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To: exDemMom

I didn’t intend to make you so defensive.

The theory of evolution claims there is change over time. But it doesn’t demonstrate speciation.

If God is who Christians claim he is, then it’s entirely consistent with simple logic to state he can create two similar environments each containing unique forms of life.


60 posted on 04/01/2018 7:07:31 PM PDT by reasonisfaith ("...because they received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved." (2 Thessalonians))
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To: reasonisfaith
The theory of evolution claims there is change over time. But it doesn’t demonstrate speciation.

The theory of evolution does not claim or demonstrate anything, because that is not what theories do. Rather, it provides a coherent conceptual framework with which to interpret and understand what is a very voluminous body of knowledge.

We can (and do) in fact observe the evolutionary mechanisms that lead to speciation. Without any prior knowledge of the organisms involved, I can construct a molecular phylogenetic tree of almost any gene that gives the genetic information about the common ancestor--even though I did not initially have that genetic information and did not know the common ancestor. And I can compare that tree to the phylogenetic trees derived from paleontological methods and find that they are almost identical. With this technique, I not only demonstrate speciation, but I can determine the relative lengths of time elapsed since the split of any two species in that tree. (I need other data to determine absolute lengths of time.)

As for the wide divergence of species between two very similar habitats, it is completely inexplicable within the context of the creation stories. Why, having created the perfect set of plants and animals for the Gobi, would God have created a completely different set for the deserts of the US? Why reinvent the wheel? And so on. There are many implications to what one would expect to observe if all plants and animals had been created at a single time and place, as described in Genesis. The bottom line is that we (the scientific community) have never seen any evidence of a single creation event on earth.

The fact that the book of Genesis refers to people and places that preexisted outside of the Garden of Eden is all the evidence I need to understand that the intended purpose of the biblical creation stories was to illustrate moral principles, never to serve as scientific documentation.

I am not defensive, but frustrated. I see a sizable movement of people who call themselves Christians, but then place the restriction that if you accept the scientific observations about the physical nature of the world, you cannot be a Christian. And in that argument, the faith community loses. Consequently, a young person who is raised to believe that one cannot accept science and be religious and as a result rejects religion, is he not likely to reject religious morality, as well? Don't we see ample evidence that millenials are, in fact, rejecting religious teachings, even to the point of openly mocking religion and religious people? Personally, I do not see these as good developments, and I do blame the rigid either/or choice that creationists (not Christians) promote. I consider Creationism as a separate sect--it is neither biblical nor scientific, but claims to be both.

61 posted on 04/02/2018 4:28:03 AM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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