwinian story we tell of our people and how we got here. In other word, everything we are and do is part of our worldview.

The problem was that those who sneered at the term worldview were not in the process of ascending above the truth of biblical propositions, but rather in the decadent process of sinking below them. They were not stretching to apply to the authority of Christ to all the practical details of their lives, now that they had taken every thought captive (2 Cor. 10:5). Not a bit of it.

The spirit of our age is made up of a yearning for pointlessness. If everything is pointless, if there is no fundamental assigned telos, then I can give my lusts free rein. I can go wherever I want. I can be whatever I want. Are you a strapping dude athlete who wants to compete for the women’s long jump gold medal in the next Olympics? No sweat. No absurdity is too great for our blinkered generation to swallow. We are almost at the raggedy denouement, the point when the warden of the asylum is about to come into our ward, tell us all to pipe down, and flick the lights on and off at us. For—let us be frank—letting a guy compete in a women’s athletic event is comparable to letting that same fellow enter himself as a watermelon in the state 4-H competition.

The problem is not the troubled soul who thinks he is a watermelon. The problem is all the judges, who all have responsible lives, who pay their mortgages on time, standing around with solemn looks on their faces, without any earthly idea about where they might go to purchase the horse laugh that is so desperately needed. But the only place where such a thing might be purchased is in a Christian worldview seminar.

I referred to the Darwin thing a moment ago, and here is why. I would identify the ur-culprits of our disintegrating world as Kant and Darwin. Kant sought to put the world as it is, the world God actually gave us dominion over, out of our reach. We cannot know the world as it is. We can only know the thoughts in our heads, and at the end of the day, left alone with the thoughts in my head, detached from things as they actually are, I discover these deep yearnings to be a watermelon.

And don’t try to tell me that I have put too many eggs in the pudding by using absurd examples. Don’t tell me that my personal choices can easily trump the xx/xy chromosomal thing, making biology a stodgy thing of the past, and then go on to tell me that I shouldn’t use watermelon examples. Why can’t my choices trump anything genetic? Why do they just have authority over this part of the genetic strand? And not that part? When Rachel Dolezal made her attempted leap over the racial chasm by this means, she was making a much smaller leap than was attempted by Bruce Jenner. Yesterday, race; today, sex; and tomorrow, tasty specimens from the gourd family. The vistas open up all by themselves. They unfold naturally, leaving aside the fact that there is no such thing as naturally anymore.

Darwin summons us to madness via another route. The bête noire of the Darwinists is purpose, telos, intention, design. This is why they freak out when anyone, even if a fellow atheist like Thomas Nagle, suggests that there has to be a point. For if there is a point in the world, that world outside my ego, then it is conceivable that my lusts might have to submit to something other than their own imperious demands.

But in the blind world of natural selection, where there is no point, where there can be no intention, where goals are only apparent, and where everything is in the process of turning into everything else, what on earth could be wrong with a sex change operation? Knock yourself out. There is no point. There is no natural use of the woman, as that benighted apostle once claimed. There can be no natural use of the man.

So the contemporary world is governed by a deep hatred of telos. And the starting point for identifying the nature of this madness is what we think about it. “For as he thinketh in his heart, so is he” (Prov. 23:7).

“With eyes wide open to the mercies of God, I beg you, my brothers, as an act of intelligent worship, to give him your bodies, as a living sacrifice, consecrated to him and acceptable by him. Don’t let the world around you squeeze you into its own mould, but let God re-mould your minds from within, so that you may prove in practice that the plan of God for you is good, meets all his demands and moves towards the goal of true maturity” (Rom. 12:1-2, Phillips).

In the next installment, I hope to address all the halfway measures that pomo-influenced Christians adopt in order to let the world push them halfway into the mold. I refer, of course, to tattoos, liturgical dress-ups, eyeliner on guys, metrosexuality, postmodern historical studies, lumbersexuality, and exotic drinks from the Orient. And if anyone reacts to anything on this list, saying that’s not prohibited in the Bible, it only goes to show the need for more Christian worldview seminars.

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Tim Chesus
Tim Chesus
7 years ago

“pomo-influenced Christians adopt in order to let the world push them halfway into the mold. I refer, of course, to … liturgical dress-ups”. If “liturgical dress-ups” refers to the Pastor wearing a white robe & stoll, then that’s a baloney viewpoint bc reality is that once the Pastoral robe comes off its not long til the rest of the clothes come off & you have a Pastor doing the Lord’s Service in a t-shirt & flip-flops & the Lord’s Supper has become absent. There are obviously other biblical reasons for the white Pastoral robe (see textbook reference below). If “liturgical… Read more »

Bro. Steve
Bro. Steve
7 years ago

Great post, but I must pick at a nit. The citation from Proverbs 23:7 is not applied correctly. This text, unlike many Proverbs, has a context. In this case, the context is about a ruler’s deceitfulness, not the genuineness of people who finally get their minds right.

somethingclever
somethingclever
7 years ago
Reply to  Douglas Wilson

I think you mean Thomas Nagel of “Mind and Cosmos”, not Thomas Nagle of “The Strategy and Tactics of Pricing”.

Setsurinvich
Setsurinvich
7 years ago
Reply to  Douglas Wilson

Are you the same Doug Wilson that was debating Hitchins a few years ago?

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  Setsurinvich

It was either him, or his evil twin. ; – )

Victoria West
Victoria West
7 years ago

“Lliturgical dress-ups,” (robes on clergy?) “lumbersexuality,” (macho men?) and “exotic drinks from the Orient” (kambucha?) – what are these things? (My guesses are in parentheses.) I am grateful however that Wilson has no problem with us girls wearing eyeliner.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Victoria West

At one time tea was an exotic drink from the Orient. Hang around long enough and there are no novelties.

somethingclever
somethingclever
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I usually have a bit of Earl Grey before I go hunting.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago

Talley-ho!

Steve H
Steve H
7 years ago
Reply to  Victoria West

I love Kambucha and tattoos. I’m looking forward to when we’re post lumber-sexual though.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

How you keep up with the swirl is a marvel.

Propositions are fine and all, but practices are going to be necessary for continued motivation.

Rob Steele
Rob Steele
7 years ago

Reminds me of this.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

A lot of fault also goes to pastors who confuse misguided philosophical propositions with basic knowledge of biology. Thus, the young Christian with half a mind sees that the pastor is wrong on the biology, falsely equivocates the biology with the philosophical claim, and then throws out the baby with the bathwater. I know hundreds of Christians who understand the basic science of natural selection and genetics and Earth history while remaining deeply obedient Christians. Unfortunately, I also know former Christians who thought they had to reject the Bible when they realized they couldn’t deny obvious biological facts anymore. The… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I question a definition of natural selection which makes it sound like an Alice in Wonderland tea party. It’s a tree today, but it might be a cat tomorrow. It’s proof of the utter pointlessness of everything that an organism with traits that enable it to adapt to its environment has a better chance of surviving long enough to pass on its genes to the next generation?

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Let’s be clear: true Darwinianism doesn’t tolerate the existence of God. Without God, passing on your genes is pointless, and existence itself, having been separated from its true giver, becomes meaningless. What’s the point of reproducing specific molecules when all molecules will eventually disintegrate in the heat death of the universe?

Without spirit, matter is meaningless. Without mind, meaning cannot exist. And Darwinianism necessitates a denial of the spiritual.

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Darwinianism necessitates a denial of the spiritual.

No it does not. Natural selection can only take place within a world that is already structured.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Darwinianism is far more than just natural selection. Learn your terms.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Thank goodness you were appointed the word czar. I love when Christians with no idea what they are talking about insolently throw around meaningless terminology!

St. Lee
7 years ago
Reply to  D

But what if Carson self identifies as the word czar? And what if Darwinism self identifies as an anti Christian pipe dream seeking to make God’s word of no effect?

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  St. Lee

Plus, I have it on good information, that “The word melon” trumphs “The word czar” in any and all cases.

And I, of course, self identify as the ultimate authority on these things! ; – )

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  D

” We can only know the thoughts in our heads, and at the end of the day, left alone with the thoughts in my head, detached from things as they actually are, I discover these deep yearnings to be a watermelon.”

Pfffffff! No word czars for me! I think my skin is getting thicker and greener already! ; – )

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

I have learned my terms, and you’re being silly. Darwinism “can” be more than that. So rather than arguing about s word that means different things to different people, why not simply be clear on what aspects we do and don’t believe?

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Great! You apparently think the way some people making a philosophy out of “Darwinism” is incompatible with Christianity, but that the origin of new species by natural selection is fine. But I think the latter is what Pastor Wilson is objecting to.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

It all depends on how you define species, which is actually a bit of a problem in science today. Natural selection is simply the survival of the fittest. Natural selection does not imply, per se, the transformation of the species. That concept has been bundled onto the term natural selection by Darwinists. Whether those two concepts properly belong together is a thorny problem. For example, the Galapagos finch’s beak does respond to environmental pressures over generations. Do you define a bird with a beak longer by a few millimeters than its parents as speciation? Well, okay, I can grant that:… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

The main reason that defining a species is “actually a bit of a problem” in science today is because the differences in DNA are so gradual over different species. It’s the close interrelation of organisms that is making this difficult. Which isn’t a great argument for creationism.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

So you mean a Creator who wanted to fill every niche of His creation would be obligated to use entirely novel DNA for every individual organism? Similar DNA just reflects similar design, for the most part. Just like a mountain bike and a street bike look similar, but do different things because they’re designed for different environments. No one argues that we need a completely different design for every single vehicle. They’re all going to work on the same general principles because of their purpose. Assuming that similar DNA just means that the organisms are interrelated, rather than that they… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

But it goes much, much further than that. To quote Michael Bebe, someone who has been quoted positively by many evolution deniers on this blog: “For example, both humans and chimps have a broken copy of a gene that in other mammals helps make vitamin C. … It’s hard to imagine how there could be stronger evidence for common ancestry of chimps and humans. … Despite some remaining puzzles, there’s no reason to doubt that Darwin had this point right, that all creatures on earth are biological relatives.” The Edge of Evolution, pp. 71–72 Do you believe that a DNA… Read more »

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Wait…you claim to have put serious study into DNA science, and you’re talking about Junk DNA? That’s a myth, man. You’re spouting junk pop science that’s over a decade out of date. There’s no such thing as junk DNA. Every part of DNA that we thought was junk has, upon further study, been revealed to have more significance than we thought, like regulating other parts of the DNA sequence. You talking about Junk DNA is like a person going around citing geocentrism – except with geocentrism, it actually explained a good amount of data and saved the appearances. Sorry, but… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Carson, if you are completely unlearned on a topic you should probably keep your mouth shut and learn. Remember your proverbs.

As it is you look like a third grader lecturing a professor.

Also, pretty sure if he produced a block quote he knows the guys name. Typos happen. This is basic charity.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I’ve actually done study. In school and out. Even secular scientists have gravitated away from that myth. Also, my Ph.D. – holding professors also say the same thing. So on what level do I look completely unlearned? I’m citing modern DNA science – if you have a quarrel with what I’m saying, you’re not picking a bone with me, but cutting-edge science. You’re welcome to try, but I doubt you’ll find current DNA scientists readily using the term “Junk DNA,” because that concept has been rather thoroughly debunked in the last decade or so. So no. Your analogy is invalid… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Carson, while the term “junk DNA” is controversial, the concept that I stated – the DNA discarded during RNA transcription and translation – is still accurate, and is still referred to by many as junk DNA. I did my main academic studies 15-20 years ago and like all aging people tend to use the same terms I first learned, but there are plenty of other scientists who continue to use the term today. And the important thing isn’t the term, but what it represents. There is a great deal of noncoding DNA, some of which has no biological function other… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Here are two more articles which help to demonstrate who is dealing with the facts as they are and who is basing their absolute claims on press releases and a “pop science narrative”.

http://www.genomicron.evolverzone.com/2007/04/word-about-junk-dna/

https://arstechnica.com/staff/2012/09/most-of-what-you-read-was-wrong-how-press-releases-rewrote-scientific-history/

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Side note, Carson Spratt — it just occurred to me that your handle might be a play on two characters from a popular British TV show. Is that what it is, or is it your real name, or something else?

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

I have been following the argument about junk (or noncoding) DNA like somebody watching a tennis match. But a report published in 2015 in “Nature Genetics”, conducted by the Cold Spring Harbor Lab, said researchers “found that, at most, only about 7% of the letters in the human genome are functionally important.” One of the team, Dr. Adam Siepel, said: “We were impressed with how low that number is…Some analyses of the ENCODE data alone have argued that upwards of 80% of thegenome is functional, but our evolutionary analysis suggests that isn’t the case.” … “We think most of the… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Carson, if I could write all that and your only response is to note a typo and say you side with the “I don’t like the term junk – please call it noncoding DNA” side of the terminology wars, then it gives me a good idea of how honestly you’re engaging in this discussion.

Considering that I provided an exact quote from Behe and an accurate definition of junk/noncoding DNA that has NOT been discarded by scientific research, your objection just looks like an attempt to score a point and little else.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I read an interesting review of Behe’s The Edge of Evolution (2007). I understood that he accepts common ancestry, age of the earth, and the close relationship between modern humans and primates, but I wanted to know more about ID. I was startled by his statements about malaria: “Malaria was intentionally designed. The molecular machinery with which the parasite invades red blood cells is an exquisitely purposeful arrangement of parts. (…) What sort of designer is that? What sort of “fine-tuning” leads to untold human misery? To countless mothers mourning countless children? Did a hateful, malign being make intelligent life… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Yeah, I brought up something akin to this four years ago when we discussed why Pastor Wilson was using Behe as an authority and certain commenters were repeatedly proof-texting Behe years ago. Behe is a biochemist. I understand biochemistry about as well as almost anyone commenting here – meaning that at best I’ve taken courses in organic chemistry and microbiology and a participated in one research project involving a bit of biochemistry. When I read Behe’s arguments about the implausibility of certain biochemical processes developing via evolutionary mechanisms, I have to admit that the ability to evaluate his claims is… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote:

Yeah, I brought up something akin to this four years ago when we discussed why Pastor Wilson was using Behe as an authority and certain commenters were repeatedly proof-texting Behe years ago.

Perhaps Jonathan can raise this objection once he stops selectively quote mining Augustine for his own purposes? (Augustine, while allegorizing the days of creation, explicitly rejected an ancient earth theory.) If Jonathan were to be judged in the manner by which he judges others, we would find him guilty by his own standard.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

No, that’s a perfect way to use Augustine. Also, I like to use Augustine because he’s someone that many people here give significant authority, while literally no one on either side gives Behe meaningful authority except in the narrow statements where he supports their view. Augustine, without even having any scientific evidence, still thought the days of creation in Genesis 1 were allegorical. However, he had no way to know how old the Earth was outside of Egyptian records that went back much further than the patriarchs, which he just assumed might have been faked because he didn’t have the… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: There is absolutely no comparison between that and someone considering Behe an authority in a scientific field they don’t understand, yet rejecting every scientific conclusion he makes but one. No comparison? Does Jonathan accept Augustine’s global flood view, or reject it? Does Jonathan accept Augustine’s dismissal of the Egyptian records as false histories? Does Jonathan accept Augustine’s instantaneous completed creation theory? Does Jonathan accept Augustine’s belief in distinct created kinds? Jonathan epitomizes the very thing he accuses Wilson of. Jonathan wrote: Also, I like to use Augustine because he’s someone that many people here give significant authority, while… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

If “literally no one” credits Behe, the man, with any particular authority (even as a PhD in microbiology), then perhaps Jonathan should cease to accuse Wilson of selective appeal to authority as a motive. Perhaps Jonathan should acknowledge that Wilson has citing Behe because of the particular merit of a particular argument that Behe advanced. Isn’t that much more plausible, since “literally no one” ascribes authority to Behe himself? Behe is a chemist, not a biologist. His Ph.D. is in biochemistry, not microbiology. His claims on evolution are related to specifics of biochemistry. Your use of him as an authority… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: Why do Christian fundamentalists think that Behe’s speculations of this nature are so valuable that they want them taught to their children in public schools? Can jillybean provide a citation for the uncritical acceptance and wholesale teaching of Behe that she is bemoaning? What Christian fundamentalists are agitating to have every argument of Behe taught to their children in public schools? Does jillybean (like Jonathan) suppose that recognition of the power of one argument from Behe means total acceptance of every other position of his? Why do jillybean and Jonathan think in such false dichotomies? Is this how… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I ought to have provided more context for my comment. When I read Behe’s remarks, I remembered that he was the chief witness for the defense in the Dover Kitzmiller ID trial. I further recalled (and I have read the proceedings several times) that two of the schoolboard members had explicitly asked for creationism to accompany evolution in the district’s textbooks. They were told ID might be a good substitute, and were advised by the Thomas More Law Institute that buying textbooks and forcing their biology faculty to include instruction would pass constitutional scrutiny. Later, at their lawyers’ urging, they… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: Later, at their lawyers’ urging, they scaled back and settle for a compulsory oral warning and recycled creationist books in the school library. Jillybean’s history lesson regarding the Dover kangaroo trial fails to address my question to her regarding her false dichotomy. What Christian fundamentalists are agitating to have every argument of Behe taught to their children in public schools? The attempt to get creationism (or ID) forced (or smuggled) back into government schools is hardly a blanket endorsement of Behe’s entire body of thought by Christians fundamentalists. jillybean wrote: My problem is how Behe fits malaria into… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

You asked for evidence of wholesale endorsement of Behe being thrust into public schools. I gave you the Dover Kitzmiller trial. Behe was a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute which sent the creationist members of the Dover school board materials about ID. Behe wrote a couple of chapters for the revised textbook “On Pandas and People” which the school board hoped to use as a science text to offset Miller’s “Biology”. Behe was the school board’s chief expert witness at the trial. From reading the trial testimony, I doubt that either Bonsell or Buckingham could have defined natural selection… Read more »

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Okay, so let’s get down to the nitty-gritty. So, your argument boils down to… God could have used similar DNA for similar purposes, but instead, we see different DNA for similar purposes. Presumably, you think this points at convergent evolution, rather than design. Now, the unspoken assumption is that God is tied to using the bare minimum amount of effort to design a creature. Where did that assumption come from, and is it warranted? In our telling, God, an infinite and infinitely creative being, made the entire world ex nihilo. That is pretty much the exact opposite of bare minimum… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

No, that’s a false reframing of my argument. Here’s a much better description of my argument. Sisters have extremely similar DNA to each other – in fact, you can prove that they had the same mother, and who that mother is, based on looking at their DNA alone. Cousins have very similar DNA, though not quite as similar – but again, you can prove their common ancestry and even identify their grandmother correctly through their respective DNA. This keeps going back further and further. You can identify a common ancestor a couple centuries back, like whether one was descended from… Read more »

Christopher Casey
Christopher Casey
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“But in that case, God would have been openly deceiving us to make it “look” for all appearances like common ancestry and a very old Earth was true.”

The moon looks bigger when it’s at the horizon, is that God openly deceiving us about the size of the moon?

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

How can it be deception if He is simultaneously *telling* you how it happened? Not a moment has gone by when people did not have either the written scriptures or the word of mouth passed down to those who would listen, telling what Adam knew.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

You don’t realize that you’re starting to sound like that geocentric guy you were arguing with again? “All other evidence can be denied before the face of my particular interpretation of Scripture.” There are billions of people in the world who don’t have Scripture, many of whom get the chance to learn about DNA and homologous structures and the fossil record long before they ever read Genesis 1-3. To look at how uniformly those lines of evidence, laid down by none other than the Lord God himself, point towards a progression of different species with a common ancestor, and then… Read more »

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

If I said any of those things, your arguments might or might not deal with them.

But I didn’t. You really have a habit of arguing with the assumptions you make about people instead of what they say — do you realize that?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

It wasn’t an assumption – it was the logical conclusion of what you said.

If you meant something different, then explain it. But I made a very detailed point, and you dismissed it with a two-sentence response. I took your response at face value. If you meant something more subtle, then you need to explain what that was.

You still haven’t even said where I have analyzed your logic incorrectly. Do you see anything in your reply that advances the discussion for either of us or anyone else, or are you just fighting?

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

When dialoguing with these folks, do you ever get the feeling that you’ve wandered into a House of Mirrors? They have painted themselves and the Bible into a corner. The only way out is to discard their reductionist approach to the scriptures. I’m hopeful, but I’m not holding my breath.

ME
ME
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

What always strikes me as kind of tragic, as Christians we’re supposed to put our faith in Jesus and than go forth and love one another. So what do modern Christians do? Pretty much just step over the least of these, ignore much of the human suffering around us,and proceed to just argue about the fossil record and creationism versus evolution.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  ME

Amen. I think what you’ve just described is the result of reducing the Bible to a set of doctrinal positions that end in parsing the hell out of agape.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

I agree that the definition of speciation is difficult, and from what I have read, it is not the definition I was taught in school a couple of Ice Ages ago. That definition was that speciation occurs when there is such divergence between two groups that they can no longer mate with each other. The classic example of how this can happen was when a habitat is divided by an impregnable boundary, and members of the species become geographically isolated. When brought back together much later, they have become two distinct species who cannot mate and produce offspring. But DNA,… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

But who gets to define “true Darwinianism”? Certainly there are atheist biologists who say they cannot imagine how anyone who understands evolutionary theory can be dumb enough to believe in God. Certainly there are Christians who say they can’t understand why the literal truth of Genesis isn’t obvious to everyone else. But there are also millions of devout Christians who seemingly have no trouble reconciling their belief in God with their tentative acceptance of natural selection and common ancestry (tentative, because all scientific theory is tentative). Your not understanding how I, and they, can do this does not mean that… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Indeed. It is, of course, possible that you believe things that are mutually incompatible without realizing it, and that if you thought it through the contradiction would come clear. But to presume the worldview of one’s interlocutor is coherent is a wiser place to start, and certainly better manners.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago

In my limited experience, it is far more common for people to believe dozens of incompatible things. I never assume the coherence of anyone’s worldview, but I try to drill down and see what the foundations are made of.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

Sure, and I grant that. But if you lead with the presumption that you’re talking to someone who can’t think straight, you are likely to ignore a lot of nuance in favor of simple binary judgments. You also tend to discount the possibility that your interlocutor has simply thought the matter through more carefully than you have.

I don’t know that either thing is true in this particular case. But the approach that you outline lends itself to certain drawbacks.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago

To clarify, I don’t assume people are unreasonable, but neither do I assume that their worldview is fully coherent when the details are filled in.

I test their worldview in the same way I do my own – with the understanding that people’s intellect is fallen.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

That’s a perfectly reasonable view to take. But it applies to you as much as anyone else, no?

Carson Spratt
7 years ago

Yes. That’s why I said, “I test their worldview in the same way I do my own.” Read carefully! ;)

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

The posture of testing, however, tends to indicate epistemic certainty, as if, having checked your own worldview, you now regard it as sufficiently established to serve as a standard. Otherwise, on what basis do you evaluate someone else?

Carson Spratt
7 years ago

Yes, I have tested my worldview and found it solid at the foundations. There are many matters which must be built upon that foundation, though. The foundations I am sure of, but there are stories higher up that probably need tinkering with. Everyone should do the same, and no one should take it as an insult when someone tests your worldview for leaks: it’s just sound practice, and the Bereans are good examples of that.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Everyone believes in some form of natural selection. It is Darwinism that is objected to.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Could you tell me (and I ask this in a peaceful spirit of genuine enquiry, not as one looking to start a fight) why people who reject evolutionary theory (defined here as speciation and common ancestry, not simply as change over time) always call it Darwinism? It always suggests to me that Darwin is solely responsible, and that no one else has ever treated, let alone confirmed, any aspect of his theory. And why “Darwinism” and not simply “Darwin’s theory”?

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I think it is shorthand. The term has been used by evolutionists. But because accuracy of language is important concerning this issue, it is wordy to specify what one means. Some people just say evolution and then claim that evolution means change thus natural selection is evolution thus evolution is true. This is quite a common response even though creationists agree that natural selection is real (it was described by a creationist prior to Darwin). Other talk of biological evolution and decry the discussion of cosmological evolution even though cosmologists may use that term. Still others exclude the first development… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Evolutionism is also a good shorthand term encompassing the materialistic and naturalistic paradigm. Most adherents are very coy about where they actually stand, because they really only want to have to answer for natural selection, and nothing else. Theistic evolutionists don’t do anyone any favors by running cover for such materialists.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I understand that you believe a theistic evolutionist is in error. But I don’t think you can say that any particular individual is intellectually insincere in reaching his conclusions, especially when these conclusions don’t run counter to the teachings of his church. A Catholic biologist is almost certain to be a theistic evolutionist. His church teaches him the duty of intellectual honesty and tells him not to generalize beyond his data–in other words, not to present his own religious opinions as “settled science says…” It is unfortunate if his research, improperly understood and subjected to illegitimate extrapolation, tends to run… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: But I don’t think you can say that any particular individual is intellectually insincere in reaching his conclusions, especially when these conclusions don’t run counter to the teachings of his church. A Catholic biologist is almost certain to be a theistic evolutionist. It may come as a shock to jillybean, but Roman Catholics are not inoculated against being wrong; even wrong concerning basic Scriptural teaching. Being a sincere Roman Catholic will not shield or excuse jillybean from giving an account to God for disregarding the light that she was given by God, from His Word. Notice that I’m… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: But that doesn’t solve the problem of the sincere Christian astronomer who, looking at the available evidence, does not believe all the stars are equally old. Should a scientist who is Christian refrain from publishing any finding that might tend to cast doubt on Genesis for fear of running cover for unbelievers? Publishing observable data is nothing to be afraid of. That’s the power of actual physical science. However, the stories that are told around the actual observable data are another matter. For example, if Adam had chopped down a tree in the garden and counted the rings,… Read more »

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Probably because of the near-immediate leap made by non-biologists from the publication of Darwin’s book to confident assertions that SCIENCE! had a sufficient explanation for the origin of life and we can dispense with all that antiquated God and religion stuff. (Meanwhile the actual science of genetics was getting started a few years later by an Augustinian monk named Mendel…)

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  ashv

Very true. But why do you suppose people were able to take Galileo’s heliocentrism in stride without immediately concluding that if our planet has been deposed as the center, then all bets are off when it comes to religion and morality?

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: But why do you suppose people were able to take Galileo’s heliocentrism in stride without immediately concluding that if our planet has been deposed as the center, then all bets are off when it comes to religion and morality? Probably for the same reason that the weather man can tell us when sunrise will occur tomorrow morning without being stoned by the heliocentric science community. They realize that events can be described, consistently and correctly, from an earth-based frame of reference. People in Galileo’s day probably realized that everything in Scripture pertaining to this question could also be… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

For one thing Darwinism describes a specific explanation for the existence of living things for which Charles Darwin receives due credit from scientists who wholly embrace the theory as you have described it. Darwinism also describes more than a scientific theory, it describes a philosophy, a mythos. In a way Darwinism does offer an explanation of the meaning of life, albeit one that dead ends in no real meaning at all. It certainly does offer an explanation of human behavior, one that explicitly rejects both the image of God and sin in favor of the origin of Homo sapiens behavior… Read more »

Christopher Casey
Christopher Casey
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

“Your not understanding how I, and they, can do this does not mean that it cannot be done–”

*You’re. :P

There seems to be a corrolation between accepting common ancestry/natural selection and bad theology. I don’t have enough data to say if the relationship is causitive, or if it is which direction it goes.

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago

It’s ‘your’. The not understanding belongs to you. (See what I did there?)

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

I was about to explain about gerunds taking possessive pronouns but you beat me to it. I think this is a grammatical rule that is not much observed here. Find me one living person who grasps the shall/will distinction, and I will bow in gratitude before him (or her). Heck, I would be grateful for the proper use of lie and lay. I insisted on teaching usage to my daughter, not trusting her English teachers as far as I could throw them, and the result was that they went through her essays changing every correct “whom” to “who.” My fellow… Read more »

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Funny, isn’t it, that grammar is something only other languages have nowadays.

Come to New Zealand, where we don’t do that annoying lie/lay thing. Unless, of course, you dislike people saying then for than!

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

First I will need to check with my sister who taught in an inner-city Auckland high school. I was startled to learn that New Zealand even had urban blight or poverty. I pictured it as being a kind of sub-tropical Scandinavia, but with sheep.

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Sub-tropical is right! We’re having a cyclone at the moment. Parts of Auckland I hear are a bit blighted. I haven’t made an extensive study of poverty in NZ but what I know of it I’d characterise as mainly cultural. That is, many of our poor would not be much helped by receiving more money, or only money. There are homeless people who choose to be homeless because they want to be off the grid and free from the burdens of things like tenancy agreements. There are people raised in violent or negligent homes who have no idea what to… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

I’ve been following Cyclones Debbie and Cook and hoping you are away from the worst of them. For perhaps the fiftieth time in my life, I looked up to see why you get cyclones, China gets typhoons, and the eastern seaboard on the Atlantic gets hurricanes. I think I have it, but don’t ask me next week.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Funny, I’ve seen the same correlation between YEC and bad theology. Of course, they make different mistakes.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago

Proof of “devolution”.

Somebody should form a band!

Oh wait! ; – )

jigawatt
jigawatt
7 years ago

No, jilly is right.

Paraphrased as “Your refusal to understand this … ”

Not “You are refusal to understand this …”

Edit: Ah, I see Indigo beat me to it.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

My rejection of common ancestry is not born out of an intellectual inability to understand how anyone else does it. Rather, it’s founded upon study, observation, and reflection upon the necessary implications of such a belief. It is not a fog of doubt that makes me unable to see how you do it: rather, it is the light of logical necessity that makes me see clearly how incompatible these two are. And while you ask who gets to define “true Darwinism,” I would answer that it should be the Darwinists – who consistently reject the syncretistic attempts of theistic evolutionists.… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

I was married to a biologist for thirty years, and I have known many others. While I have not personally met a biologist who rejected every aspect of evolutionary theory, I have not encountered the kind of zealotry you describe. My ex-husband, who is Jewish, believed in God. He did not reject theistic evolution; he did believe, however, that methodological naturalism precludes assuming theistic explanations for natural phenomena. I think it is important to distinguish between rejecting theism as something incompatible with the scientific method, and rejecting theism overall. But not every evolutionary biologist is a Dawkins. There are numerous… Read more »

Bro. Steve
Bro. Steve
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Jillybean,

Here’s an anti-evolutionary viewpoint from a self-described atheist.

http://www.unz.com/freed/darwin-unhinged-the-bugs-in-evolution/

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

In re: the popes saying that Christian belief and evolution are compatible:

I do not believe that the Pope represents the best theology available, nor the best science. And if he wasn’t speaking ex cathedra, he doesn’t really speak authoritatively on behalf of the church, right?

So the pope’s recommendations don’t persuade me as to the actual compatibility of the two doctrines.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

You are right that the teachings have not been given infallibly: I don’t think that would ever happen as infallibility is restricted to questions of faith and morals. And even those are given rarely–sometimes less than once in a century. On the other hand, the majority of Catholic teaching is presented with Magisterial authority that a Catholic may not ignore simply because it was not delivered ex cathedra. If I am an obedient Catholic, I won’t get gay-married even though there has been no infallibly delivered rule. It’s important to be clear about what the papal statements about evolutionary theory… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

I took a “science and religion” class that included a book which had 14 different definitions of evolution. Only a couple of them denied the spiritual, though 3-4 others were also false for other reasons.

ME
ME
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Well,I am the girl in the blue dress for a reason and we have truly arrived at the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party.

Not too get too cynical here, but people are kind of like these slightly stupid hairless apes, easily taken down by a common house cat. So without Divine intervention, I suspect our ability to pass down our genes would have been severed long ago.

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  ME

I’m curious what you mean by Divine intervention, and if you could give an example or two.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

The birth of Issac and the birth of Samuel.????????????

Clay Crouch
Clay Crouch
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

I’m not sure that’s what ME had in mind. But I am quite certain that our species’ ability to pass down our genes would have continued regardless of the births of Issac or Samuel.

ME
ME
7 years ago
Reply to  Clay Crouch

“Divine intervention,” everything from ensuring our survival to correcting our never ending mistakes.

“I am quite certain that our species’ ability to pass down our genes would have continued regardless….”

I am NOT convinced. People have a propensity for self destruction and if our steps were not ordered in some way, I think we would have all died out long ago.

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The funny thing is that if you start talking about race and IQ you can find people who are both anti-God materialists and anti-science fundamentalists. ;-)

mkt
mkt
7 years ago
Reply to  ashv

Oh yeah…that’s one of the biggest holes in “progressive” Christian thought.

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  mkt

Specifically I mean the people who deny the existence of the soul or anything spiritual but still insist that all humans have equal worth or ability.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Perhaps one of those hundreds of Christians could explain the natural process by which non-living matter became the first living thing from which all life evolved.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I don’t think any Christian who accepts evolutionary theory would deny divine intervention. I have no doubt that God created life. I have no doubt that God created the universe.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

The question is whether God created all life by solely by natural processes. Its the difference between my own origin in the womb, and that of Mary’s firstborn. Was power outside nature needed at any point from the beginning until now to make all living things? That goes against the naturalism that most scientists assume. Many scientists still assume that there is an as yet unknown natural process to explain the origin of life.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I agree with you, but while every scientist assumes that only natural explanations can be entertained while working in the lab, not every scientist is committed to philosophical materialism in every realm of life. Those who are, like Dawkins, are giving an opinion that is outside their specialty. If there is ever solid evidence that lightning sparks produced amino acids from a soup of atmospheric gases, I will still believe that the sparks, the gases, and the acids were part of God’s creative will. It would be disingenuous for me to pretend that there is no conflict between this view… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

If origins “look” the same (that is, in terms of our thoughts–because obviously no developed human was there to observe and record), regardless of theism or atheism, why believe there is a god acting behind the scenes? How can the answer be the Church or Scripture? ISTM that when the Church deconstructs Genesis 1-11, it invites the deconstruction of 1) the rest of Scripture, and 2) its own recorded origin and history.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

That’s quite interesting. So you’re admitting that your beliefs in God feel threatened by knowledge of science, and that you’re afraid that if God isn’t needed as the “explain this crazy magic” excuse-maker, your whole fragile edifice falls apart.

I assure you there is a different faith out there, one that can understand how things in the world work and still be devoted to the God of Jesus Christ in all of it. And there are many millions of people with this faith.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think that is a little harsh. It seems to me a valid question to ask: if Genesis is not to be taken literally, at what point are we to start being literal in our understanding? Half way through the Old Testament, or can I wait until Matthew 1:1? If the evidence leads me to reject Genesis as history, do I treat every recorded miracle with equal skepticism? These are fair questions.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

But it’s based on quite a few false assumptions. We already know not to take a great deal of the Bible “literally”. Jesus’s parables, Daniel’s visions, John’s revelation, the Song of Solomon, are all obvious places where a symbolic story is told but the point of the story is not to relate history, but to elucidate a point about God and how He works and is now working. During the Galileo debates, where he was accused of not taking Scripture literally because Joshua clearly stopped the Sun in the sky thus proving the sun revolves around the Earth, he made… Read more »

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

What is your position on the supernatural?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

I believe in it – thought I made that clear in the nonviolence discussions. I have witnessed it as well, though of course one’s own experience can be faulty and from time to time I can second-guess things I’ve seen with my own eyes or heard with my own ears. I don’t have a firm position on the mechanism. Such as, does God create a plausible natural explanation when He performs the miraculous, so that those who wish to doubt can always maintain “plausible deniability”? Thus, are many things with plausible natural explanations still clearly miraculous events that would not… Read more »

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Ah, my faulty memory strikes again. (It’s also difficult to review your earlier remarks, given your Disqus settings.) I agree that the miraculous is not able to be subjected to scientific study. I do not see that a not-scientific book must necessarily be not-historical. I do not see the slightest reason, textually speaking, not to take Genesis as historical. “We already know not to take a great deal of the Bible “literally”. Jesus’s parables, Daniel’s visions, John’s revelation, the Song of Solomon, are all obvious places where a symbolic story is told but the point of the story is not… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

I have a long argument written out, which I’ll post soon. But I realized that I was starting to get off the point in arguing this rather inconsequential subpoint (which only becomes consequential when preachers begin to claim it’s the whole thing). In order to re-orient back to the main point, I recommend looking up these three very short N.T. Wright videos before reading anything I have to say.

N.T. Wright on Genesis
N.T. Wright on Adam and Eve
N.T. Wright – Evolution

He makes three completely different points in those three videos, all three good ones.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

Here are some textual reasons not to take Genesis as purely, literally historical. 1. There is a great deal of allegory within the passage. Take the snake, for example. Every Christian I know believes that the snake in Genesis 3 represents Satan, not some physical species of snake that happens to have the power of speech. (Note that there is no indication that God miraculously gives the snake speech – it just has it naturally as it is a very crafty animal. That’s another clear sign the story is allegorical – we’re not dealing with a real snake here.) They… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: They believe that the “offspring of the woman” represents Jesus, and when “he will crush its head”, it represents Jesus’s defeat of Satan. But the literal words of the passage clearly say that the snake is a snake, a wild animal, not Satan. Jonathan is repeating a very common misunderstanding, which leads him to engage in a long string of straw man fallacies. Since Genesis is recorded for us in literary form, none of us has any choice but to take it literally. So the question is not whether it will be taken literally, but what literary intent… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

As N.T. Wright so appropriately quotes in his Genesis video, you appear to be reading an entirely different book than me. If you read Genesis and believe that the main point is to instill historical shackles, give a treatise on exact order of creation and the length of creation days so that we can hold arguments with scientists digging up fossils and radioactively dating rocks 2,000 years later, then I have to say that you haven’t read the book for all its worth yet. You confuse simple metaphors of language and deeper allegory tremendously. Yes, “windows of heaven” is a… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

I think the obvious allegorical content of Genesis 1-3 is the most text-supported reason not to take it literally in every detail. But here are a few other supporting reasons. 2. The structure of Genesis 1 is very uniform and poetic, and then differs a lot from Genesis 2-3. As history, that would be utterly confusing. What order did God do things on each day in Chapter 1? What is Chapter 1’s relationship to Chapter 2, and why so many apparent contradictions without explanation? What span of time do chapters 2-3 cover? Where did Adam and Eve go after they… Read more »

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I regret that I don’t have time to do justice to your long post today, but here are some quick points: Any creation account is going to look different from other recorded history, for a number of reasons. One of those is that God was the only eye witness, as you mentioned, and another is that it is describing something supernatural and probably beyond human comprehension except at a basic level. Bible history is not given for its own sake, but to tell the story of God’s work in this world. The fact that Genesis 1-3 doesn’t contain lots of… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Indigo

Bless you too Indigo. I agree with basically everything that you said, only disagree that what you have left over after you’ve admitted all those things is still something that can be called “literal history” in the modern Western sense, or why, after admitting so much is clearly unconcerned with order or exact details or time frames and there for the point of allegory or anthropomorphic illustration, it is so hard to see that other details within the same event fit the same pattern.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I get all that. I agree with all that. But, it is easy for me to get all that because I come from a tradition that does not insist on a literal reading of Genesis, does not base its theology on there being no death before the fall, and also teaches that if there is an apparent conflict between scientific discovery and Christian doctrine–be patient, because truth cannot conflict with truth. Ultimately we will understand. I did not grow up with a belief that Christian teaching is being deliberately undercut by wicked and deluded biologists and astronomers and geologists. No… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Amen to all that Jilly.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

So you’re admitting that there is no evidence for God intervening in the world. You’re prepared to say that the Exodus (in the traditional sense) never happened, and that the Jesus Seminar is a helpful pursuit, but that nevertheless you pray, and value the “Jesus of faith.”

Heliocentrism is compatible with the historic Christian faith revealed in the Scriptures. The same cannot be said for other fashionable theories.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

No, not at all, I believe absolutely nothing like that. You seem to know nothing about me whatsoever.

You have created a completely made up strawman version of me in your head. Engage with things I’ve actually said.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Perhaps you could extend to me the same courtesy?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

You stated: If origins “look” the same (that is, in terms of our thoughts–because obviously no developed human was there to observe and record), regardless of theism or atheism, why believe there is a god acting behind the scenes? How can the answer be the Church or Scripture? ISTM that when the Church deconstructs Genesis 1-11, it invites the deconstruction of 1) the rest of Scripture, and 2) its own recorded origin and history. That implies that faith in God rests on needing to have a theory of origins that science cannot explain. You said that it seems, to you… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I’m conceding a use of the term “origins” to encompass many things, from the beginning of the universe, even until now (especially from an evolutionary perspective, in which the cosmos continues to evolve). If all “origins” must have, and do have a materialistic explanation, Occam’s razor suggests that to posit a divinity at work invisibly behind the scenes is an unnecessary addition. That’s one reason Darwinian explanations so often foster atheism. And if such materialism applies from the beginning till now, how can we exclude the critical deconstruction of Scripture and the authority of the Church? To recognize this challenge… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

If all “origins” must have, and do have a materialistic explanation, Occam’s razor suggests that to posit a divinity at work invisibly behind the scenes is an unnecessary addition. I don’t see any rationale to argue that the creation and sustenance of existence in a purely materialistic world is “simpler” than the creation and sustenance of existence by a deity. Even the extremely materialistic Stephen Hawking, who has spent his life trying to write God out of everything, is forced to ask, “But what breathes fire into the equations? Why is there a universe for them to describe at all?”… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I think it might be a more accurate (and fair) statement of the position to say that lab science gives no tools by which we can test or measure God’s intervention in the world.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

Hey! They don’t have to be christians! Just ask randman: “How did rocks turn into people all by themselves?” Trust me, it’s quite a ride! ; – )

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I actually took an entire class specifically on that exact question, and I’m not convinced it could have happened without divine intervention. Are you interested in the theories or were you just trolling?

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

It’s not trolling to point out that scientists are not certain on that question. There is at least that one major point about origins that your hundreds of Christians do not as yet know.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

Oh, many many points. That’s one thing that science and faith have in common – in both cases there are many many things we do not know.

My question as to whether you were trolling was directed towards whether you actually wanted to hear the explanation you had asked for or not.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I asked for “the natural process by which non-living matter became the first living thing from which all life evolved.” In other words, it was a statement (couched as a suggestion) that there is no agreed scientific position on the subject. Your offer to bring forth a number of possibilities from the classroom simply confirms my statement. How many theories there are, and what they are is not germane. Not wanting to have them told does not mean I was trolling.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I’m struggling to see what you’re trying to get at. Yes, there is no agreed scientific position for the exact mechanism of the start of life some 3.9 billion years ago or whatever. Of course – the field is still young. There are people alive today who were scientists before DNA was even discovered, before we could explain genetics at all. The field is removing remarkably fast. It may be 10 years before a breakthrough that causes the scientific community to unite around a highly plausible theory, or it might be a 100 years, or it might be never. But… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

You referred to Christians who accept evolution as basic science. Yet, the basic science concerning original life and the so-called “last common universal ancestor” is not agreed. I’m not claiming that that disproves evolution. I realize you can accept evolution and hold origination off to the side. Yet it could help a scientist be more willing to entertain evidence against naturalistic evolution. Apparently you accept both God and a naturalistic process of evolution. I don’t know if there is anything that would falsify the process for you, or give you pause. I do find it telling that evolutionists can get… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

You’re saying a lot of different things, and I’m not sure I follow all of them. 1. Yes, how one views the atonement does matter. But I am in fellowship with Christians with almost every view of the atonement imaginable, and yet we’re still Christians. I cannot see how one of those views could be “falsified”, or if it were, if that would affect any of our acceptance of Christianity. We all accept that Christ died for us, even if the most exact details of that one-time event aren’t at all agreed upon for us, and almost certainly won’t really… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

1. It’s not clear to me that “how one views the atonement” really does matter, if, “with almost every view of the atonement imaginable… we’re still Christians.” What are the Christians you fellowship with being taught? If Christ is only a teacher and example in laying down his life, our need for him is reduced to ignorance and moral error. If I see that my need concerns God’s holy wrath coming toward me–a person dead, guilty, and defiled–then Christ’s propitiation, substitution, and resurrection power will be precious to me from the Bible. A sound view of the atonement is not… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

I won’t even get started on an argument of which atonement theory is “correct” or “primary” or “essential”, as I’ve invariably found that they’re the most useless arguments in all of Christiandom. Too many ingrained positions built off of particular cultural assumptions which then cause the person to interpret everything in favor of their understanding, not realizing that the filter they’re looking through completely distorts almost everything they’re looking at. There’s just no way to argue with that. For now I can just suggest caution before declaring most of the historical church, most of the modern church, and virtually all… Read more »

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, if you “…won’t even get started on an argument of which atonement theory is “correct” or “primary” or “essential” “, is it essential you go on at such length about how much it doesn’t matter? :-) Personally I think it is a worthwhile discussion, although I agree Christian’s have honestly come to differing views. Since we’ve started on the subject, is it necessarily either/or? Are we, or must we, be talking in terms of “this not that”, or could it be a matter of the aspect one sees fit to emphasize more than the others, without denying the others?… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

Jonathan, if you “…won’t even get started on an argument of which atonement theory is “correct” or “primary” or “essential” “, is it essential you go on at such length about how much it doesn’t matter? :-) YES. :) For certain issues, the fact that they shouldn’t divide us, that a large range of views is acceptable, is actually of enormous significance. Personally I think it is a worthwhile discussion, although I agree Christian’s have honestly come to differing views. Since we’ve started on the subject, is it necessarily either/or? Are we, or must we, be talking in terms of… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Lewis is valued as an apologist for “mere” Christianity, but he did not think anyone was meant to stay a “mere” Christian: I hope no reader will suppose that “mere” Christianity is here put forward as an alternative to the creeds of the existing communions—as if a man could adopt it in preference to Congregationalism or Greek Orthodoxy or anything else. It is more like a hall out of which doors open into several rooms. If I can bring anyone into that hall I shall have done what I attempted. But it is in the rooms, not in the hall,… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

Personally, I don’t make a big deal about the age of the earth one way or the other. Why not? If you take Genesis as literal in the historical/scientific text, and the text clearly speaks of a series of 24 hour days followed by lifetimes of specific lengths of years, why not insist that a 6,000 year old Earth is just as essential to faith as the denial of other aspect of evolutionary theory? Current views don’t have to be a conspiracy of lies. I’m sure you know the history of error in science. I think comparative anatomy argues against… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Do you not realize that scholars are consistent when they apply your Genesis standard of interpretation to the Gospels? Marcus Borg: “The central meaning of Easter is not about whether something happened to the corpse of Jesus. Its central meanings are that Jesus continues to be known and that he is Lord. The tomb couldn’t hold him. He’s loose in the world. He’s still here. He’s still recruiting for the kingdom of God.” Dr. Borg values the effects of the empty tomb, while downplaying its historical nature. I’m glad you don’t go that far, but you’ve laid out no basis… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

Marcus Borg is a Jesus Seminar guy. From what I’ve heard he’s certainly not the worst of the bunch, but I’m still certain that I disagree on so many levels that this would be just the tip of the iceberg. As you say, “The problem shows especially in the truth that the Gospels are not history according to modern historigraphical standards. They are theological through and though.” This is absolutely true. However, we have to base on understanding of the truth on the truth, not on what we are scared by. We can’t understand Genesis correctly if we’re just focused… Read more »

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

It’s not helpful to dismiss someone’s view as motivated by fear, rather than truth. Fear for the cause of the truth is not a dishonorable motivation. I can say with justification that N. T. Wright holds certain views of Genesis because he is scared that science minded folk won’t become believers. I don’t count that as evidence against his view, or his program. In a time when naturalism reigns supreme, the question of whether a non-historical view of Genesis negatively impacts other Biblical narratives is not out of bounds. Bishop Wright believes that the Gospels are more historically reliable than… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

It’s not helpful to dismiss someone’s view as motivated by fear, rather than truth. Fear for the cause of the truth is not a dishonorable motivation. You’re right that it’s usually not helpful, but because people react poorly to hearing it, not because it’s wrong. And the fear is not “dishonorable”, but it won’t lead you to truth. Genesis 1-3 cannot be understood as an attempt at the same kind of history that the Gospels clearly are This quote merely restates that the details of the Gospels correspond to actual events, but the details of Genesis 1-3 do not. Perhaps… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

Hi John, if I can butt in. I’ve had it explained to me what evolutionary biologists would regard as evidence that disproves the theory, in whole or in part. Because the theory has become so much more developed over time, it is hard to find one failed test that would demolish the theory in one go. I’m choosing the ones that I understand clearly and that seem accessible to non-biologists. 1. If there was indisputable evidence that the earth is only a few thousand years old. There would not be enough time to account for so much biodiversity descended from… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: Hi John, if I can butt in. I’ve had it explained to me what evolutionary biologists would regard as evidence that disproves the theory, in whole or in part. … I’m choosing the ones that I understand clearly and that seem accessible to non-biologists. I’m afraid jillybean’s list tells us more about her gullibility than about the falsifiability of evolution doctrine itself. jillybean wrote: 1. If there was indisputable evidence that the earth is only a few thousand years old. There would not be enough time to account for so much biodiversity descended from a common ancestor. Evolution… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

It is impossible to discuss this with someone who apparently believes that every evolutionary biologist is lying through his teeth or is under the influence of demonic deception. And not just biologists, of course, but every scientist of every field pertaining to the age of the earth. What is the point of discussing where the evidence leads if you dismiss the methodology, the motives, and the data of every single scholar who disputes that the Genesis creation account as scientifically accurate? You say that I am gullible, and I’m sure that’s true. But my reading comprehension is as good as… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

jillybean wrote: I do not actually mind being called gullible and sentimental. But I have engaged with you without using personal adjectives; One of the things that I’ve really appreciated about jillybean is that she doesn’t tend to take disagreement or correction too personally. That’s highly commendable. However, the subject of evolution seems to be more sensitive and dear to her for some reason. jillybean wrote: You say that I am gullible, and I’m sure that’s true. Does jillybean suppose that the false religion of Islam is a great conspiracy since so many believe it? Or does jillybean acknowledge that… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

You have it back to front. The fact of boys and girls is an obvious one. The subtleties of evolution and the inability (of evolutionists) to agree on vast numbers of specifics, but only agree on the overarching truth of the grand theory, is not nearly so obvious. No creationists are arguing for boys to run in the Girls’ 100 m. Every last trans-affirming person is also an evolutionist. This doesn’t make one right and the other wrong, but I don’t listen to men tell me about the finer points of linear algebra when they think that 2 and 3… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

This puzzles me a little. It seems to me that, if one accepts the most bleakly mechanistic view of the evolution of life on earth, one concludes that DNA is destiny and that the organism’s only function is to survive long enough to reproduce. A futile attempt to change genders seems more like defying this deterministic outlook than acquiescing in it. I understand your second point. But it leaves out the vast numbers of Christians (including all the Catholics if they follow the teaching of their church on this point) who both tend to accept evolutionary theory and reject transgenderism… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I don’t think that believing evolution makes one a believer in transgenderism. I do think that holding false beliefs, especially willingly, tends to lead one to greater error. But Jonathan was arguing against creationists for being scientifically ignorant. I don’t think they are, and it is notable that they are not getting the obviousness of boys and girls wrong. Evolution is very subtle, and has major lacunae, and isn’t understood by most people who believe it to be true. Even a 3 year old can tell the difference between a boy and a girl. The world is preaching boys are… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

If a creationist (or a three-year-old) can tell the difference between boys and girls but a biologist can’t, your argument holds up. I would agree totally that any biologist who thinks that gender reassignment surgery produces gender change at the DNA level should be viewed with mistrust when he invites us to trust his science. But nobody actually believes that such change is possible. The question is not whether boys can become girls in that sense; the real question is how we view people who want gender reassignment surgery, how tightly or fluidly we view gender identity, whether we think… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Yes to paragraph one. Which is entirely the point. A girl who thinks she is a boy or a cat is entirely delusional. There is a problem when someone points this out and everyone goes on the attack in defense of the girl whose concept of reality is screwed. Spiritually this is because God deludes men who hate him. So while Doug may say that the concept of genus fluidity aligns with gender fluidity—and that may well be true—I predominantly think that the new sexuality has to do with a society rejecting God and thus God sending them delusions. You… Read more »

Eagle_Eyed
Eagle_Eyed
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Quit digging Jill

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Eagle_Eyed

Happy and blessed Easter, Eagle-Eyed!

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

That’s funny bethyada, because it’s quite similar to what Augustine had to say about Christians ignorant in science, only in the opposite direction.

I mean, how recently could you have used that claim in relation to people who believed the sun revolved around the Earth, or in a flat Earth, or that natural explanations for disease were false, because evil spirits or witches?

If you are going to dismiss one belief because those who practice it have other errors, then you see church history as an awful slow process of cleaning up its own house.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Nonsense, it is quite easy to understand that things look different from different reference points. People understood that the earth circling the sun would look like the sun circling the earth. The question was which and the answer was not at all clear. Not like the question of what a boy or girl is. Obviously an evolution believing physicist who designs satellites is more intelliigent than a creationist who did not finish highschool and shelves at the local supermarket. But the fact that the latter knows that a boy who thinks he is a girl is nonsense and the former… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

As Augustine pointed out, for a preacher of God to be obviously wrong on other aspects of the world is certainly consequential if it leads others to reject his message. Again, I know multiple Christians who have left the faith due to such misguided preaching. Often, a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other parts of the world, about the motions and orbits of the stars and even their sizes and distances, … and this knowledge he holds with certainty from reason and experience. It is thus offensive and disgraceful for an unbeliever to hear a… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

And Augustine was wrong.

Often, a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and
the other parts of the world, about the motions and orbits of the stars
and even their sizes and distances

the beliefs of the day were somewhat incorrect. So what the non-Christian “knew” was probably incorrect. Which shows that we need not agree with the claims of the day about things that are not certain. Some of his other comments are reasonable, but denying evolution, or the world being 4 billion years old is not reckless.

Denying a boy is a boy is reckless.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Who are these highly intelligent evolution-accepting scientists who think a boy can become a girl in any meaningful biological sense?

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

If you are going to dismiss one belief because those who practice it have other errors,

Not at all. We all have errors. But we are justified in not listening to grossly immoral people (even if they happen to be right in some areas; which every person is). Further, we are right to disregard those who can’t get the most obvious right.

I listen frequently to my pastor even though he believes in evolution, global warming, and a variety of other concepts that I dispute.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

And the “fact of boys and girls” as an absolute is not an obvious one in most of the world. Nearly every culture has a 3rd gender of one sort or another. In Biblical culture they were called eunuchs. They are different in different cultures, but the conclusion that “boy with penis, girl without penis” are the only two options is only “an obvious one” within a very limited set of cultural assumptions. Not even mentioning people who are clearly intersex physically as well as mentally. And it certainly didn’t start with evolutionists. You’re off by thousands of years there.… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The intersex (physically) is irrelevant. I am not talking about ambiguous cases that even the researchers struggle with. My point was that clearly boys and clearly girls (the majority) are clearly so and even young children can tell them apart. Evolution is far more subtle than that. Taking a pastor to task for denying a questionable complex theory while giving the world a free pass for denying the blindingly obvious is where I mean you have it back to front.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

It’s not questioning evolution that can make people grow a little weary of pastoral utterances on the subject. I have heard a few on youtube, and they are too often characterized by misstatements of basic points in conjunction with a whole lot of accusations of bad faith. Before venturing to say that only a fool or a villain can accept evolution, I would make sure I could more or less accurately summarize the basic elements of the theory. As I said earlier, I don’t think anyone believes in the possibility of gender change at the molecular level. It’s unfair to… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I know that they have high sounding (conflicting) explanations for their beliefs. More so than children. After all, it takes a certain amount of education to think that males can transition to females. But it is still nonsense and foolishness. So Christians cannot be calling out Christians for criticising an admitted difficult theory that evolutionary scientists disagree about in virtually every detail except for the fact that evolution did happen. And then pay attention to otherwise intelligent men holding preposterous positions. I know several people who, in various ways, aid men and women in their attempts at being a different… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I agree that body dysmorphia, even in so severe a form, should not be treated with surgery etc. Even if I had no other objection to using surgery to treat an emotional disorder, there is no evidence that most people who undergo it end up any happier. The evidence seems to go the other way. Which is what we would expect. I have often been surprised that there is a great deal of vitriol directed against people who have the surgery, but I have seldom read any criticism of the presumably emotionally healthy surgeons who wield the knife. They, more… Read more »

fp
fp
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

What is it about this case that makes it horrifying? I thought that a woman’s right to autonomy over her own body is sacrosanct, and that whatever she does with her body is between her and her doctor.

Who cares whether it’s a pair of eyeballs or a “clump of cells”?

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  fp

If I believed the first, it would be harder to condemn the second.

But what I find especially horrifying is that the therapist is presumed to be the sane one in the relationship. She (in this case, it was a she, but not an MD) either lost her clinical objectivity to such an extent that she grew to share her patient’s delusion, or she deliberately failed in her duty to keep her patient safe. In this state–at least for now–a therapist may not legally hand a suicidal patient a loaded gun. Let alone help her pull the trigger.

fp
fp
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I’m not saying you believe the first. My point is: When pagans actually do behave in a manner consistent with their “principles”, why is it horrifying in one instance but not the other?

Jilly, just so you know, this isn’t directed at you personally.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  fp

I know it isn’t!

I have been lucky enough in my lifetime to have known some very principled “pagan” people. The downside is that it has given me high expectations. I am always surprised when people behave badly. (I am not surprised when I behave badly.)

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

And this pollyanna jillybean is what endears us.

:)

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Thank you! My Snowflake is going to New Orleans tomorrow and I am feeling nervous. In Israel she will have ex-IDF security with her. In New Orleans who knows?? It is most unfair, but I always picture it as a den of iniquity.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Our perceptions of danger often exceed the real risks.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

She’s freaking out upstairs because she googled the murder rate. “Snowflake! You grew up in a gang-infested LA neighborhood! Woman up here!”

But I would appreciate it if you would say a prayer for her anyway!

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Ay-y-y, getting the Snowflake to the airport is enough penance even for a Catholic on Good Friday. When I have a noon flight, I am at the gate by 9 AM. I leave it only to go ask strangers if they are sure I am in the right terminal and at the right gate, and if are they sure that my plane is going to the right place. Once I have done this half a dozen times, I relax…sort of. The Snowflake appears to think that no flight would ever take off without her. I hope the Israelis will do… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

3 hours! I am annoyed I have to be at the airport 90 minutes before an international flight.

Private Benjamin?

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

A movie about a very over-indulged girl who is jilted before her wedding and runs across an army recruiter who promises her condos in foreign places if she enlists. It is very funny watching Goldie Hawn deal with basic training. But she perseveres and ends up having unsuspected depths of character and courage.

But now I must go back to obsessively following the Snowflake’s plane on Flight Tracker. Not that I’m over protective or anything like that. Of course not.

Indigo
Indigo
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

If it’s any comfort, my conservative and respectable parents have been several times in the last few years and they adore New Orleans.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Sympathy can be variable. For example the fa’afafine are to be pitied somewhat and the culture that created them rebuked. And it is right to be compassionate to those who struggle, and resist, and are horrified by their sin. Why would anyone hate on a guy that struggles with gay feelings but who knows the feelings are wrong and prays against them. This is (somewhat) similar to alcoholics giving up drink and men staying away from porn. But there is a militancy that Christians seem afraid to confront. Even if there is a background issue that pushed someone to a… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

You’re almost perfectly engaging in exactly what N. T. Wright called out in his short video on Genesis. Trying to argue one question by making a completely unwarranted connection to an unrelated question so that you can then tie it to the culture wars. It is simply never a path to truth.

We generally agree on the Christian response to gender dysmorphia. But for you to keep pushing the idea that you can use that as a culture war bludgeon to attack evolution is ridiculous.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

You’re the one who claimed people were leaving the church because pastors deny evolution. Then they join a culture that tells them sodomy is moral, and sex outside commitment is moral, and kids don’t need a dad and a mum, and that boys can be girls. I am sorry, but the issue here is what people are willing to believe. If one has a problem with his pastor’s denial of evolution (something far from obvious), but not a problem with other facts that are far more than obviously incorrect, then his crisis of the faith was not a crisis of… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I’m leaving aside for now the people who have other mental issues. But are you claiming that someone who isn’t intersex physically can’t be intersex mentally? Not even saying that is what is happening, but even a well-educated child could understand that it could possibly happen, right? Again, this isn’t something new or connected to evolution, but something that has been recognized in most cultures across millennia. Again, not saying that makes it right. But this claim, “even a child knows” is simply not true in the reality of the world, but simply a function of the cultural norms the… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

My claim is that the idea that actual boys are girls is so Emperors New Clothes that the justification for that is usually a sophisticated one, one that intellectuals like to use. But still nonsense. Can a boy have girl feelings? Why not. There are all manner problems in our fallen world. Though the current trend being so big reflects copycat behaviour for many rather than severe gender feelings. But it is still a wrong feeling, much as wanting to steal, or get angry (sinfully), or be attracted to the same sex is a wrong feeling. What we are seeing… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I believe in gender differences that affect how we think, how we process information, make decisions, and so on. But I think that these differences are so much on a continuum that I don’t think “woman’s in a man’s body” has much meaning.

Society at large no longer imposes rigid gender roles on people. A man who thinks his tastes, interests, and mental processes tend toward the feminine doesn’t have all that many people telling him he can’t study fashion design. I sometimes wonder why this greater tolerance does not seem to have reduced gender dysphoria.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Happy Easter, Jonathan.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Happy Easter Jill!

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: I know hundreds of Christians who understand the basic science of natural selection and genetics and Earth history while remaining deeply obedient Christians. I also know hundreds of Christians who don’t pretend that natural selection and genetics are at the focus of what is wrong with evolutionism. Theistic evolutionists don’t help their case (let alone the cause of evangelism) when they keep suggesting that creationists are hung up on Mendelian genetics. All it really shows is that evolutionists are still muddying the lines of the debate. Jonathan wrote: Unfortunately, I also know former Christians who thought they had… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I have no trouble at all accepting the miraculous. When I am told that our Lord turned ordinary water into wine, I believe that. But if I were told I must believe in a kind of miracle science that accounts for water turning into wine–so that it is not a question of my believing that natural laws were suspended, but of my believing that there is a special kind of chemistry with its own laws that are truer than the laws discovered by the vast majority of chemists–then it becomes difficult. The theory of evolution may one day be discarded.… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I also know hundreds of Christians who don’t pretend that natural selection and genetics are at the focus of what is wrong with evolutionism. Theistic evolutionists don’t help their case (let alone the cause of evangelism) when they keep suggesting that creationists are hung up on Mendelian genetics. All it really shows is that evolutionists are still muddying the lines of the debate…. Again, obvious biological facts are not the problem. Such facts would be the sort that are actually reproducible, rather than the evolutionary stories about the distant past which aren’t reproducible. If any seeker thinks that they have… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I don’t think that genetics has anywhere near shown what you imply in this comment. The proof across genus and family lines is very speculative, and there is significant disagreement between supposed evolutionary trees from genetic and fossil claims.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

So where do you believe the line is, and what is this line? Please, seriously, tell me when you think this “speculative” stuff starts. How is the process by which common ancestry evaluated within a species any different than that within a genus, within a family, and so on?

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Frequently what they are actually looking at is different. For example in ancestry they may look at actual conserved domains. So the DNA may be the same between father and daughter, even though historically the gene has mutated (or has natural variants). These may be in areas that are non coding. And we know that humans are the same kind. Across different kinds of animals the assumption (which is an assumption, not evidenced by the actual DNA) is common ancestry. DNA from various genes are compared with the assumption that the original gene in the ancestral organism was the same… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Frequently what they are actually looking at is different. For example in ancestry they may look at actual conserved domains. So the DNA may be the same between father and daughter, even though historically the gene has mutated (or has natural variants). These may be in areas that are non coding. Not sure completely what you’re getting at. Like you say, it does vary from test to test, and not as in “x relationships are evaluated this way whereas y relationships are evaluated that way”. Sometimes what they are looking at is different, other times what they are looking at… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Whining and ad hominem aside, Jonathan wrote: What you apparently don’t know is that there’s no line at all – the exact same genetic principles show the common ancestry of two closely related species, two more distant related species, two different genre, different families, etc. Contrast that statement with Jonathan’s claim that: That’s why NO ONE in this discussion is saying, “It would be impossible for God to have specially created all creatures distinctly in the beginning.” Science cannot tell you that. All science can do is look at the evidence and tell you what we can know about the… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

Whining and ad hominem aside :dead: Does Jonathan merely mean hypothetically possible, but historically impossible? Yes, thought that was quite obviously what I said. No one denies that God could have created such a world, but the evidence shows rather clearly that He didn’t. It seems that Jonathan is the one still struggling with his own philosophy on the limits of science. The claimed contradiction isn’t there, and for you to think there was one shows that you not only read me wrong, but that you think there might really be hard boundary lines across the board that were set… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: No one denies that God could have created such a world, but the evidence shows rather clearly that He didn’t. Yet Jonathan also declared: All science can do is look at the evidence and tell you what we can know about the natural world, not how God did it. So how can Jonathan claim to know, by looking only at the physical world, how God did it? He can’t have it both ways. Jonathan seems to be making some rather bold claims about how God did, or didn’t do it. Again, if Jonathan were around in the garden… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

So how can Jonathan claim to know, by looking only at the physical world, how God did it? He can’t have it both ways. Jonathan seems to be making some rather bold claims about how God did, or didn’t do it. Yet again, you continue to refuse to recognize a distinction between what God did and how God did it. Those are two different things. We can look at evidence for what God did. We do not know how God did it. The way you almost constantly reframe my arguments in inappropriate ways to try to create false dilemmas is… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: Yet again, you continue to refuse to recognize a distinction between what God did and how God did it. Those are two different things. We can look at evidence for what God did. We do not know how God did it. Jonathan appears to be making a distinction without a difference. If he claims that God used eons of death and suffering to produce all the animals from a common ancestor, he is not simply claiming that God created, he is asserting how God did it. Not sure why he can’t acknowledge that. Jonathan wrote: And yes, God… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: Since I don’t believe that God would so elaborately deceive us for no discernible purpose, I dismiss that possibility. If God DID do so, then I’m sure that we’ll have a laugh about it when we meet, but I’m not the least concerned about eternal consequences. As with jillybean, Jonathan is choosing in which direction he is willing to be wrong. If God really did create the world in just a week, with the appearance of age, and did so as a pattern for man’s own sabbath rest, then Jonathan thinks this would make God a deceiver, in… Read more »

Christopher Casey
Christopher Casey
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Since I don’t believe that God would so elaborately deceive us for no discernible purpose, I dismiss that possibility.”

Why do you insist that either all life evolved from a common ancestor or God is intentionaly deceiving us? You almost sound like you’re getting talking points from Richard Dawkins.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Because the fossil record quite clearly shows a long pattern of descent. Because homologous structures in current animals show obvious signs of common ancestry. Because the DNA record shows that same pattern of descent and common ancestry. Because there is literally no explanation whatsoever for God doing such unless he is trying to trick someone into thinking those things really happened. Let’s say that God suddenly created Christopher Casey as a 19-year-old adult in the year 2016. We could accept that that happened. But let’s say that God also created a school record for Christopher Casey showing that he attended… Read more »

Christopher Casey
Christopher Casey
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Because there is literally no explanation whatsoever for God doing such unless he is trying to trick someone into thinking those things really happened.” Because there is no possibility that our perception is flawed in some way? “But let’s say that God also created a school record for Christopher Casey showing that he attended certain schools in 2003-2015, created an arrest record for him showing that he was arrested but not charged in 2014, created a dental record showing he got his wisdom teeth removed in 2015 and took out his wisdom teeth to match it, created medical records showing… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Of course the possibility is there – but that possibility extends to the perception of Scripture AND the perception of creation. On one hand, we have a rather understandable interpretation of Scripture in Genesis 1-3 that fits the text as well as fitting what we know of creation. On the other hand, we have an inexplicable and pervasive issue in our interpretation of creation that can only be explained by our flawed perception if it is to match with a particular favored interpretation of Scripture. I’m never going to say I can “prove” anything or that I “know” anything perfectly… Read more »

Christopher Casey
Christopher Casey
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“Again, I haven’t seen you explain why if you apply this logic to the fossil record and DNA and homologous structures of modern organisms, you can’t apply it equally to a geocentric solar system and a flat Earth.” One could do that, but my goal is not to get anyone to deny what their senses tell them about reality. If the plain reading of scripture clashes with our peception of reality than either our reading or our peception is off. If you say that if our peception is wrong than God is deliberately deceiving us what can you say to… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago

Because I don’t see any deception in Scripture. Genesis 1-3 is quite obviously composed of two different stories, and they are clearly allegory meant to teach us about our relationship with God. No one thinks that snakes are the wisest of creatures, that they talk, or that now as a curse they eat dust. The way that Genesis 2-3 is framed, it quite strongly recalls the story of Israel’s exile, showing how that cycle of gift and disobedience and loss has been repeated since the beginning of humanity’s relationship with God. Now, I can see how people could easily take… Read more »

Dan
Dan
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

11 Therefore God sends them a strong delusion, so that they may believe what is false, 12 in order that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness. (2 Thess 2:11-12)…gulp!
Dan

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dan

So do you agree with the other commentor below in applying that thought to a geocentric solar system? Why or why not?

Of course, you don’t need to, because the actual context is regarding those who follow the anti-Christ and God’s actions in the End of Days, and has absolutely nothing to do with what we see in God’s creation. The perils of proof-texting.

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: No, you’re quite wrong on multiple levels. First off, “deny the biological fact of death” is a meaningless statement. I’m pretty sure everyone who believes in the resurrection accepts the biological fact of death, because if there wasn’t a biological fact of death the resurrection would be meaningless. The Resurrection is what it is BECAUSE death is omnipresent in this world. Otherwise it wouldn’t have the meaning that it does. Not one for consistency, Jonathan is willing to permit miracles that plainly contradict the biological facts about the permanence of biological death, but he is not willing to… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

Not one for consistency, Jonathan is willing to permit miracles that plainly contradict the biological facts about the permanence of biological death, but he is not willing to permit the miracle of special, direct creation of original kinds, because that would, you know, contradict biological facts about offspring only coming from biological parents. Jonathan’s entire point against the doctrine of creation (being a stumbling block to the science-minded seeker) turns out to be special pleading about which miracles Jonathan has already chosen should be acceptable, on a biological basis, and which are unacceptable. Hard to imagine a finer example of… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I don’t think the doctrine of special creation is a stumbling block for the science-minded. The stumbling block is the scientific evidence we are asked to believe in order to prove that this miraculous event occurred exactly as Genesis states 6000 years ago and that it explains the physical world as we see it today. The stumbling block is that I have to regard almost every modern scientist as a knave or a fool because some religious teachers have framed the issue as Believe all of it or none of it. I could almost handle “It was a miracle that… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan wrote: And your claim that science can only give you information on reproducible things is more creationist mumbo jumbo. Are you claiming that scientific investigations of murder scenes are useless because no one can reproduce the murder? Of course not. Do you believe that scientific study of, say, the Black Death of the 17th century is fruitless because no one can produce that event? Of course not. Science is constantly informing us on past events which we have events for, using principles gained from understanding other events. That’s how all knowledge is built. You make experiments and observations under… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

Unfortunately, he commits a very classic mistake. He doesn’t distinguish observation from extrapolation. He assumes that the authority of science applies equally to both, when it, manifestly, does not. I guess you can call it a “very classic mistake” if by that you mean, “a classic distinction that many centuries ago was shown to be logically false. Even on the most basic level, everything you observe is meaningless without extrapolation. All your brain knows is that some light wavelengths with different amount of a few particular colors have hit the back of your eyes, and that the air outside your… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

Criminologists do tell us, however, that eyewitness testimony is much less credible than forensic evidence.
http://forensicoutreach.com/library/%E2%80%A8do-the-eyes-really-have-it-why-eyewitness-testimony-is-more-fallible-than-you-think/

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

Jonathan wrote: Science is constantly informing us on past events which we have evidence for (obvious typo corrected), using principles gained from understanding other events. That’s how all knowledge is built. This is false. All knowledge is not built using the scientific method. Science is a particularly limited means of knowledge, which is why it is so persuasive in the situations when it can be applied. Most of our knowledge is by way of faith in testimony, not by way of actual scientific experimentation. If Jonathan believes that George Washington crossed the Delaware, he does not have that knowledge because… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

And it was exactly pre Kantian thought that our Westminster Brothers swallowed before they regurgitated the idea that Mankind’s ruminations on the propositions presented in scripture can offer a sufficient platform of knowledge for salvation.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

what else could offer such a platform? As long as we have not the minds of angels, can we do otherwise?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Because we are not minds in vats, an anesthetic experience of God through the creation in which He has situated us provides an entirely sufficient basis for contact with Him.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Anesthetic? I am not familiar with that word in this context. Do you mean “not physical”, hence privileging reason over sense-experience? That doesn’t seem to fit your meaning. Paraphrase, please?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Hah! Beautiful auto-spell correct!
Meant aesthetic.

We experience and can and do and should pursue knowledge of God through means other than mental propositions.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Forms are not just exterior packaging for content.
They are content.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Say, perhaps, a form of content :-). Because a form and its content are distinct things, and may inform each other in a variety of ways. They are both properly subject to interpretation, but in different ways.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

That makes a lot more sense!

Are you meaning to exclude mental propositions, or merely to deny them exclusive claims to truth? If the “other means” of knowledge seem to contradict mental propositions, which would you be more inclined to reject?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

What God says in his works of art or architecture tend to be more accessible to a wider audience then what he has said in the limited number of propositions he has sporadically enumerated. Even babies in the womb have a whole lot of theology presented to them.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

They are also more ambiguous. Every pagan who has every seen the sky knows that its ruler demands our worship. To determine that the Sky God also came to die for our transgressions requires Special Revelation.

I consider nature is informative, but Scripture is necessary. Seeing mountains cannot save us, but a blind man who hears the gospel and repents will be just fine. Would you accept that hierarchy?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Oh but now you’ve gone and jumped in bed with Kant again!

What content God communicates is never ambiguous, unless our hearts are dark.

Then, Scripture will be no more help than a heartbeat.

And Scripture proper has always been preceeded by nature, and cannot be interpreted without it.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

So you would argue that the Bible is unnecessary? Or is it your view that the gospel is sufficiently apparent within the bloody scope of fallen nature? You are free to reject my proposed hierarchy, but I would like to know your alternative.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Propositions are not only unnecessary but also ineffective, given the bloody scope of fallen nature, are they not?

Name just one proposition you find in the Bible that is required to understand for the obtaining of salvation!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

that Jesus died for my sins?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

And awareness plus acceptance of this proposition brought salvation to Abel, Noah, Melchisidec, Abraham, Jethro etc?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I don’t know what you want me to tell you. Yes, knowledge of grace in itself is insufficient. Nevertheless, God makes things known in his word and generally makes knowing them a pre-condition for salvation. “How shall they believe in whom they have not heard?” Do you disagree with that?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I want you to tell me that Abel in fact did not need to be aware of that proposition you had said was indispensable for him to be aware of if he were to be saved.

Hearing must occur, yes.
It is the metaphor for faith.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

No human activity, strictly speaking, is necessary for salvation. God saves at his own good pleasure and by his own free will. Nevertheless, God has ordained that the ordinary means by which one comes to faith will be hearing and believing the message of the gospel. I see no reason to imagine that Abel was unfamiliar with this doctrine – the man wasn’t offering blood sacrifices for no reason, after all, and God’s direct revelation of that promise was easily within living memory.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Theoretically, then, you hold that all humans potentially have sufficient memories or histories recording the needed “direct” revelation?

And you are unaware of how Abel could use his noodle plus observations upon the state of God’s created order to “hear” and see that to be saved by the God he knows requires a condition of loyalty and trust that all the provisions He gives are gifts worthy of total submission?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I don’t think everyone’s mom and dad got direct verbal revelation from God, if that is what you are asking. Abel is a special case, for many many reasons. If a man dies without ever hearing of the gospel, my expectation is that he will be damned. Hence the need for missionaries. I am not “unaware” of this idea you seem hold: that Abel could reason his way into salvation by looking at and experiencing the world. I have heard of it before, and I think it false. It is not hard to see how nature teaches us about sin.… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Ok, you say Abel was a special case.

Noah too?
And Melchisidek, and Abraham and Jethro?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Can you please explain what you are trying to prove by these examples? Are these people supposed to represent saints who did not have the benefit of special revelation, or what? You proposed champions fall into two categories: those of whom we are almost entirely ignorant, and those to whom God talked directly. Neither of those proves what I suppose to be your case.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Your answer has dodged your own previous requirement that the proposition “Jesus died to save” must be understood or accepted.

Why don’t you be consistent and simply state that while the text is not explicit, you believe it must have been that that was somehow exactly what was propositionally communicated by special revelation to all those old testament figures?

That’s the only way they can be saved according to your paradigm: by mentally agreeing with some abstract proposition!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

That isn’t my paradigm, and I have said as much up thread. Don’t put words in my mouth.

Is it conceivable for someone to be saved without assenting to some set of propositions? I’d like you to explain how that works, if you can. Granted, God is free to do as he pleases. But I cannot imagine what it would look like for a rational human soul to be forgiven his sins without obtaining something that pretty closely resembles the knowledge I get from reading Scripture.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Let’s cut to the chase … Once you have whatever info you think is required, then what do you think happens to get a “rational human soul” saved? I gather you think the devil and his crew have a pretty good bead on that info and aren’t confused as to its meaning. So you probably don’t think acquisition of correct info is sufficient, since those bad angels aren’t saved with it. So what happens to the humanoids once they’ve been enlightened as to the propositional content you hold so indispensable as groundwork? Does the Spirit then use the info as… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Men are ordinarily saved by ordinary means. So when one hears the message of the gospel (information), the Spirit uses that information to work conviction in the heart of the about-to-be believer, whence spring repentance and faith as a response. I don’t see how anyone can repent of sin without knowing what sin is. And that information is propositional.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

the Spirit uses propositions to work conviction in the heart — wait:

How did conviction get introduced into the picture?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

By the Spirit, like I said…

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Ok then — you say the Spirit adds a new element into the picture = conviction!

Would you define conviction as a disposition?
Would you go so far as to say it is an orientation towards God that is one of love?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Yeah, sure. The information is used by the spirit to produce a change of heart, resulting in repentance and faith. Where’s the problem in that?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

The problem with that is that you’ve demanded that a change of heart be preceded by by mental acuity and intellectual acceptance of an argument.

Can’t change the heart without logic first being exercised, right?

You’re making faith wait for works by brain.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Not an argument, a fact: that one is a sinner.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I’m doing my best to answer your questions. I’d appreciate it if you had a go at mine.

Is it possible to repent of my sins and put my faith in Christ without knowing certain propositions that are contained in Scripture? If it is possible, how are those actions (repentance and faith) meaningful?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Repent of sins without knowing certain (I presume you’d say fundamental) propositions?! — Yes it is not only entirely possible, but in almost all cases (well I’d strike that almost and just go with always) there is hardly any propositional knowing actually really going on anyway. Who do you know that really understands those propositions? These are the deep things of God, and knowing much of what they mean is beyond the ability of even the subtlest minds. Besides, it isn’t the understanding of propositions + accepting them that gets one saved. Repenting of sins — now that’s a different… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

“In all cases there is hardly any propositional knowledge going on”…
so is Paul mistaken when he says that the Law brings about conviction of sins? Do you have any evidence for this point of view?

What can it mean to repent of sin when you don’t know what sin is? How can I put my faith in Christ without knowing who he is? That doesn’t make sense.

Your explanation refers to something (pre-natal repentance) that has never happened, so far as can be known by men. That’s not very convincing.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Paul is not mistaken. the Law brought conviction of sin to Abel, for example — before the Israelite “law” was even written. So where was the Law in Abel’s day? It was and is throughout all creation. Of course, the Law then also required the Spirit to bring a happy outcome. And this is universally the case, whether in the womb or in the old man. What can it mean to repent of sin when you don’t know what sin is? — You’ve already precluded in your own head that “knowing what sin is” = a mental cognitive capability for… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

The Law in Abel’s day had been directly delivered to Adam and Eve. I don’t know why it is so difficult for you to concede that. At the time, with the world newly cursed by sin from their lawbreaking, I daresay it was sufficiently obvious. I have concluded “in my own head” – your head being presently in use, and unavailable – that knowing means “knowing”. Yes, guilty as charged. It is not exclusively a mental activity, but neither can it be exclusive of our minds. I have no earthly idea what children or disabled people know, or do not… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

What Law in Abel’s day had been delivered directly to Adam?!!
Go forth, multiply & subdue?! >> that’s what you call a tidy summary of God’s law?!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

No, more like “Don’t eat from the tree or you shall surely die”.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Hmm — a bit problematic wouldn’t you say?
Abel is supposed to be convicted by a Law he had no opportunity to obey or disobey?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

No, remarkably, I wouldn’t. That’s why I used it as an example.

Adam’s transgression of that primal law is the basis of the original sin with which Abel, like the rest of us, was cursed. The effects of the fall were all around him. This was readily available information.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Okay — therefore that Law that Paul says was given is on display and can be known propositionally by observation of its effects when disobeyed?

Noah, Melchisidek, Abraham all had access via observation to this form of special revelation, even before they heard or saw a word from God?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Absolutely – the world abounds in evidence for sin. What is harder to derive from mere observation is the possibility of salvation. That is why the world is generally pagan, and why we are commanded to tell people of our faith, not wait for them to figure it out for themselves.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

The question is, is this abounding evidence for sin an example of propositions of special revelation? You said Paul’s statement that the Law convicts = a reference to the historic special revelation placement of propositions given way back even to Adam. You said Abel observed those propositions in the effects in the world. Therefore the effects in the world are a record of special revelation, you say. Now you appear to be trying to say that even those specific special revelations are not going to be effective agents for the Spirit to bring salvation, because they do not encompass the… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

You asked about which Law Abel would have been familiar with. The special revelation needed for grace would be God’s subsequent promise of a redeemer, the Seed of the Woman. My contention remains the same: faith must have a content, and the way we understand content is in terms of propositions.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

So your position demands that, because Abel was saved, then Adam &/or Eve MUST HAVE communicated this verbal special revelation promise (unavailable to discover in the natural world) to Abel (stipulating that he could have otherwise been saved in an unordinary means)?

Faith is definitely full of content.
The best content there is.
Faith is the heart & soul of what we need to hope for: love & loyalty to God.

“The way we understand content is in terms of propositions?” — yep.
I’m just saying we don’t need to understand it to have it.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

That is my assumption. I don’t say it “needed” to happen that way, but that seems the simplest account to me. And I actually agree, to a point, that we don’t need to understand the content of faith perfectly. I would say that one needs to have some clue, so as to distinguish faith from a meaningless gesture, but I don’t think I can stipulate the precise degree required. Like a parachute, perhaps. To say that I “trust” my parachute implies that I know certain things: jumping out of a plane is dangerous, my chute is meant to stop me,… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Thanks for the engagement.
I benefited from the exercise.
I respect your opinions.
I’m glad you’re thinking about such things.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

No one can figure it out for themselves, of that we agree.

I’m not sure I agree that the world is generally pagan.
Maybe.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

You would say that it is mostly Christian? I find that surprising. Or is there a third option?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Remember the guy crying “I’m all alone in believing you, Lord!”
God: “I’ve got so many you have no idea about”

To take a stand proclaiming you know the state of most of the world’s hearts is, however, in logical keeping with someone who has first required them to do some thinking then mental accepting of those propositions before you’ll identify them as saved.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

No, it actually just requires that I read the Bible: many are called, but few are chosen. God’s people are always in the minority wherever they find themselves.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I won’t fight you on that one.
There is a school of thought, however, that finds that billions and billions of believers are still the chosen few.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I would not call the evidence from nature “special revelation”. That’s general revelation.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

And you’ve said that not just any special revelation comprises the requisite informational content sufficient to be usable by the Spirit to enable & bring salvation.
Not only will general revelation do.
Even the parts of special revelation that we call the Law will not do.

You’ve said it has to be parts about a promised salvation.
Now that’s something the Spirit can use!
The rest, probably just helpful context, right?

But to get right down to it, a few cryptic words about a coming seed crushing a snake’s head — that’s all we need!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I deny that they were so cryptic. I understand them, and Adam was far smarter than me. And he talked with God directly! What makes you think he didn’t know what it meant?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I see you now allow exceptions to God’s ways!
Of course, you must be at an impasse to find anything anywhere in Scripture for this idea that God makes exceptions to anything He demands!
Your logic so far allows God to let reprobates into heaven as is — after all, He’s God and He can do whatever He likes, right?!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

You’re not even trying. If you have any response to what I actually said, feel free to post it.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Your have no earthly idea what children know?!

For all you know, a 2 day old zygote does have the requisite mental capacity to ascertain & assent to those abstract propositions you demand?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I have no idea at what pace embryonic children develop intellectual capacities, or anything that could be described as will. Nor do you.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Therefore, they may be capable of knowing and accepting those propositions?
And, in fact, if God will be saving them by what you call “ordinary means”, this must be the case?!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Your hyperbolic punctuation does not lend your argument any additional urgency, in case you were wondering.

“Ordinary” is not the word I would use to describe the salvation of a fetus.
Is that something you think happens very frequently?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Almost universally.

So will you take to the stand and agree you’re unsure if a 1 day old zygote is capable of ruminating on those propositions?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Are you so sure that he can’t? Who appointed you pre-natal expert to the nations, anyway? I repeat my question: do you regard the repentance and faith of a zygote as normal or exceptional?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I like where you’re going with this! You’re saying one doesn’t actually need a brain to consider abstract propositions! I myself do not regard the repentance and faith of zygotes as in any way exceptional. I consider it not only the norm, but the correct expectation of every set of believing parents with regard to these kiddos. We believe these immediately conceived ones have been given faith. You’ve now said that even you can imagine that those first cells might be capable of having all the equipment needed to enable them to encounter, and, with the work of the Spirit,… Read more »

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Sorry, but I think that’s nuts. I gave you an inch and you’re trying to take a mile. As if something being miraculously possible – and not even certain, then, merely within God’s possible range of action- were enough to demonstrate that it is probable. You haven’t got any theological argument, or even a coherent theory of how this might work. You have got one possible case, John the Baptist, who is a glaring exception to almost every natural rule, and you have inexplicably decided to make him the model of conversion. It’s like making an argument about the surface… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Abel did not reason his way to salvation.
There you go accepting Cartesian categories again.
What do they teach these boys in Sunday school nowadays?

Cain thought as straight as Abel.
But he chose to flaunt self-sufficency.

But you and Cain pretend to be nonplussed at God’s reaction, so inscrutable you find nature as He presents it.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I have asked you several straightforward questions, and it begins to seem that you are playing games. Abel is nearly the worst possible example for the thesis that we don’t need direct revelation to be saved – his mom talked with God, and received the promise of the gospel directly. It’s hard to get much more special than the revelation he had.

Answer me this, or let’s have done: what, in your opinion, is the relationship of the sixty-six books of the Bible, to the rest of creation?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I’m sorry to se see wear out so quickly.

I would go with words of comparison like further, examples, more abstract and analytical than, when differentiating Bible from other created things.

Those books are a gift from God that He expects us to use for teaching us helpful things about how to live.

They provide further models of how to live and how not to live, and also very encouraging info on some if the specific things we can expect.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

If Scripture is merely an extension of what we see lying around in creation, would you say that it is unnecessary for salvation?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

Scripture, by itself, just “lying around”, is totally unnecessary for salvation.
And so is any and all of the rest of any created things.

That is not to say it is irrelevant to salvation, however.

A surgeon (the Spirit of God) can pick up any old scalpel he has handy and work wonders.
If he’s clever enough (and He is) he can use his bare hands.
And He has.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

I would say that the word of God is pretty effective “just lying around”. That is, a man can pick it up and read it and come to faith. I don’t see that happening with cranberries, mountains, or maple trees.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

“a man can pick it up and read it and come to faith” — well, only if you include that tiny little detail about that other little thing — you know, the Holy Spirit of Almighty God walking into your picture and doing open heart surgery.

Note, He doesn’t do open brain surgery.
Not at first.
The thinking comes later, as a result of getting a new heart / being born again.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Not according to Paul. “How shall they believe in whom they have not heard.” Hearing, hence knowledge, precedes faith. That knowledge won’t do anything without divine action. But your soteriology is simply unbiblical on this point.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

I agree — hearing & knowing precedes faith.
Hearing, you agree, doesn’t involve physical ears, does it!
Same with knowing, you know — it’s not a physical cranial brain thing!

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

By analogy I am willing to include “reading” within the definition of hearing, yes, particularly as Paul likely didn’t distinguish between the two – letters in his day were commonly consumed audibly, and letter-writing was considered a species of oratory. I do not know what alternative to “knowledge” you have in mind, and would like you to clarify.

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago

To know God or other folks is a way to describe disposition and orientation.

There’s a world of difference between hearing Him or, as you propose, hearing about Him.

To have know God, to hear Him, to see Him, means to have faith, to love Him.

Your position requires some unspecified threshold of intellectual development plus physical aptitudes including auditory or visual abilities.
It is therefore quasi-gnostic in nature, dependent upon some human attainment, before which others (infants, for example, but also older folks with cognitive disabilities) should be excluded unless an exception is somehow granted.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

Are you trying to posit a person incapable of thinking who nonetheless possesses will? Are you talking about someone legally braindead, or what? Because infants think. Demented, crazy people think, too, although not with great clarity. So I don’t know whom you are trying to protect by denying the role of intellection. But I am happy for God to make exceptions for such people, presumably by direct revelation.

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

If propositions are unnecessary and ineffective, why did God give so many?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

They are ever so useful – “useful”: isn’t that the word the Bible itself uses to describe its own character? Useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness?

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

So something can be useful and ineffective at the same time?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

John — I’ve found hammers extremely useful for pounding nails.
Darn if they aren’t ineffective refrigerators, though.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago

I think that nature alone leads to some very unpleasant theology. Sunsets and starry nights are all very well, but earthquakes, volcanoes, and the dining habits of vultures might produce some horrifying beliefs about God.

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

How do you determine unequivocally what God says in His works of art or architecture?

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

Your question reveals a quest for certainty, does it not?

This question reveals that the questioner has at least temporarily accepted a Kantian poison that you will stand as at least one of the arbiters of truth.

But to be fair, your question must then be asked of any interpretation you apply to Scripture, does it not?

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  PerfectHold

So are you a follower of Peter Gabriel? or Soren Kirkegaard? or Erwin Schrodinger? John 8:31-32: So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” 1 John 5:13: I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, that you may know that you have eternal life. We should all be on a quest for certainty. If that makes us *sort of* agree with Kant, in part, and if… Read more »

PerfectHold
PerfectHold
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

You’ll have to dumb down that question for me a bit, sorry.

It seems your quest for certainty allows for the possibility that we don’t already know the truth.
I’m saying we can’t not know.

Adam van den Hoven
Adam van den Hoven
7 years ago

If you want to see a great analysis of how we got HERE while at the same time witnessing the proof of Romans 1, you should watch this https://youtu.be/WqFo32lwY_g

I found myself saying to myself “and now if only you draw the next conclusion … Oh Romans 1” frequently. Its very relevant, I think to this post

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago

The idea that natural selection is incompatible with teleology is hotly contested, to say the least. Natural selection can only take place within a world that is already structured. It is not random.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Au contraire. Randomness (in genetic and subsequent structural changes) is the heart of the theory of natural selection. Thus Einstein’s comment about God playing dice with the universe.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I agree. Theistic evolutionists are trying to bridge an unbridgeable gap, one which denies the core of Darwinianism (random genetic mutation, acted upon by natural selection), and explains away the straightforward meaning of Genesis.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

If one is a Christian, one cannot reconcile a God who says death is the penalty for sin, yet uses it to the infinite power to make the biological world, including us.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Psuedo-randomness possibly, but not true randomness. All Darwinian mechanisms depend on an entirely structured and logical world.

Darwinian randomness is similar to the randomness of a die roll. It’s only random because the complexity is too large for us to understanding or predict, but it isn’t truly random. If you could perfectly simulate all the forces on the roll of a die, then you could perfectly predict what number it would fall on. Genetic mutations work the same way.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Darwinian randomness = Hocus Pocus. Evolutionary theory depends on chance alone. The structure of physical “laws” is the result of chance in this universe, one of many in the multi-verse, according to this theory. Evolutionists are much better than Christians at tolerating no other God.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

The whole multiverse stuff has absolutely nothing to do with Darwinian evolution.

The randomness in Darwinian theory has to do with genetic copying errors, commonly referred to as mutations. They are called random because we can’t predict them, not because they are truly stochastic by nature.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

They are related. Extrapolating the purely mechanistic means of evolution to a cosmology means ultimate randomness in the physical world as well. You can’t ascribe chance to biology and then stop at the physical laws (as Einstein did) and say this realm is solid, immovable and therefore “god.” Be consistent.
We want the randomness to a point. But when it tells us we mean nothing, our pride balks at that.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

They are both extrapolations of naturalism/materialism, but the multiverse is not an extrapolation of darwinian evolution. They are totally different theories with totally different mechanisms of action.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Your statement “It’s only random because the complexity is too large for us to understanding or predict, but it isn’t truly random” doesn’t fit the theories of natural selection or evolution. Every moment is a fork in the road, like whether I step on an ant or miss him by a fraction and change the future of millions of ants, ant predators and ant prey down the road. You have variability introduced every millisecond which makes the list of possible outcomes infinite. Thus, random.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Those aren’t random events, though. Under a naturalistic worldview, they are deterministic.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Determined by what or whom?

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

By the laws of physics.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

But what about the “choices” made by animals and humans?

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

A naturalist would see choices as, in the end, nothing more than the result of deterministic chemical reactions in the brain.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Well, that’s depressing.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I agree completely.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

So, my typing this response was a pre-determined result of the laws of physics from the beginning of the universe?

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

From the beginning of the universe? Possibly not because of the inherent randomness found in the quantum mechanics in the extremely early universe, but definitely determined since shortly after the start.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

So, to be clear, you are saying that in natural selection, there is no true variability nor randomness, just a pre-determined outcome based on the laws of physics? Do you ascribe to this theory?

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

That sounds like the Matrix, which brings us full-circle to Doug’s post as both of the Wachowskis now want us to call them sisters.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I often wonder about animals and choice. People who know much more about it than I do tell me that it looks as if my cats are making choices, but they’re not. What looks like choice is pure instinct. Then why do they have second thoughts about scratching the furniture when I walk into the room?

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  John

But a consistent worldview.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I don’t think that is actually true. But if every biologist in the world was an atheist (which is untrue), you would still have to show that their atheism invalidated their science. You would need to show that their atheism led them to cherry pick the evidence, to misstate their findings, and to engage in mass conscious deception. Whether Einstein’s relativity theory is valid doesn’t depend on his personal religious beliefs, his being pretty much a socialist, and his not being very nice to his wife.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Huh? Never said every biologist was an atheist, just almost all of the ones who taught me. The debate point is randomness and chance which are ENCASED in evolutionary theory and natural selection as they are taught currently by the majority, not as some would like them to be taught or changed. We’re not debating the theory itself. That’s a whole other topic.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I am always nervous about the role of world view in establishing truth. I realize that our perceptions and thoughts are filtered through our world view, and that one of the purposes of the scientific method is to test for this. But I think a major creationist argument has been either that their world view has blinded most biologists to truth, or that acceptance of the theory of evolution should not depend on whether there is evidence but rather on whether it is bad for society in general. I think that in general this is a risky argument because, once… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Again, I’m not talking about worldview. I’m saying that evolutionary theory and natural selection, as they are currently taught in the universities, both have at their core the idea of events that are random and by chance, both genetic mutations and the natural forces that work on biological entities.

It’s all rather silly anyway as natural selection does a lousy job of explaining the fossil record.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Perhaps we are not meaning the same thing by “random”. And what I mean by it might not be what a biologist means by it.

Have a blessed Good Friday and Easter.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Christ is risen indeed :)

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

And, in fact, randomness is NOT an essential feature of evolutionary theory. It is part of the theory believed by some, not by others, and that has never been experimentally proven. It is one of the places in which I believe certain evolutionists have added their philosophy beyond that which is warranted by the scientific evidence.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I think 99% of the current pool of biology professors teaching in universities would disagree with your definition of their theory.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I disagree with your assertion and believe you should test it with 100 university biology professors, then get back to me. But even if it were true, it would not be an argument against my claim. Randomness has never been experimentally shown to be essential to evolution. It is one of the places where certain evolutionists have added their philosophy beyond that which is warranted by the evidence. Once you get in touch with those 100 university biology professors, ask them what experiment or fossil evidence demonstrated that randomness was essential to the evolutionary process. There is a strong current… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Okay. I’ll listen to N.T. Wright. Your homework is to study random genetic drift, random allele segregation, and population statistics.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

haha – what gives you the slightest impression that I don’t know what those words mean or what their implications are?

Have you ever read any of the following papers?

“Interaction-based evolution: how natural selection and nonrandom mutation work together”

“Climbing Mount Probable: Mutation as a Cause of Nonrandomness in Evolution”

“Evolution: are the monkeys’ typewriters rigged?”

“A Biochemical Mechanism for Nonrandom Mutations and Evolution”

“Nonrandomness of point mutation as reflected in nucleotide substitutions in pseudogenes and its evolutionary implications”

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I have not.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Ginny, I don’t want to be unpleasantly argumentative, but it doesn’t. Mutations are random, but they are sorted out by natural selection which is the very opposite of chance. Genetic variation is random (why my siblings and I who share the same genetic material don’t look alike), but the variations which are beneficial to a particular environment are selected. Even the arrangement of atoms and molecules is directed by their chemical properties, not by chance. If anything, natural selection seems to me to be brutally deterministic.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Indeed, even the mutations, genetic drift, genetic editing, etc. aren’t random. But the observer often has a limited understanding of the inputs. God does not play dice is quiet right. The cosmos and everything in it operates according to physical constants. There is no random.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

My math is lousy, and I don’t understand the inputs. What I found helpful was learning that the chance of any particular sequence resulting from shuffling a deck of cards is 52 factorial–roughly 8 X 10 to the 67th power. This number, if written out, would convince me that such an event is impossible–yet it happens every time we play cards.

St. Lee
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Even if your numbers are correct, your conclusion “yet it happens every time we play cards” is wrong. The event would have to be specific, such as the cards after the shuffle being aligned in numerical order by suit, something that does NOT happen every time we play cards. Now apply the same math to the number of atoms in the universe instead of a deck of 52 and see where your random takes you.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Whoever explained this to you has no understanding of statistics. That is not how it works. The chance of having a sequence is 1. The change of a predetermined specific sequence is tiny. You don’t get to choose the sequence after laying down the cards.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

No good ever comes of my mentioning anything mathematical. Delete it from the record. Let me go back where I belong.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Your math is fine, and correct. Your interlocutors didn’t understand the point (it appears you didn’t either…).

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

The analogy made sense to me, but I I don’t have much faith in my understanding once I move outside my own field. It is one of the problems of this kind of debate that people use arguments they do not fully understand.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I am very puzzled about something. When I first became aware of the debate a few decades ago, no creationists were discussing “information” as a vital requirement for speciation. I do read quite a few biology boards, and I don’t encounter any discussion of “information” other than as a spurious demand from creationists. Is “information” a concept recognized by biologists, and is there an accepted definition? Is there a way to detect and measure it?

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I will mostly have to claim ignorance of information theory. I think it came to prominence in the YEC community through Dembski (not a YEC!).

This might be useful (don’t take this as a recommendation, I haven’t read it):

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/information/infotheory.html

On a tangential point, some of the most interesting challenges to modern synthesis are mathmatical, such as Granville Sewell’s work. Of course these arguments are no help to YECs as they have mostly adopted super hyper fast evolution from baramids.

I think there are very few biologists with the math chops to wade into the math debate.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I read “baramid” as “barmaid” and thought “Well, this is a novel criticism.”

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

You gain no information. If there is sorting then the information gained is imposed from outside. If you randomly alter a key until it fits the lock then the final shape of the key is determined by the shape of the lock you are fitting it to. The gain in information of a blank key to a key that fits the lock is no more than the information contained in the lock.

Natural selection cannot generate information that does not already exist.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Random is random. Darwinian randomness is nonsensical. Natural selection is the end result, according to evolutionists, of random processes that result from random physical phenomenon. There is no “selection” by a higher intelligence. Evolution has ALWAYS been an attempt to describe the natural world as arising by natural means with NO GOD ALLOWED, either in the biological processes or the physical ones. Trying to meld evolution and theism is trying to have your cake and eat it too. Survival of the fittest fits with Romans 8:20–frustration and futility, but as a Christian I do not believe this is the natural… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Evolution need not be random. Some evolutionists use the term “random” when describing the theory, some do not. There is no particular evidence for the driving factors being totally random other than that “some” mutations of the genetic code appear random.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Again, every evolutionist I was ever taught by, and every textbook I ever read spoke of purely mechanistic processes, depending on chance for their occurence.
Not sure what you are getting at, Jonathan. Are you saying a creator God used evolution to create the biological world as we know it?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I’m saying that there’s a difference between the aspects of evolutionary theory that we have evidence for (from the fossil record, analogous organs, embryonic development, DNA structure, laboratory experiments with bacteria, natural observations, etc.) and the aspects of evolutionary theories that are just philosophical gloss added to that we actually know. Whether you want to hypothesize the intervention of God, or the ability of organisms to self-regulate and even alter their own DNA to some degree, there is no scientific evidence that convincingly demonstrates that truly “random” mutations have to be the driver of evolutionary change. And you might have… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

You didn’t answer my question. Do you believe a creator God used evolution to create the biological world as we know it?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Yes, in a sense. I believe that the creator God created the world, that the fossil record shows a general progression of species and those species are related to each other, and that natural selection appears to be part of the process at some level. I believe that the creator God is the one who chose to make a world where that would happen and that God had a pretty clear idea where it would all go. I didn’t use the word “evolution” in that answer because “evolution” can mean different things to different people, and I wanted to stick… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

How do you reconcile this with “through one man sin entered the world and death through sin” Rom 5:12, as well as Romans 6:23, “the wages of sin is death?”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Happy Easter Ginny! I think my answer might be highlighted best by my asking a series of questions instead. I’d love if you could answer them, briefly or in detail. 1. What do those verses mean to you? At the deepest, most significant level, what do you believe that Paul is trying to get across to the Roman congregation for the benefit of their lives, and hopefully for the benefit of yours as well? 2. How many times do you believe sin entered the world? 3. Do you feel personally responsible to some degree for your own sin? While another,… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

6. Jesus Christ died once for all (Heb 7:27, I Pet 3:18, Rom 6:10) 5. Jesus Christ’s sacrifice is the propitiation for our sins (1 John 2:2). He paid the penalty for our sins which is death (Rom 3:24, 6:23). 4. Spiritual death was instant as was physical death. Adam’s body began its anti-nascent. We have no record of animal death until after Adam’s sin. Also, Romans 8 says creation was subjected to futility and slavery to corruption. This implies animal death was part of the fall. Plants don’t “give up the ghost” kind of die. Who cares about bacteria?… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Dang, I was honestly thinking that we would be on the same page and I was simply going to say, “See, I agree with you on every single fundamental”, and instead you wrote something quite different than I expected. 1. What do those verses mean to you? At the deepest, most significant level, what do you believe that Paul is trying to get across to the Roman congregation for the benefit of their lives, and hopefully for the benefit of yours as well? Notice, Jonathan, how many times you frame the questions subjectively. God’s personal communication to us as individuals… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

My presupposition is simple: the Word of God is to be given the benefit of the doubt over and above the inductive process of science. Where they seem to conflict, I assume the straightforward meaning of scripture and assume that science doesn’t have the whole picture yet. Few questions… If the death resulting from sin wasn’t physical, then why did Jesus die a physical death to pay for our sins? Why do you call physical death a trial if it was part of how God made the world, calling it good? I’m not going to die on the animal-death hill,… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

My presupposition is simple: the Word of God is to be given the benefit of the doubt over and above the inductive process of science. Where they seem to conflict, I assume the straightforward meaning of scripture and assume that science doesn’t have the whole picture yet. While that’s a good presupposition if you had perfect insight into God’s word and had perfect confidence in your own interpretation, it doesn’t make the same kind of sense when you see that what you’re comparing science to is your INTERPRETATION of God’s word, which is certain to be faulty in places, as… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

No doubt there are errors in my interpretation of God’s word. That’s why I rely greatly on teachers who have come before me, whose life mission has been to study the scriptures and who have more knowledge than I. I also pray that God would show me the correct interpretation. However, I can guarantee you that there are profound errors in scientific theories of origins. A quick survey of science history shows both a multitude of errors in theories, and often a corresponding hubris, not unlike what we see today. I do hold strongly to this rubric, with the idea… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

However, I can guarantee you that there are profound errors in scientific theories of origins. A quick survey of science history shows both a multitude of errors in theories, and often a corresponding hubris, not unlike what we see today. Yes, neither theologians nor scientists are immune from human error. That is why we need to do our best to be humble and keep deepening our understanding in both pursuits, rather than sitting on one “truth” claim and saying that you will then ignore all outside evidence to the contrary. And be careful how much you ascribe hubris to the… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

When I look at pictures of a T-Rex’s fearsome teeth, with serrations for shredding it prey to ribbons, I can’t imagine how it coped with a vegetarian diet. Ate grass? And how could it have lumbered around without crushing every rabbit or kitten in its path?

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

You forgot that the early humans were riding on the top, directing them in a safe manner.

Ken Ham states that dinosaurs died out in a flood 4,300 years ago. Which would have made them contemporary not only with the early Israelites, but with quite a few well-documented global civilizations….none of which mention the tragedy (or blessing) of a bunch of dinosaurs getting killed off by the flood.

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2014/05/24/article-2638115-1E29BF6F00000578-28_634x419.jpg

http://www.sacredearthlings.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Jesus-With-Dinosaurs-012.jpg

http://68.media.tumblr.com/83a7688a7bca45c4e93c3dfc9f1b9355/tumblr_nc5u8fFZEI1r7lkbmo1_1280.jpg

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Why do I get the feeling you want to win an argument, rather than find the truth (which, by the way, will set you free)? This could go on forever as you refuse to concede any points, and you seem determined to conquer, rather than to gain knowledge.
God speed, Jonathan.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Probably because you have a very certain view of what you think the right interpretation is, and have already decided that anyone who doesn’t concede that you are correct must either be ignorant or dishonest. If you note, I have conceded several things that you’ve said were true. But I guess by this reply that you’re saying that unless I give up my basic position, any smaller agreements are meaningless. I spoke very honestly about what I believe and how I get there from the Scripture and Creation. These are topics I’ve spent approximately 18 years studying, including writing papers… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

No doubt you have spent lots of time pondering these things and honest answers are always good and appreciated. Of course I don’t expect you to switch to my point of view. I have pondered some of your points and these discussions can certainly help sharpen our thinking in both directions. But your method of arguing is, in my opinion, myopic. You assume I condemn all who disagree as ignorant or dishonest. You picked apart the minor points above–like the rotational velocity of the earth not being relative or how did those speckled sheep arise–and ignore the major ones–like all… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I know we don’t agree, but I do like how well and how kindly you express yourself.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Thanks for those kind words.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

That (atonement) especially is a big deal. You are willing to take the opinion of experts in science but not theology? Are you currently dialoguing with a creation scientist about some of these points? Are you dialoguing with your pastor? Your theological arguments have scents of Gnosticism, post-modern relativism and deconstructionism, and intellectual elitism. “I think it’s ridiculous to claim that there’s some simple “right theory” that God could just explain to us and we could understand perfectly.” You are just wrong here. Jesus spoke in terms that all can understand because He made us with a spectrum of intelligences.… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I really don’t want to get into a long detailed discussion. You are welcome to respond of course. You and Ginny have different levels of knowledge on different things. So the debate will go as far as what you know, or what she knows. She has given some responses that you dismiss but they are summaries of far more thorough perspectives. So to give you a couple of examples, not to completely prove creationism, but to see how this could go from a creationist perspective. The concept about geocentricism that Ginny may have been getting at is not about… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Thank you for that thoughtful response. You are correct that the limits in the understanding of the participants often shortchanges discussion. There are many times when I am thinking of an argument the discussion participant should be using but isn’t, or see a weakness in my own position that they should be exploiting but aren’t. (I usually have an answer for that weakness, otherwise it wouldn’t be my position anymore, but sometimes the answer is harder to explain or carries less rhetorical weight than the simpler argument that’s in play.) And I’m sure that happens in the other direction as… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I was just pointing out what I thought Ginny was getting at. The point being if relativity is true the debate about which is moving is somewhat moot. But I don’t have a problem with the earth moving. Where do you think that the Bible says God acts on the sun? Creation or Joshua? I have no problem with God doing any miracle and it being described from our perspective. To be sure, there are somethings that seem to us to be designed that way, but I am not certain it is as obvious if thought about in more depth.… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

To be sure, there are somethings that seem to us to be designed that way, but I am not certain it is as obvious if thought about in more depth. Clearly all the cats (for example) came from a single created kind. They are fast but that does not preclude them getting somewhat faster or slower. That cats can survive on a vegetarian diet is consistent with them starting that way. I don’t think God created cheetah’s and lions and tigers and tabbies. I think these are new variants. Likewise the species of bats came from many fewer types of… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

And this is partly why I didn’t want to go there. We deal with cats and bats and you go off to snakes and sloths to prove your point. And if I give a reasonable response to that you will be talking jellyfish and radiodating. Of course all these are interesting a legitimate topics, but the expansion is never ending. Pretty much everything you mention I have read about, and creationists have tried to address. There are areas where it difficult to know what the situation is, but then there is in every subject. Ginny was concerned that you do… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Your second line is, to the silly, utterly irresistible:

There were cats and bats and elephants,
As sure as you’re born,
But the loveliest of all
Was the unicorn.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

We deal with cats and bats and you go off to snakes and sloths to prove your point. And if I give a reasonable response to that you will be talking jellyfish and radiodating. Of course all these are interesting a legitimate topics, but the expansion is never ending. I didn’t use a different example because you had “dealt with” the precious ones, there’s just only so many times one can repeat themselves before it seems pointless to keep repeating the same point. Everything about a cheetah’s body is oriented to a world of predators and prey. And we know… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I can accept many claims by evolutionists without agreeing with every claim that they make. As I can as well. As I have pointed out, I reject claims made by many evolutionists (naturalism, purposelessness, the idea that evolution proceeded largely through random mutation), and also recognize there are plenty of questions of science. The basic claims that I believe are beyond argument are an Earth far more than 10,000 years old, a descent of species over time from earlier forms many of which no longer exist, and a clear biological relationship between all species. Those are the three issues which,… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

“In fact, one of the most frustrating issues was that those few scientists who get behind the Creationist movement, the ones who publish on the well-known websites, were frequently dishonest. (Another commenter, I forgot who, brought up this same point two-three weeks ago.) They frame things in such ways that they KNOW someone with scientific understanding would see through as rubbish, but claim them anyway because they assume their audience doesn’t know any better.” The other commenter was “D” and both of you are impugning the integrity of Christian men and women who, unlike you, are publishing their full names… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

That doesn’t look like a quote of mine, but I’m admittedly not always careful with the rhetoric. Regardless, I have given examples where respected creation science groups have behaved badly or haven’t even attempted to understand the underlying claims. For instance here is Ken Ham spouting nonsense about bristlecone pines: https://answersingenesis.org/media/audio/answers-with-ken-ham/volume-121/trees-are-they-really-that-old/ Read the links he posted for support FROM HIS OWN SITE! They conclude the opposite of what he says. He either hasnt read his own citations or is misrepresenting them completely, neither is a good look for an educator. Here is AIG posting a sermon by Spurgeon: https://answersingenesis.org/education/spurgeon-sermons/30-the-power-of-the-holy-ghost/ In… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Here is your quote: “Also, look at the way ICR has interacted with Joel Duff (Naturalis Historia). He points out problems in their work, so they correct it (without attribution) he points out more problems, they correct it again (still no attribution, or even acknowledgement that they changed things), he points out more problems and they ban him…. Also, some of the stuff these people write must embarrass them. Andrew Snelling is clearly a pretty bright guy with a good scientific training, but you read his posts on coal and oil formation, for instance (all formed from flood deposits, of… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Ginny, My rhetoric can get ahead of me sometimes. The blackmail quote was meant as a joke. However, I have no problem criticizing these guys work as they are being paid for their efforts – this is their job. And in many cases it is extremely renumerative. I am indeed critical of much evolutionary speculation especially in the common press where the nuance level is low and the bluster is high. And I am very critical of scientists who use their platform to push incredibly poor philosophy and epistemology (think PZ Myer and Dawkins). I rarely say much about evolution… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Are you referring to Ken Ham’s statement that bristlecomb pines can produce more than one ring per year, then citing as evidence John Woodmorappe’s saying that they cannot? That was a bit of a head scratcher.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Not only did Woodmorappe say that there is no evidence that BC pines can produce multiple rings per year, he said that to align with the evidence they would have to produce 5 rings per year, every year, for 1,000 years after the flood!

Clearly Ham either didn’t read it, or skimmed it for confirmation. I am frankly surprised that a piece as reasonable and uncertain as the first Woodmorappe piece was allowed on AIG in the first place.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

See above

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  D

D, the problem that Ginny is reacting to are the claims that creationists are lying. That is that they are spreading information that is both false and that they know to be false. This is a very serious matter. If they believe something but they are wrong that is a serious matter as they are teaching others, but the accusation that they are lying is just as serious. Now the term lie can be used rhetorically meaning that a claim is untrue. But the accusation that a specific person is lying for their cause when they are not is sinful.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  D

To your claims here, you are being unreasonable. Ham is giving a short talk which is transcribed after the fact. There is not a reference to the actual claim but links for further reading. The first link states that Woodmorappe thinks the overlaps between different samples may be in error and that he is unaware of any current evidence for multiple rings in one year though he thinks this is possible. The second link is to a forester who claims to have seen more than one ring per year (and Woodmorappe disagreeing with him). Perhaps a little sloppy (though the… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I wouldn’t claim dishonesty, but the juxtaposition of Ham’s post and the first paper is misleading. I think most readers would interpret Ham as suggesting that there is now evidence to support that BCPs can produce more than one ring a year, and that he is basing his claim is based on the articles he cites. I have no idea whether the BCP can produce more than one ring a year, but if I read only Ham’s blog, I would assume he was announcing a scientific discovery and that the linked articles backed it up.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

This is a transcript of an audio. Ham claims that the tree ring data does not exclude a young earth, possibly at a talk, on at an interview. The transcript is on his website so they link to more definitive data. I read that Woodmorappe says that there is no evidence for a specific species having multiple rings in the context of a dataset from that same species. I also read that Woodmorappe thinks that multiple rings are still possible even though undocumented at this stage, and that he thinks the dataset has been complied incorrectly (the overlaps are not… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Fair enough, this comment here should be rewritten

Research on bristlecone pines has showed that a tree can sometimes produce several rings a year. The rings seem to correspond to weather patterns, not annual cycles.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

You seem to be misreading the same way Ham is. Woodmorappe says, in both articles “there is no evidence that bristlecone pines can put on more than one ring per year.” (First article) And “Finally, to reiterate, while there are many kinds of trees that grow more than one ring per year, there is no evidence that adult bristlecone pines can ever do this.” (Second article) The second article has embedded text talking about pines manager for harvest in the southeast US. not BC pines and certainly not alpine BC pines. I realize that some other creationists have claimed that… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Ginny, you are commenting on a website that regularly casts aspersions on the integrity of a great number of Christian men and women. If someone does something to cast doubt on their integrity, that deserves to be called out. I gave a very specific example, if you want to I can start citing individuals and organizations that were guilty of that particular example. If you want to deal with that example, then please deal with it. If you just want to assert that certain Christians are beyond critique simply because they are on your side, then we will get nowhere.… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Now I know you are full of beans. You just tried to re-write your comment that is right there in front of us. How much more do you do this to everything else? Calling YEC’s “frequently dishonest” and “lying” is not one specific example–it is a generalized slander and throwing in a tu quoque doesn’t help.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Ginny, your response is quite confusing. I quite clearly gave a very specific example to back up my charges, and could point out others. I did NOT “rewrite” anything. Right now I can only assume that you misread something in the above comment. This is was EXACT example that I gave: One example I remember were websites that claimed that the moon was moving away from the Earth (it is, slightly under 4cm/year), and that if you multiplied the annual distance it as moving away by years, you would find that the moon could not possibly be as ancient as… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Hi Jonathan I didn’t see anything from the moon onwards when I read this earlier. I was reading on a phone thru the disqus site. Have read the rest now. This is getting off topic a little. You need to assess what someone is trying to do. Is he putting up a claim that contradicts a common interpretation. Yeah, sure, the evolutionist may come up with an auxiliary theory to save the main theory, but a creationist is welcome to do the same thing. If a fact calls into question the evolutionary consensus, and a creationist shows how this fact… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

And the move away from the earth is not linear. I know that. You know that. So do you really believe that Dr. Thomas G. Barnes of the Institute of Creation Research, one of the most prominent purveyors of the “Creationism matches the science” mantra, and someone who claimed three degrees in physics, did not know that? Yet here is an exact quote: There is an easily understood physical proof that the moon is too young for the presumed evolutionary age. From the laws of physics one can show that the moon should be receding from the earth. From the… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Other examples of poor uses of the Earth-moon recession claim: Dr. Jason Lisle, who holds both Master’s and Ph.D.’s in Astrophysics, made this claim in 2006: The moon moves about an inch and a half further away from the earth every year due to this tidal interaction. Thus, the moon would have been closer to the earth in the past. Six thousand years ago, the moon would have been about 800 feet (250 m) closer to the earth (which is not much of a change considering the moon is a quarter of a million miles, or 400,000 km, away). So… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Hovind and his Ph.D.-issuing Patriot University refused to make his doctoral dissertation public, so it got released on Wikileaks.

mkt
mkt
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

AIG distanced themselves from Hovind a while back. Whatever his dissertation is about, it can’t be worse than Michelle Obama’s. As Chrisopher Hitchens said, that was little more than rambling about “what it’s like being me at this college.”

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I took a look at the material on creation.com on the moon recession argument specifically. While they are much more detailed than the ones with the issues I have already noted, I still feel they are being deceptive. Their version is written by Jonathan Henry, who has a Ph.D. in astrophysics. First, he works out an equation that appears quite similar to the one Dr. Lisle used, with some differences that I don’t really care to figure out the source of. Importantly, he comes up with a similar “upper limit” for the Moon’s age of 1.3 billion years (again, incredibly… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Jonathan, I have read you 3 responses. Note how antagonistic you are. I read Henry’s paper. tiny footnotes The article is in standard format with superscript footnote references and footnotes at the bottom in a smaller font, which is standard for an article. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this, it is just antagonistic on your behalf. The “recently” in the text actually refers to a 1964 paper that was “recent” when quoted in 1965 but is quite obsolete now. But Henry is not saying “recently” he is quoting Baldwin. It is not about how recent or not, it is… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Jonathan, I have read you 3 responses. Note how antagonistic you are. Yes, I definitely admit that those responses were antagonistic. Of course, the original papers I was quoting, especially Henry’s, were as antagonistic or more. So if my reply was too antagonistic for a comment on an internet messageboard, I am quite surprised that you are happy with the same sort of antagonistic approach in published papers. Henry quotes different opinions, footnotes them, and tells us where he disagrees. And he gives 3 different calculations. Now you are free to disagree with Henry and say that you do not… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

On to the other points: tiny footnotes The article is in standard format with superscript footnote references and footnotes at the bottom in a smaller font, which is standard for an article. There is absolutely nothing wrong with this, it is just antagonistic on your behalf. You missed the point entirely. The issue was not the choice of footnote size in the formatting of the paper. Footnotes are usually tiny. The issue was choosing to push such pertinent information into those tiny footnotes, knowing the vast majority of people who read your paper are not going to read the footnotes.… Read more »

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I don’t disagree that they are inaccurate. I am happy for that to be pointed out. As I said, even CMI quote arguments that they think creationists should not use. I am trying to say that you jump to quick to the dishonesty charge. You, an evolutionist despite millions of children raised on propaganda we now know to be fraudulent (and something that they should be called out on). But disagreeing with a creationist does not make him dishonest. I pointed out some issues with what you wrote. Even if you are saying the issue is that they are footnotes… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

If even you and I know that they are inaccurate, yet the person who wrote it claims to be a scientist with more credentials than you or I, and CERTAINLY the inaccuracies have been pointed out to them before in 34 years that the paper has been up, then why are they still promoting such inaccuracies? And yes, I used some “unnecessary rhetoric” in my comment. Of all the places where I’d expect to be called out for unnecessary rhetoric, Pastor Doug Wilsons’s blog is not exactly the one I had in mind. But all you can call me out… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

Are you talking about haeckel drawings, or something else?

I’m curious.

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Last paragraph: I was thinking more along the lines of junk DNA, but there are other examples.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I was referring to the fradulent propoganda claim. Sorry I was unclear.

By junk DNA do you mean the idea that much of an organisms genetic material is non-coding, or doesn’t otherwise lead to physiological manifestation? I am far from an expert in genetics, but it seems like that has been a topic of much interest that has been hashed out very publicly in the scientific press.

This kind of stuff:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/hidden-treasures-in-junk-dna/

bethyada
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Yes, but the creationists were saying this years before all this research materialised.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  bethyada

I am not familiar with the history. But the oldest creationist claims I can find are from about 2000. After the human genome project had started kicking out interesting stuff.

This article is the earliesr substantial treatment I could find. https://answersingenesis.org/bios/linda-walkup/?gcbc_level=&gcbc_count=24&gcbc_contribution_type=642,,articles,&gcbc_sort=-last_published&gcbc_visibility=1&gcbc_start=-1&gcbc_template=db/related-content-nodes/post-list-stacked-item

(Sorry for the gnarly link)

The author states that there is some junk DNA – so it certainly is a more nuanced, less wholesale, critique. It is well worth a read down to the heading AGEing theory after which it becomes and exercise in esoteric reasoning and wild speculation.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

I thought Einstein’s comment reflected his problems with the Uncertainty Principle and his rejection of quantum mechanics. He didn’t believe in God, but he believed that the behavior of subatomic particles could not be truly random. But, nearly a century on, hasn’t the theory of their randommness prevailed against the competing theories of the time?

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Einstein wasn’t exactly an atheist. I believed in “spinoza’s God” which is a big improvement over our current crop incoherent atheists.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  D

“I believe” should be “he believed.” We regret the error.

“I believe in Spinoza’s God, who reveals Himself in the lawful harmony of the world, not in a God who concerns Himself with the fate and the doings of mankind…”

-Albert

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

You are correct. He wasn’t talking about natural selection.
It’s interesting, however, that he was resisting the idea of total randomness at the most basic level of matter/energy.

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Sorry, you don’t know what randomness means in this context.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Randomness is the problem, isn’t it? I know what it means in the context of every atheistic biology professor I was ever instructed by (10+), which is RANDOM, i.e. chance, lots, dice, etc, etc.

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

You still don’t know what it means.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

“I’d like to buy an argument. No, no that’s contradiction.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMRgmmnIrDU

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Seriously, you need to study up on the philosophy of randomness.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Hey Thursday1, you used the word without defining it, not I. If you want to use a specialized, theorized version of the word, it’s your responsibility, in this context of a layman’s blog, to define it.

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Honestly, you used the word carelessly, without making any effort to understand how it has been used, nor whether the sense in which you used it applies in this case. It’s time for you to do some reading, hun.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Condescension and Begging the Question work well in shutting down discourse but are ineffective if your goals are clarity and persuasion. I’ll go first. Random: lacking a definite plan, purpose or pattern; or, elements that have an equal probability of occurrence (Mirriam-Webster). This word is ubiquitous in my textbooks that discuss natural selection, allele frequencies, genetic drift, population ecology statistics, etc. You said, “The idea that natural selection is incompatible with teleology is hotly contested, to say the least. Natural selection can only take place within a world that is already structured. It is not random.” Are you saying “not… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Can you show the experiment that showed that species-level evolution lacks a definite plan, purpose, or pattern, or that different outcomes had an equal probability of occurring? And maybe you haven’t seen my reply to your earlier statement yet, but I showed you that “random” or “chance” are NOT ubiquitous in the 24,000 word wikipedia entry on evolution, nor in the 339 sources for that article. So it might be that you’re looking both at older textbooks and books with a strong ideological slant. I’m not going to deny that certain evolutionists get hung up on the philosophical ideas of… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

First off, I was trying to get Thursday1 to define “random.” But he just wanted to pat me on the head and told me to go back to my knitting. Let’s take one aspect of natural selection: allele segregation. This is random in the sense that four haploid gametes have a 1 in 2 chance of getting an X or Y gene. It follows the rules of statistics–thus human populations are roughly half female and half male. As a Christian, I have no problem with this as the God of the Bible is the Lord of Statistics (casting lots and… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

While it appears that gender selection is reasonably close to 50-50 (though not exactly), that does not mean it is random. In fact, scientists have uncovered several ways in which gender selection is non-random. For example, certain meiosis errors and differences in genetically-carried diseases make the birth of boys more likely that the birth of girls, so there are more boys than girls in the newborn population. Certain genetic and environmental factors may also make certain men more likely to produce boys, and other men more likely to produce girls. Or certain women’s bodies may have attributes which make the… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

So, to backtrack a bit, perhaps in my original responses, I could have been more specific. There is random segregation of alleles in meiosis (otherwise, why do we do punnett squares?:). According to naturalists/materialists, the physical events that select certain traits and that cause mutations are random in that there is no supernatural plan. In the middle, the selection by nature part, there is non-randomness in that one outcome is favored over another by environmental conditions. So random (statistically) at the beginning, random (no plan) at the end, and selection in the middle. To me, that means the end result… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Yes, pure materialists deny any supernatural influence in evolution, and often state the theory as such in order to propagate their beliefs. But they have no evidence for that claim and it is in no way an essential part of the theory. More careful scientists, even among the materialists, avoid such claims. Like I showed you, it isn’t anywhere in the entire Wikipedia entry, which suggests that the crowd abandons it when they’re paying attention.

Evolution is no more materialist than Newton’s Laws or the Big Bang or any other scientific theory.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

Some leading evolutionary biologists have theistic views which do not stop them from being hired at top universities. They probably don’t discuss their religious views in class, but they don’t keep them secret. Francis Collins, who directed the Human Genome Research Project and is now head of the National Institutes of Health, is a devout Catholic. The point is that the scientific method rules out the supernatural as an explanation for any material phenomenon. I can believe that my lab is full of invisible angels hovering over my head, but I can’t say these angels are responsible for plate tectonics… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

The divorce of God and science is a recent (last 100 years) phenomenon. The journals of scientists in the late middle ages into the modern era used to be full of praise to God. I used to think that science drove this, because I was taught science and the history of science by materialists. But after reading Schaffer’s book, How Shall We Then Live, as well as some histories of modern science written by Christians, I now think philosphers framed the mental boxes from which scientists view the world, constructed to exclude God. Science is the tail and philosophy is… Read more »

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Ginny Yeager

And you got the Einstein reference wrong. He was objecting to quantum mechanics.

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Correct

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  Thursday1

Darwinianism is more than natural selection, and Pastor Wilson is here using “natural selection” as a shorthand for Darwinianism – which he mentioned in the previous paragraph.

The idea that Darwin is compatible with an intentional universe is only available to those who gloss over deep and foundational differences between the two worldviews.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

That blending of two very different terms is one of the reasons Christians have such a hard time getting young scientifically minded people to listen to them. Everyone, including Christians ought to believe in natural selection. We see it happen all the time. Bacteria developing resistances to medications are a clear example. When a Christian says that they don’t believe in natural selection, it betrays a total ignorance of clear science.

Darwinian evolution requires natural selection, but natural selection is not nearly the entirety of Darwinian evolution.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  John

If we’re going to play at pedantry, I submit that the term “natural selection” is itself already freighted with questionable assumptions. By representing nature as an active, even conscious entity, the metaphor tends to eliminate God from consideration, strongly hinting at the divorce between natural science and theology that has caused so many problems in the last few centuries.

John
John
7 years ago

This is what I mean… it’s not just pedantry. It’s just a false conflation of terms that mean different things.

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Both terms are wrong, and for more or less the same reason.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago

This is where we encounter the limits of language. Have you noticed how difficult it is to describe the movement of atomic orbitals without suggesting there is some kind of intentionality?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

That’s why I have no problem ascribing them intentionality, either inherent or externally imposed. Materialism is boring: my stars sing, to those with ears to hear them.

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Exactly. I was fortunate to be taught as a child that scientifically-observable evolution via natural selection, sexual selection, etc implied nothing about origins of life or species; the conflict between belief in a literal six-day creation and meaningful use of modern biology and genetics is entirely illusory.

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  John

True enough. I think in context, it was quite clear that Mr. Wilson understands that, since he used the phrase “the world of natural selection,” using it as Darwinians do, implying that it is the guiding and shaping force of the world.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

That may be the case, but using one term to mean something different doesn’t help with clarity. Doug said: “But in the blind world of natural selection, where there is no point, where there can be no intention, where goals are only apparent, and where everything is in the process of turning into everything else, what on earth could be wrong with a sex change operation?” The statement only works if the phrase “natural selection” doesn’t actual mean ‘natural selection,’ but instead means ‘Darwinian evolution,’ or even materialism/scientism. It would be very easy to conclude that Doug doesn’t really understand… Read more »

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  John

I think the surrounding context is important. Evolutionists commonly describe natural selection as blind, indicating that he’s using it in a Darwinian context. He also uses the phrase “blind world of natural selection,” indicating a view where natural selection is the highest formative mechanism, just like you could say “the intentional world of God.”

Shortly, it would be easy to think Doug doesn’t understand the words if you read woodenly, without nuance.

Thursday1
Thursday1
7 years ago
Reply to  Carson Spratt

You apparently think the way some people making a philosophy out of “Darwinism” is incompatible with Christianity, but that the origin of new species by natural selection is fine. But I think the latter is what Pastor Wilson is objecting to.

Zachary Hurt
7 years ago
jigawatt
jigawatt
7 years ago

They unfold naturally, leaving aside the fact that there is no such thing as naturally anymore.

It occured to me the other day that a corollary to the moral argument is that Naturalism implies nothing is “unnatural”. GMO’s, DDT, super sized cokes, antibotic and hormone enhanced chickens and cows, all the way up to rape, murder, and nuclear war – all those things are natural in an “atoms banging around” sense.

Rob Steele
Rob Steele
7 years ago
Reply to  jigawatt

Yep. There ain’t no such thing as unnatural if nature is all there is.

jigawatt
jigawatt
7 years ago
Reply to  Rob Steele

I’m gonna print out some “All Natural” stickers and stick them on packages of peeps at the grocery store.

Malachi
Malachi
7 years ago
Reply to  jigawatt

Naturally…sodium chloride is natural, as is methylchloroisothyazolinone. God made–er–natural selection evolved all the particles that comprise both compounds. Synthetic oil is just as natural as crude-derived oil, which is as natural as ethanol, which is just as natural as corn-on-the-cob, mashed taters, chick peas, and sizzling BLTs with a glass of sweet tea.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  Malachi

Yet pecan pie remains an undisputed monument to intelligent design!????????☀️????

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  Malachi

I can say “methylchloroisothyazolinone”. Just gotta take a breath and go syllable by syllable.

Ministry Addict
7 years ago

Why a watermelon, and not some flavorful gourd without all the guilt-inducing stereotype associations? I’m so triggered, as I sit here contemplating my RC-Cola-and-Moon-Pie reassignment surgery.

Malachi
Malachi
7 years ago

What about the Popeye’s Fried Chicken??

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago

I would also lump in Copernicus as an ur-culprit. He began the process of making our place in the kosmos small and insignificant, tucked away in some unimportant place in the universe. The perfect place for a rebel to hide and fulfill his lusts. And why should God care about something so unimportant?

Farinata degli Uberti
Farinata degli Uberti
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

Just curious: do you accept Copernicus’ cosmology, generally speaking?

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago

I would be more curious to know whether, if he accepts that cosmology, he believes Copernicus had a duty to suppress his findings.

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago

Actually, I don’t. I think the Earth is the center, as the Bible declares, and as science cannot disprove, though it has tried.

By the way, Copernicus’s cosmology had a lot of fudge factors in it, just like Ptolemy’s. It took Kepler (using geocentrist Tycho Brahe’s data) and Newton to come up with a more or less consistent heliocentric cosmology. I only bring up Copernicus because he got the revolution rolling.

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

Science has disproved it by successfully sending men to the moon under heliocentric assumptions. It would not have worked to use heliocentric assumptions to send a man to the moon, if geocentricity were true.

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

Sure it would. Just solve the problem in a heliocentric frame of reference. Mach’s Principle days it’s okay.
From day one of high school physics you’re taught to find the appropriate reference to solve a problem simply.
All of Newton’s and Kepler’s math is useful. Just, in the grand scheme of things, pin the Earth down and watch the rest of the solar system, operating under Newtonian mechanics, spin around it. How do you pin the Earth down? With the rest of the stars of the Universe.

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  John Warren

Okay, that’s not clear to me. But a clearer example is the Mercury Messenger. You can’t send something toward the sun, have it get where you want and expect it to be, and have it be irrelevant whether the sun is moving or stationary. There’s too much solar gravity involved for that to work.

John Warren
John Warren
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

The rest of the stars in the Universe are exerting a gravitational force on the Solar System. Geocentricity postulates that they do so in such a way as to pin the Earth down so that it doesn’t move. However, there’s still the gravity of the elements of the Solar System to deal with. This will still cause the Solar System to move in the Keplerian/Newtonian way we learned in high school/college, if we view it in a Heliocentric reference frame. If we view it in a Geocentric reference frame, it looks like stuff (except the Earth) is spinning around a… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

I actually appreciate how John Warren is illustrating this point, so that others who make other similar points can get an idea for how they look.

Dunsworth
Dunsworth
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

I agree. Of course, “similar points” would require statements about observable and measurable things that can be disproved by observable, measurable methods. Statements about how an omnipotent God chose to do things in the past before any but He was present to observe, aren’t really in the same category.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

I really have spent serious time studying this stuff, and honestly, unless you go with the theory that God is openly trying to mess with us and fool us, the facts that the earth is far more than a few thousand years old, there is an ancient fossil record of animals and lifeforms which are extraordinarily different from the animals and lifeforms around today, and all life on Earth is closely related to each other with very measurable degrees of difference between them, are all observerable and measureable on the same level as astronomical phenomena. You need different tools and… Read more »

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  Dunsworth

Yet just like careful observation can solve a murder case, even when no one else was around to observe it, careful observation can give you information about what happened in the past as long as evidence still exists. That, of course, means that one can come to informed conclusions about certain things, get general ideas about other things, and have no clue at all about some things for which there just plain is no evidence trail. Pastor Wilson has shown in the past that he’s willing to fully accept and even promote the conclusions of anthropology and paleontology, even regarding… Read more »

ME
ME
7 years ago

“The problem is not the troubled soul who thinks he is a watermelon.”

True. The problem is with the watermelon ideas that always try to fit themselves inside a pea brain ,and so we spend all our time navel gazing the origins of existence and arguing over communion wine, and very little time actually living as Jesus Christ has called us to live.

Malachi
Malachi
7 years ago
Reply to  ME

Ummm…I’d say the problem still lies with the judges.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago

Psalm 2
1 Why do the nations conspire
and the peoples plot in vain?
2 The kings of the earth rise up
and the rulers band together
against the Lord and against his anointed, saying,
3 “Let us break their chains
and throw off their shackles.”

4 The One enthroned in heaven laughs; the Lord scoffs at them.

5 He rebukes them in his anger
and terrifies them in his wrath, saying,
6 “I have installed my king
on Zion, my holy mountain.”

Man, this Psalm keeps getting better and better! (Though it does not inspire “melon-oma”! ; – )

John
John
7 years ago

How exactly does natural selection have anything to do with a lack of purpose? The fact that bacteria natural select towards resistances to medications, a clear case of natural selection, has just about zero effect on whether I have God given purpose.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

J’, is organisim survival “natural” or “designed”?

I suggest asking both God, and a watermelon or a banana! ; – )

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

It’s natural in the same sense that gravity is natural, or our digestive system is natural, or any other “natural” system is natural, as in it follows the laws of physics and can be predicted.

If you aren’t willing to call “natural selection” natural, then the word doesn’t have any meaning at all.

Malachi
Malachi
7 years ago
Reply to  John

I don’t have a problem with the definitions of “natural” or “selection.” I have a problem with putting those two words together in a phrase and saying it means “fish morph into birds.” This is neither natural nor selection, an obvious fact seemingly lost on the droves of people who continually toss out the phrase.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Malachi

“Fish morph into birds” is not a necessary conclusion from natural selection. Natural selection simply means that certain traits are “selected,” or increase, based on natural pressures (like a need to survive or mate). So bacteria get more resistant to medications, certain bugs change colors over time based on their surroundings, etc. These are examples of clear and unavoidable natural selection. This is what I mean by being clear with terms. What you’re saying would be like saying that I can’t accept Jesus because I can’t believe in the Assumption of Mary. Obviously, the assumption of Mary isn’t a requirement… Read more »

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

If you aren’t willing to call “design” design, then the word has lots of meaning that you don’t understand.

Not unlike the vocabulary limits most watermelons! ; – )

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

I honestly don’t get what point you’re trying to make. Is the digestive system designed? Yes. Is it also natural? Yes. They aren’t mutually exclusive terms.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

John: “The fact that bacteria natural select towards resistances to medications, a clear case of natural selection, has just about zero effect on whether I have God given purpose.” God: 20 And God said, “Let the water teem with living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the vault of the sky.” 21 So God created the great creatures of the sea and every living thing with which the water teems and that moves about in it, according to their kinds, and every winged bird according to its kind. And God saw that it was good. 22 God… Read more »

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

So what is your definition of the word “natural?”

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Romans 2:13-15 13 For it is not those who hear the law who are righteous in God’s sight, but it is those who obey the law who will be declared righteous. 14 (Indeed, when Gentiles, who do not have the law, do by nature things required by the law, they are a law for themselves, even though they do not have the law. 15 They show that the requirements of the law are written on their hearts, their consciences also bearing witness, and their thoughts sometimes accusing them and at other times even defending them.) The “nature” of a thing… Read more »

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

Natural selection isn’t random, though, in any sense of the term. There’s nothing random about it. It doesn’t even include the randomness of gene mutations.

Natural selection refers to the mechanism by which already existing phenotypes increase or decrease in prevalence based on environmental factors.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

So, is that your full explaination on how bacteria become medication resistant? And if the alleged natural selection process is not “random” in any sense of the term, would it not be systematic, or planned?

For instance, in the Simpsons when some string of unlikely events happens, doesn’t Mr. Burns say “All part of my plan Smithers!” ? ; – )

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

You keep drawing this false binary dichotomy between things that are within the plan of God and things that are natural. Natural simply means that it is fully explainable by the laws of nature. It doesn’t mean it’s somehow separate or above God’s plan.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

John:
“The randomness in Darwinian theory has to do with genetic copying errors, commonly referred to as mutations. They are called random because we can’t predict them, not because they are truly stochastic by nature.

John:
Natural simply means that it is fully explainable by the laws of nature.

Well, let’s just say God is less of a dichotomy than you,
or me even! ; – )

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

Darwinian evolution isn’t the same thing as natural selection…

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

U.C. Berkeley definition of “natural selection”:
“Natural selection is one of the basic mechanisms of evolution, along with mutation, migration and genetic drift.”

Yes, John, yes it is. ????

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

Natural selection is one necessary mechanism of evolution. Evolution depends upon natural selection. This doesn’t mean they are the same thing. Evolution ALSO requires random mutation, genetic drift, etc, but none of those things are required for natural selection.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Evolution does not require random mutation.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Yes it does. Genetic mutations provides the large majority of new genetic material that allows speciation.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

Wow!
Name one genetic mutation that changed one species into another.
(?)
Kevin Costner in “Water World” does not count!????

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

I don’t think you understand me. I’m not arguing for the truth of Darwinian evolution. I’m simply explaining the theory as it stands.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

So, Jonathan seems to be saying that Darwinian evolution is not a three legged stool, and you are saying that it is, correct?
Beyond that, I am saying that a real time transition from one species to another, has not been observed.
My how our conversation has evolved!????

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

I never said it had been observed…?

You keep switching back and forth between evolution and natural selection. It’s hard to keep up.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

No, you never did say new species had been observed, I was adding that point to the topic. Sound to me like we don’t have much disagreement, but do express similar ideas in very different terms!

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  John

First off, we don’t know that for certain. Few if any speciation events have been observed at the molecular level, so to claim that you “know” how the large majority of new genetic material for those events arose is pretty high on the speculation side. Second of all, the fact that a genetic shift occurs does not necessitate that the shift was random. Of course God could have directed that, but even going outside the God level for a second, what if there are self-directing mechanisms within the organisms’ own structures that direct it? What if speciation-level mutations are not… Read more »

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Octopuses don’t edit their DNA. They edit their RNA, which has no effect on DNA. There’s zero reason to think this has anything to do with providing new genetic information.

You’re asking a lot of “what if” questions, but they useless unless you actually have a reason to think it’s happening. So far, we don’t have any reasons to think those things happen, but we do have extremely good proof that mutations are a real thing.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  John

I didn’t say that octopuses edit their DNA. But they certainly do mess with their genes quite extravagently, via their RNA. And this is a relatively new discovery. That makes it plausible that mechanisms could exist for messing with DNA as well. And you can’t start claiming that evolution is random just because we don’t know that it’s nonrandom. Yes, genetic mutations are real. We do not know that they are always random, or that the ones that are random are the primary drivers of evolution as opposed to potential non-random ones. We already know that these mutations are NOT… Read more »

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

J’, evolution, or Darwinian evolution, is a three legged stool.
The legs are:
Natural selection
Genetic drift / mutation
And migration.

If you don’t have one of the legs, you don’t have the stool.

Even with all three “legs”, evolution can’t predict rocks turning into people, over time.
Also, I would say that natural selection is ultimately expressed by genetic indicators. ????

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

Sure, but that says nothing about natural selection being true or false. Natural selection can be true while Darwinian evolution is false. My point is that we need to recognize these distinctions so that we don’t sound totally ignorant when speaking about them.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

I don’t think anyone was being ignorant.
“Natural selection”, is for many, a synonym for “evolution”.

African elephants compared to Indian elephants might be an example of natural selection, but not an example evolution.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

It’s only a synonym for people who don’t understand the difference. It would be like someone saying that the Trinitarian belief is a synonym for Catholicism because Catholics are trinitarian.

Natural selection is a real thing that exists. Christians can’t deny it while also being scientifically informed, yet MANY do because they think it’s the same thing as evolution.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

I don’t think any biologist has ever suggested that rocks turn into people. I think scientists are pretty clear about how rocks are formed.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Jilly, back in the day, our buddy Randman referred me to the UC Berkeley evolution web site, where they start at the Big Bang and project out to the evolution of people. So if the Big Bang started out as a rock so Big that it exploded, “rocks” evolved into people, in a manner of speaking! ????The illustrations on the site somehow end up being very “Far side” like, so the whole deal gets even more funny!????

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  John

“Laws of nature”?
Who made those babys? ????

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

“A” Dad, I don’t think most creationists reject natural selection. I have read on a creationist site that the response to natural selection is a design feature front-loaded by God. I think the dispute is with whether natural selection implies common ancestry and millions of years.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

We agree Jilly. As i noted elsewhere, what some call “natural” selection, may have more “design” to it, than some would care to admit!????????????

Carson Spratt
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

That is true. While we may disagree, you represent your opponents truthfully. Thanks!

JohnM
JohnM
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

That’s one creationist site. Of course creationists (which all Christians are) can accept natural selection, most of us just do not find the kind of results posited by Darwinism plausible. Nor do we have need of that hypothesis.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  JohnM

Yes, we are all creationists!

BooneCtyBeek
BooneCtyBeek
7 years ago
Reply to  John

I understand him to mean that design has a telos to it. It was designed with and for a purpose.

In a restrictive sense, as Wilson has described, Darwinian nature has no telos.

John
John
7 years ago
Reply to  BooneCtyBeek

Darwinian, yes, I agree, but I’m not talking about darwinian nature. I’m talking specifically about natural selection as a mechanism that exists.

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

Bananas are definitely unnatural.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  ashv

I think bananas are repulsive. Far more appalling than labor pains was watching my two-year-old mangle one through her fingers and her hair.

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  "A" dad

The bananas you eat were designed by man. To some degree the watermelon too, probably.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The first was a mistake.

"A" dad
"A" dad
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

The men that “designed” the bananas where designed by God!????????☀️

ME
ME
7 years ago

“The spirit of our age is made up of a yearning for pointlessness. If everything is pointless, if there is no fundamental assigned telos, then I can give my lusts free rein”

Along those same lines, David Wood gives us a rather horrifying peek into where that all leads.

https://youtu.be/DakEcY7Z5GU

Steve H
Steve H
7 years ago

#keepdarwinweird

D
D
7 years ago

The whole age of the earth question really makes my head hurt. The fact that many (most?) in the conservative reformed community consider the position of Spurgeon, both Hodges, Warfield, and Machen to be beyond the pail, while promoting the inane rambling of Seventh Day Adventists and their disciples is disheartening.

Malachi
Malachi
7 years ago
Reply to  D

If something goes beyond the pail, is that because it kicked the bucket?

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  D

The post above does not mention the age of the earth issue, although that is certainly a component of a worldview. Is your concern the difficulty of details of the discussion, or the very fact that some hold a young earth view? Since most conservative reformed communions allow liberty on the issue, stopping short of macroevolution, we are asked to tolerate some disheartening inanity in a brotherly fashion.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

B.B. Warfield:
“I do not think that there is any general statement in the Bible or any part of the account of creation, either as given in Genesis 1 and 2 or elsewhere alluded to, that need be opposed to evolution”

Spurgeon:

“We know not how remote the period of the creation of this globe may be—certainly many millions of years before the time of Adam.”

Doug wouldn’t want these guys teaching in his schools, much less his pulpit.

I’m fine with YECers teaching I just think they should up their game.

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  D

The B.B. Warfield quote is said to be from his lectures dating first from 1888. The citations I found online continue the quote:

“The sole passage which appears to bar the way is the very detailed account of the creation of Eve … We may as well admit that the account of the creation of Eve is a very serious bar in the way of a doctrine of creation by evolution.”

Warfield’s position is extremely nuanced. It was not, “Evolution? No problem!”

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

“Warfield’s position is extremely nuanced. It was not, “Evolution? No problem!” If course it was. He was thinking through the issue carefully. However, his position certainly was not “stopping short of macroevolution,” nor was it in any way making a denunciation of certain scientfic theories, when “confined to its own sphere as a suggested account of the method of the divine providence.” It isn’t people disagreeing with certain findings that troubles me (except when they operate in bad faith, which is frequently the case with YEC “science” organizations). It is making a rejection of well founded theories an article of… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Were the ACCS teachers asked to affirm their orthodoxy on those points, or to refrain from teaching a different position to their students? I don’t much like either, but I can see a justification for the second. In my time as a teacher in Catholic schools, I was never asked to sign a statement of faith. But, it was also understood that if I found myself doubting a core Catholic doctrine, I was not to share those doubts with my students. And “core” meant really core, not whether I have private misgivings about whether St. Joseph of Cupertino could really… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I’m particularly refering to Doug’s list of “I Believe” affirmations, which included a lot of nonsense positions (including positions rejected by Calvin, Aquinus, and Augustine, not to mention Charles Hodge, Spurgeon, Warfield, and Machen; apparently they would be disallowed as educators).

I don’t know exactly what the purpose of that document is, but it is poorly conceived regardless.

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  D

D wrote: … called for all ACCS teachers to sign a statement of faith codifying it (along with related problematic beliefs such as the absence of all animal death prior to the fall. That is wrongheaded. What is problematic about the absence of animal death prior to the fall? Why is it wrongheaded to affirm, in a statement of faith, that death came upon creation through Adam and Eve’s sin, and not prior? Such a statement does not condemn others for believing differently (or even call them “wrongheaded”), but simply sets the expectations for what will be taught, authoritatively, to… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

I didn’t understand D to be saying that the Christian schools are operating in bad faith; I thought he was referring to some YEC science organizations. Most parents would, I think, want to know how a Christian school’s science and religion departments will handle such issues. Nonetheless, I would rather ask teachers to commit that they will neither teach doctrines the school considers heretical, nor undermine their students’ belief in doctrines the school considers orthodox, than to ask them to promise in writing that they have never entertained a doubt about animal death pre-Fall. I could not conscientiously sign a… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

There are two primary problems. The first is binding the conscience of your instructors on a matter that is clearly adiaphora. Additionally, a group that claims affinity with the historical reformed church that adopts standards for teachers that would exclude Calvin, Spurgeon and Warfield is making itself a farce. The second problem is that teaching clearly wrong information at your school IS wrongheaded. I would say the same about a statement requiring all teachers to affirm a futurist dispensational eschatology, or affirming that blacks are to be subjugated due to the curse of Ham, or that the Pythagorean theorem is… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  D

D wrote:

Requiring that your science classes teach false information is not a good educational philosophy.

Perhaps D feels that anyone who teaches creation (the sort which the vast majority of Christians throughout history have believed) is teaching error. However, among his fallacies of guilt by association (including lizardmen conspiracies, no less), D didn’t actually offer any examples of false information that ACCS schools are teaching.

He seems to just disagree that parents should be able to find a school where they can opt out of having evolutionism taught to their children as fact.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  katecho

A brief, very incomplete list from my kids science this year at an ACCS school: *The oldest bristlecone pine is 4600 years old (false), began growing immediately after the flood (who knows), and the fact that the oldest tree is ~4600 years old “proves the flood killed all living things.” *it never rained prior to the flood (vapor canopy theory). Windows of heaven opening was the destruction of old firmament. *The grand canyon shows no weathering between layers (false) * The geologic column is only consistent with a single catastrophic flood *Dragon narratives are proof (proof!) that dinosaurs existed after… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  D

D wrote: *The oldest bristlecone pine is 4600 years old (false), began growing immediately after the flood (who knows), and the fact that the oldest tree is ~4600 years old “proves the flood killed all living things.” Citation needed. Who is D quoting to say that the age of the oldest tree “proves the flood killed all living things”? Who says that the flood killed all the sea life, for example? This quote from D is highly suspicious. Is D quoting from a curriculum endorsed by the ACCS, or an unverifiable comment from a specific teacher? As far as the… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

And, no. I don’t think the schools, or Doug, are operating in bad faith. They are just incorrect have been poorly taught, and are perpetuating their error. Sometimes the creationist organizations do act in bad faith. AIG posting a Spurgeon sermon and removing his reference to millions of years was bad faith. When called on it, they put the millions of years statement back in, in brackets, with the footnote “Bracketed text indicates that as brilliant as Spurgeon was, even he did not understand the age of the earth issue.” Still bad faith. Impugning great Christian geologists’ (such as Buckland… Read more »

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  D

D wrote:

And, no. I don’t think the schools, or Doug, are operating in bad faith. They are just incorrect have been poorly taught, and are perpetuating their error.

What error are the ACCS schools perpetuating?

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I think that sometimes it is not so much bad faith as a complete and unbridgeable gap between what they and mainstream scientists define as science. Ken Ham’s website, which I often find interesting, says that AiG does real science. But AiG requires its research staff to commit to the following: “By definition, no apparent, perceived or claimed evidence in any field, including history and chronology, can be valid if it contradicts the scriptural record.” This is a science-stopper, if science is defined as testing a hypothesis and abandoning it if the evidence goes the other way. People can see… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Sometimes it is just people talking past each other; however, removing portions of quotes that disagree with you, and casting aspersions on people’s character and faith in order to discredit their work is not ok. Also, look at the way ICR has interacted with Joel Duff (Naturalis Historia). He points out problems in their work, so they correct it (without attribution) he points out more problems, they correct it again (still no attribution, or even acknowledgement that they changed things), he points out more problems and they ban him…. Also, some of the stuff these people write must embarrass them.… Read more »

Ginny Yeager
Ginny Yeager
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Blackmail. Wow.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I don’t think it’s blackmail in any form. I do think, however, that when science is done in conscious service of an agenda, the science is likely to suffer. No matter who is doing it or what the topic is, you end up with apologetics and cherry-picked data. I am always disheartened by people who say, “So what? Doesn’t the restoration of faith in Biblical faith and morality justify desperate measures? Is the preservation of your academic integrity really more important than not undermining the faith of millions who couldn’t give a toss about science in the first place? If… Read more »

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

I was joking about blackmail. Should have had sarcasm font darker.

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

I think so. I have a very hard time recognizing sarcasm in posts, but seldom in real life or in literature. I wonder if that is because we get used to such diversity of opinion that nothing strikes us as out of the way!

john k
john k
7 years ago
Reply to  D

Do you consider biological macroevolution a well founded theory?

katecho
katecho
7 years ago
Reply to  john k

It’s good to have more context to go with Warfield’s statement. Although, there are several other passages that “bar the way” besides that one, including the definition of “day” given in Genesis 1:5, and the problem of death prior to Adam. Theistic evolutionists tend to shuffle past these problems by simply turning the Genesis account into a broad, generic metaphor that doesn’t require any particular targets or sources for the individual details and characters. It’s good to see that Warfield at least felt some responsibility to try to grapple with the details as if they were actually important to what… Read more »

jillybean
jillybean
7 years ago
Reply to  D

My history is a whole lot better than my math! Catherine the Great established a territory in western Russia called The Pale of Settlement where Jews were allowed to live. A few were allowed to go, as a special favor, “beyond The Pale.” There was also a Pale in Ireland that was controlled by the British. And a Pale in Calais that was controlled by English monarchs after the Battle of Crecy.

D
D
7 years ago
Reply to  jillybean

Thank you, Jilly. Always understand your idioms, right? Another possible source appears to be beyond the pale of a palisade, basically beyond the wall.

Conserbatives_conserve_little
Conserbatives_conserve_little
7 years ago

Bizarro World a cube! Oionly stoopid worlds is round. Oh, no bizarro World is perfect cube Auuuugggh! Okay who is old enough to remember Bizarro World! For those who read Superman comics in 50s-70s here is your comic relief.

ashv
ashv
7 years ago

EARTH HAS SIMULTANEOUSLY 4 DAYS EACH ROTATION, etc

Jonathan
Jonathan
7 years ago
Reply to  ashv

I can’t believe so many people know that one. The traction he got off that was incredible. :)

ashv
ashv
7 years ago
Reply to  Jonathan

Hey, there’s a lot more people interested in the truth than you might think.