Posted on 11/17/2005 9:25:39 PM PST by raj bhatia
A brilliant piece by Krauthammer, as usual. The punch line: "How ridiculous to make evolution the enemy of God. What could be more elegant, more simple, more brilliant, more economical, more creative, indeed more divine than a planet with millions of life forms, distinct and yet interactive, all ultimately derived from accumulated variations in a single double-stranded molecule, pliable and fecund enough to give us mollusks and mice, Newton and Einstein? Even if it did give us the Kansas State Board of Education, too."
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
We could go around and around with this verse. Yes, on the day that Adam ate the fruit and sinned against God, God doomed Adam to die. I would argue that if he hadn't sinned, he would not have died.
But let me ask just a few questions, to help get us out of this loop:
1) Do you believe Adam and Eve would have died if they hadn't sinned?
2) How do you interpret Romans 5:15-21, which clearly states that "the many died by the trespass of the one man" and that "by the trespass of the one man, death reigned through that one man" and "sin reigned in death"?
3) And how do you interpret Romans 8:18-22, which speaks of a bondage to decay brought about by the Fall?
4) In light of Romans 6:23, would you say that death is *not* the consequence of sin? Yes, "spiritual" death, but also "physical" death. Death.
You're saying the translators of the ESV are intentionally mistranslating here? They're "editing God's word"?
Great examples of how "day" is not necessarily literal in Genesis.
Note that Black felt the need to add words to the verse. He wrote that "Adam will surely die the moment he eats from the tree...." The Bible doesn't include the words "the moment."
The creationist types demand that either unproven theory not be taught or theories with bholes and gaps not be taught. But if they understood what they are thinking, they would realize that their arguements leads to a scientific dead end.
Aside from arguing the nuances of Law vs. Theory, the important point is that most people, especially the creationist types, just can't or won't get their heads around the basic concept of theory. And I can tell by many of your previous posts, that it drives you just as crazy as other people here on FR who know the important context of what is a scientific theory.
Simon Conway Morris is both. See for example about 1/4 the way down
excerpt
In an essay entitled, Agreeing Only to Disagree on Gods Place in Science, George Johnson reports from a Templeton Foundation seminar on science and religion in Cambridge. There, Dawkins, a featured speaker, had a heated exchange with Simon Conway Morris, a Christian paleontologist.
Seems the two scientists started off pleasantly enough. They agreed, Johnson writes, that the richness of the biosphere, humanity included, could be explained through natural selection. They also agreed that evolution is not a crapshootthat if the earths history could be redone the result might differ slightly, but certain physical constraints would favor the eventual appearance of warm-blooded creatures something like us, with eyes, ears, noses and brains.
But thats where they forked in orthogonal directions. For Conway Morris, natures ability to produce moral creatures, humans, indicates that God must have orchestrated evolution. Dawkins doesnt buy it, and he asked Conway Morris why, if they could agree on everything else, he has to add God to the picture. From a scientific perspective, Dawkins said, Conway Morriss God was gratuitous.
Ouch. Dawkins remark apparently left Conway Morris momentarily flummoxed, as he muttered to himself. Dawkins, Johnson writes, had scored a crucial point.
End excerpt
Conway Morris is one of the world's experts on the Burgess Shale.
A couple of weeks ago I bypothesized that the anti-evos were really agents of the D*m*cr*t* party, or George Soros, or suchlike, salting FR with juicy quotes to be mined later.
*Dhimmicrat may be a better euphemism.
For what it's worth, I tend to reference the King James Version when making scriptural analysis, since that is the version I used during my formal studies. I find it helpful to share that info so whomever I am talking to doesn't have to guess. Hopefully I was correct in attributing your quote to the English Standard Version.
"Evening and morning" placemark
The presence of the footnote indicates a revised interpretation by someone involved with that version. While I cannot speak with authority as to their motive, it is self evident that someone did indeed 'edit God's Word', and this was acceptable enough to the recipients of this particular version that the footnote still stands. I do acknowledge that my inference that it was done to alleviate confusion regarding the literalness of a biblical 'day' is merely my own opinion.
Note that BackInBlack clarified in his post #149 that he got that word usage from the New American Version. Considering that Theo hadn't bothered to cite the version he was working with, one can hardly fault BackInBlack for relying on the version of his choice.
I am saying what others have said: fish is not a single species; therefore, your point didn't make much sense.
In fact, that IS what 'punctuated equilibrium' says occurs. Many significant changes occuring in very short periods of time (and therefore the reason no transitional forms are found).
"We could go around and around with this verse. Yes, on the day that Adam ate the fruit and sinned against God, God doomed Adam to die."
The only reason we're going around and around is that you have no faith in God's word. You lionize your own instincts instead of trusting what God plainly says. That is hubris, not Christianity. The verse does not say God will doom him to death on that day; it says Adam will die on that day. You are simply wrong, and on some level you know that, because anyone who can read knows what that verse says.
"Do you believe Adam and Eve would have died if they hadn't sinned?"
They would have died physically, of course, but would not have suffered the spiritual death of separation from God.
"How do you interpret Romans 5:15-21, which clearly states that 'the many died by the trespass of the one man' and that 'by the trespass of the one man, death reigned through that one man' and 'sin reigned in death'?"
It means because of Adam's separation from God, his descendants, too, are separated from God (though they have the ability to get closer and closer through Christ). When it says "sin reigned in death," it again could not be talking about literal death, because simply dying is not a sin. Sins are things we do when we're alive. So for sin to reign in "death," we must be literally living, but spiritually separated from God.
"And how do you interpret Romans 8:18-22, which speaks of a bondage to decay brought about by the Fall?"
Same as above.
Did you not see my translations? The New American version specifically DID have the word moment. Why do you hate God's Word?
Evolutionists are not all on the same page when discussing evolutionary theory.
I was quoting someone else there. I agree with you.
Based on the impressions you have formed about me over the course of our discussions, would you be shocked to hear that I am in the Punctuated Equilibrium camp?
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