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Falling Stars, Damnable Heresy, and the Spirit of Evolution
Renew America ^ | Sept. 19, 2013 | Linda Kimball

Posted on 09/20/2013 4:29:03 AM PDT by spirited irish

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To: spirited irish
spirited irish: "If theology is a search for truth but science has nothing to do with it, then BroJoeK must surely be attracted to the opposite of truth since he is a fervent defender of ‘scientific’ evolutionary theism."

Not in the least, since I am merely trying to distinguish between the lower-order knowledge of natural-science (i.e., facts, laws, hypotheses and theories) compared the higher-order truths of theology and philosophy.

In science, we never speak of "truth", because that is outside science's "lane", so to speak.
Truth (capital T) resides in the realm of theology and truths (small t) in the various categories of philosophy.
Neither of those resides within science, which is locked into the realm of "confirmed observations" (aka: facts) and "confirmed theories" (aka: natural explanations for natural processes).

Sorry, but I don't know why this seems so obvious to me, but apparently so difficult to explain...

461 posted on 10/11/2013 12:49:45 PM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: BroJoeK; betty boop; YHAOS; R7 Rocket; spirited irish
Ethics and law on Jefferson's list do not fit your definition of "practical knowledge of natural things." They are both steeped in what we would call philosophy and theology.
462 posted on 10/11/2013 8:15:22 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: Alamo-Girl
Alamo-Girl: "Ethics and law on Jefferson's list do not fit your definition of 'practical knowledge of natural things.'
They are both steeped in what we would call philosophy and theology."

Granted, but remember that Jefferson and other Enlightenment figures were devoted to what they called "the laws of nature and of nature's God".
For them, "natural law" and the ethics on which it is based could be derived from nature, without reference to the Bible.

No, Jefferson was not strictly a Deist, "Christian-deist" would be a more appropriate term, along with "Unitarian", as understood in those days.
In another (1803) letter to Priestly, Jefferson explained that his interest in (basically) a Deist's Bible came from his 1799 conversations with Dr. Benjamin Rush.
What Jefferson wanted was to emphasize the "principles of a pure deism" taught by Jesus, while "omitting the question of his deity".

Jefferson's Bible:

Indeed, it seems that many of our Founders were uneasy, if not outright uncomfortable, with the Deity of Christ.
Regardless, Jefferson did not abandon the Bible, or "nature's God", but he did want them strictly, ah, suborned to his own naturalistic outlook.

463 posted on 10/12/2013 12:46:14 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: BroJoeK; YHAOS; Alamo-Girl; spirited irish; tacticalogic; R7 Rocket; hosepipe; MHGinTN; TXnMA; ...
All of those [pagan philosophers] are irrelevant to this discussion because they were not Christians.... The importance of Aquinas is that as a well-recognized "Doctor of the Church", he defines long-standing official Church doctrine regarding the relationship between theology and natural-philosophy (science).... And what Aquinas recognized were two separate realms, based on different lines of reasoning.

Hi dear BroJoeK! Glad to see you again!

WRT the above statement: I agree with parts of it, but not all of it.

What I disagree with is the idea that the "pagans" are irrelevant to Christian theology. Also, though I think it's correct to say that Aquinas recognized "two realms" based on "different lines of reasoning," I do not get the sense from him that he intended to irrevocably separate the two realms, to somehow suggest that they are mutually exclusive. That would be tantamount to separating Faith and Reason. To do that would amount to the defacement of the very image of God that we each of us bears in our soul, thus rendering us "less than human."

But then dear BroJoeK, you did say, "What Aquinas did not recognize (as least so far as I know) was the possibility that the two realms might conflict — that scientific evidence from our senses might contradict theological words derived from the Bible." So I gather, you see the problem, too. [Question: Are you advocating for such conflict here?]

Personally, I do not find/experience any "conflict" along these lines, and never have. Since I was a small child, I "understood" (somehow) that the divine and the natural interpenetrate. It just took several decades for me to realize how and why that is. And that is still a work in progress — by the Grace and Light of the Holy Spirit I pray.

Notwithstanding its modern-day detractors, we still find Christianity inherently, eminently reasonable. I imagine the reason for this (in part) is its deep debt to the revolutionary thinking of "pagans" such as Plato and Aristotle, which gave birth to the knowledge disciplines of psychology, cosmology, logic, natural theology, natural philosophy, ethics, political theory; laying foundations for these disciplines which continue to bear up till this day, without which "modern science" would not be possible.

Actually, I find it quite amusing to hear you say that Plato, Aristotle, et al. — the "pagans" — are irrelevant to Christian theology because they were not Christians. How could they possibly have been Christians, since both men were dead some 400 or so years before the Incarnation of Christ?

What if — as was the case with St. Justin Martyr — Plato and Aristotle had actually lived long enough to hear the Word of God clearly articulated to man, with the Incarnation of Christ? My best guess is both men would have become Christians. As did Justin Martyr, a great student of the schools of ancient Greece (and especially of Plato) and elsewhere, who found in Christianity the culmination and fulfillment of classical philosophy, just as much as he found in it what Christianity proclaims itself to be: the culmination and fulfillment of the Patriarchs and Prophets of the Old Testament.

I agree with Eric Voegelin's assessment of Justin Martyr's point of view and conclusions as a great classical and Christian thinker:

In the conception of Justin the Martyr (d. ca. 165), gospel and philosophy do not face the thinker with a choice of alternatives, nor are they complementary aspects of truth which the thinker would have to weld into the complete truth; in his conception, the Logos of the gospel is rather the same Word of the same God as the logos spermatikos [the creative word] of philosophy, but at a later state of its manifestation in history. The Logos has been operative in the world from its creation; all men who have lived according to reason, whether Greeks [Heraclitus, Socrates, Plato) or barbarians (Abraham, Elias), have in a sense been Christians [Apology 1:46]. Hence, Christianity is not an alternative to philosophy, it is philosophy itself in its state of perfection; the history of the Logos comes to its fulfillment through the incarnation of the Word in Christ. To Justin, the difference between gospel and philosophy is a matter of successive stages in the history of reason. — Eric Voegelin, "The Gospel and Culture," in The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin, Volume 12: Published Essays, 1966–1985. [emphasis added]

From which I conclude: The separation of faith and reason is an artificial construct designed to undermine human reason and human nature as well.

I sense that the difficulties we get into, dear BroJoeK, are the result of differences in the way we see things. I tend to be someone who sees history as indispensable to the analysis of human questions and problems, where you seem to be a bit more "scriptural" or "doctrinal" in basic approach. But I note that the promulgation of knowledge of human history is something actually repressed by the public schools and the institutions of higher learning nowadays.

Indeed, it seemed to me that, at the same time as lauding the great Saint and Doctor of the Church, Thomas Aquinas, you were trying to separate him from his own intellectual history. Which, to me, means you may have inadvertently falsified something very important about this man: That he, as a great genius of faith and reason, stood on the shoulders of other great geniuses of human faith and reason who came before him, who serve to illuminate the thinking of a great Saint in their turn.

Aquinas is one of my three favorite Saints and Doctors of the Church. The other two of my "three big A's" are Augustine and Anselm — both of whom were quite evidently heavily influenced by Plato. Aquinas is the most "Aristotelian" of the three. But if you've got Aristotle, you've got the most, if not the whole of Plato "for free" — for Aristotle was Plato's student and colleague of some 27 years.

To defend my claim that you may be more "doctrinal" than I am, I note that, from your writings, you are rather attracted to String Theory as ultimately accounting for the foundation of the world of experience.

It seems to me that String Theory is fertile ground for the unfettered mathematical imagination. Yet it seems its account of actual Nature must include new spatial dimensions that are smaller than Planck length — and thus strictly speaking undetectable by human direct observation in principle. Thus so far, the "predictions" of String Theory remain yet to be detected because so far, they have produced nothing capable of human direct detection in actual experimental contexts. Same problem with Panspermia Theory. Even if we think our method of evaluation is "true," what we cannot explain by this method is the origin of the "space aliens" who did all this biological "seeding" in the first place.

Thus to me, neither theory rests on anything that can be called "scientific" at all — if all that science as it is presently constituted can do is to observe, record, and test objects in Nature that fall under direct human observation.

My final point here is that there are aspects of Nature that are not susceptible to the observing, recording, and testing of natural objects which constitute the "scientific method" as presently understood.

But from that fact, we cannot conclude that just because something cannot be "qualified" by the scientific method, that it does not exist, and is not important to the lives of human beings.

In conclusion, I do not see that a fatal distinction obtains between "theology, based on revealed truth," and "natural-philosophy (aka 'science'), which begins with input from our senses."

These are but different approaches that human beings follow to illuminate the truth of their existence. And they are not mutually exclusive.

Must run for now. Thank you so much, dear BroJoeK, for writing!

464 posted on 10/12/2013 2:19:15 PM PDT by betty boop
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To: betty boop

You’ve touched on something that I think about from time to time, which is the way various truths touch on one another.

If a collection of truths are in harmony with one another, which being true you would expect them to be, they become useful and we employ them in making sense of the world. We take them into the shop and build things with them.

Where there are small dis-harmonies, or apparent dis-harmonies, we can use one truth to illuminate the other, and vice versa.

As the contradictions grow, though, is where it gets interesting. Resolving the apparent contradictions is where you get the chance to move up to the next level. Where all your truths agree, thats great for the engineers and mechanics. Where they don’t all agree, thats where the scientists and philosophers and deep thinkers come in to play. Resolving the contradictions is where new knowledge is generated.

Something similar happens when the various truths are of different realms. They lend one another context and perspective where the apparent contradictions are small. Where they are larger, it doesn’t bother me. I’m happy to let the scientists do what they do, and I’m happy to let the theologians and cogitators figure out what the deeper meaning of it is. The human brain is quite capable, in fact it is well designed for handling and blending and splitting the difference between apparent contradictions and ricocheting ideas one to the other. And in the end, if we keep digging, truth is truth.

One of the things that make the arguments about evolution so bitter, I think, is that both sides of the debate seem to think the existence and godship of the Creator God is in play. It isn’t. If you’ve met him and walked with him that isn’t even in question; the only questions are the nuts and bolts “hows” of creation, which we generally let the science guys handle, and the “whys” of it which we generally leave to the philosophers and priests and amateur cogitators like us. I know, the scientists don’t really get us, but thats OK. They don’t have to. They gather the data, and where it impinges on the big picture and the “meaning of life” thats our job. If they think we’re wrong, they can go gather more data.


465 posted on 10/12/2013 6:38:29 PM PDT by marron
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To: betty boop
What I disagree with is the idea that the "pagans" are irrelevant to Christian theology. Also, though I think it's correct to say that Aquinas recognized "two realms" based on "different lines of reasoning," I do not get the sense from him that he intended to irrevocably separate the two realms, to somehow suggest that they are mutually exclusive. That would be tantamount to separating Faith and Reason. To do that would amount to the defacement of the very image of God that we each of us bears in our soul, thus rendering us "less than human."

Whatever this "sense" you have is, it seems rather counter-intuitive. The act of defining "Realms" is intrinsically an exercise in finding mutually exclusive traits and characteristics that define the boundaries. The question is, what are the traits characteristics that delineate the Realms? If the realms themselves are not mutually exclusive, then nothing can be reasonably allocated to one or the other and every comparison results in a distinction without a difference.

466 posted on 10/12/2013 6:54:56 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: betty boop; spirited irish; YHAOS
betty boop: "What I disagree with is the idea that the "pagans" are irrelevant to Christian theology."

No, not irrelevant to Christian theology generally, but certainly to this particular discussion on evolution theory, which involves the question: what do we do if/when it seems that Biblical Truth and scientific theory contradict each other?
Yes, I gather you don't agree they are in conflict, and I might well agree -- after all, when I look at science I see God's purpose, regardless of how "random" science claims it all is.
Likewise, when I read Genesis, I see metaphors made inevitable by the fact that those who first wrote and read it could not possibly have understood what was really going on, in scientific terms.
Neither scientific "randomness" nor Biblical metaphors cause me any particular problems in understanding.

But that is hardly the view of our Creationists, Intelligent Designers or Young Earthers posting on these threads.
They stubbornly insist the two accounts cannot be reconciled, and any efforts to explain Genesis in scientific terms they counter with other scripture passages which make reconciliation seem impossible.
And for them, it is not just a matter of understanding, but in spirited irish's article words: of "moral topsy-turvydom of Modernism" and even heresy:

For them, there is no reconciliation, and the very effort only serves "diabolical purposes".

betty boop: "...you did say, "What Aquinas did not recognize (as least so far as I know) was the possibility that the two realms might conflict — that scientific evidence from our senses might contradict theological words derived from the Bible."
So I gather, you see the problem, too.
[Question: Are you advocating for such conflict here?]"

I don't advocate anything, merely report the obvious fact that our Creationists, Intelligent Designers and Young Earthers are unwilling to accept any explanation that doesn't match up with their own interpretations of scripture.

betty boop: "Actually, I find it quite amusing to hear you say that Plato, Aristotle, et al. — the "pagans" — are irrelevant to Christian theology because they were not Christians.
How could they possibly have been Christians, since both men were dead some 400 or so years before the Incarnation of Christ? "

The important point about all those pagan philosophers -- for purposes of this particular discussion -- is that not one of them could even conceive the possibility that scientific theories and Biblical doctrines might conflict.
That's why they are irrelevant here.

betty boop: "I agree with Eric Voegelin's assessment of Justin Martyr's point of view and conclusions as a great classical and Christian thinker."

Understood, and not wishing to split hairs, yet still must point out that Justin Martyr was comparing Christian doctrine to the best of pagan theistic philosophy, and declaring them equivalent.
Martyr did not address the possibility of doctrine conflicting with natural-philosophy (aka "science").
And yet that is the conflict insisted on by our Biblical literalists.

betty boop: "I tend to be someone who sees history as indispensable to the analysis of human questions and problems, where you seem to be a bit more "scriptural" or "doctrinal" in basic approach."

Sorry, but I don't know what that means.
The truth is, I am merely responding to some very strong language posted on this thread (and others) by people like spirited irish.

betty boop: "at the same time as lauding the great Saint and Doctor of the Church, Thomas Aquinas, you were trying to separate him from his own intellectual history.
Which, to me, means you may have inadvertently falsified something very important about this man"

Sorry, but I'm only trying (and trying...) to draw your attention to the facts about Aquinas which relate to this thread, and those have to do with any potential for conflict between science and religion -- or in Aquinas' terms: between theology based on the Bible and natural-philosophy based on inputs from our senses.
Aquinas understood those are two separate modes of thinking, but did not expect them to conflict.

However in fact, for some centuries now, they have conflicted, at least in the minds of some believers.

betty boop: "To defend my claim that you may be more "doctrinal" than I am, I note that, from your writings, you are rather attracted to String Theory as ultimately accounting for the foundation of the world of experience."

Then you missed the ironic point of my mentioning "string theory", namely that it is hypothesis, not confirmed theory, and the very name "string" is total metaphor!
So "string theory" is scientific metaphorical guess-work.
It is not metaphysical or ontological, it's neither theological Truth nor philosophical truth, and it's not even a scientific fact, law or theory.
It's just scientific metaphorical guesswork, and yet, it's the best they can do at providing natural explanations for natural processes.

Of course I think it's interesting, and who knows where it might lead?
But "string theory" illustrates my main point: that science by its very nature is a highly restricted, limited enterprise which cannot leave the boundaries imposed by its mission to provide natural explanations for natural processes."

betty boop: "Same problem with Panspermia Theory.
Even if we think our method of evaluation is "true," what we cannot explain by this method is the origin of the "space aliens" who did all this biological "seeding" in the first place."

Well.... despite what you may have watched on some Discovery channel, there is no scientific theory of "space aliens" -- that is pure fantasy.
At most, "panspermia" posits that certain critical organic chemicals arrived on earth aboard comets or meteors, and for that there is some evidence.
There are also suggestions -- hints, really -- that some exotic organic chemistry may have been on-board certain rocks blasted off Mars and later fell to earth.
No confirmation on that as yet.

But that's it -- everything else is pure imagination without supporting evidence.
So it still remained for the Earth itself to provide conditions in which "exotic organic chemistry" may have grown complex enough to be classified as "primitive life-like forms".

betty boop: "Thus to me, neither theory rests on anything that can be called "scientific" at all — if all that science as it is presently constituted can do is to observe, record, and test objects in Nature that fall under direct human observation."

But of course, neither "theory" is a "theory", they are both just scientific hypotheses, meaning highly educated guess-work.
Yes, someday they may be confirmed by evidence or falsification-tests, but not yet.

betty boop: "But from that fact, we cannot conclude that just because something cannot be "qualified" by the scientific method, that it does not exist, and is not important to the lives of human beings."

Agreed, and thank you for a most interesting discussion, FRiend!

467 posted on 10/12/2013 8:00:00 PM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: BroJoeK; betty boop; YHAOS; R7 Rocket; spirited irish
Jefferson's concept of God is irrelevant, ethics and law both are steeped in our present concept of philosophy and theology, e.g. acceptable behavior, personal responsibility.
468 posted on 10/12/2013 8:22:22 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop
In conclusion, I do not see that a fatal distinction obtains between "theology, based on revealed truth," and "natural-philosophy (aka 'science'), which begins with input from our senses."

These are but different approaches that human beings follow to illuminate the truth of their existence. And they are not mutually exclusive.

I very strongly agree, dearest sister in Christ!

Thank you so much for your illuminating essay-post!


469 posted on 10/12/2013 8:34:08 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: BroJoeK; betty boop; Alamo-Girl; YHAOS

Bro: I look at science I see God’s purpose, regardless of how “random” science claims it all is.
Likewise, when I read Genesis, I see metaphors made inevitable by the fact that those who first wrote and read it could not possibly have understood what was really going on, in scientific terms.

Spirited: In a pre-incarnate theophany, Jesus Christ spoke to Moses from the burning bush (Exodus 3:14). The name He used when He spoke to Moses is “I AM.”

According to the inner illogic of BroJoeK’s claims, Jesus Christ must have been a really stupid, inept God to not have known that Moses, let alone the Prophets, early Church Fathers and all of today’s faithful Christians could not possibly understand “in scientific” terms.

No, true understanding is only knowable, only possible, for ‘scientifically enlightened’ modern Gnostikoi like BroJoeK.

As BroJoeK has admitted elsewhere, ‘natural science’ is not a search for truth. What is left unsaid is that it is a search for personal power. Knowledge is power, and this is what ‘science’ is for BroJoeK whose ‘science’ is the perversion described by CS Lewis as magic science.

Magic science and the Wizard of Oz are twins animated by maestros of pompous pretense speaking presumptuously and with great authority about things which cannot possibly be known. Hiding behind both the curtain and magic science are mere mortals pretending to be what they are not.


470 posted on 10/13/2013 3:58:21 AM PDT by spirited irish (we find Gilgamesh)
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To: BroJoeK; betty boop; YHAOS; Alamo-Girl

Bro: what do we do if/when it seems that Biblical Truth and scientific theory contradict each other?

Spirited: For individuals like BroJoek, not only are natural science and the Wizard of Oz twins, but crystal balls. Thus when BroJoeK stares into his crystal ball in pursuit of answers the spirit of the glass informs him that ‘science’ is the ongoing, always ‘new’ revelation that must always supplant (replace) the Word of God.

In a pre-incarnate theophany, I AM (Jesus Christ) divinely revealed certain knowledge pertaining to creation which early Church Fathers who wrote commentaries on Genesis counseled us to accept by simple faith.

Unable to believe, Origenists argued that the first three books should be reduced to metaphor, allegory and myth. In company with all evolutionary theists BroJoeK argues for the same position thereby identifying himself as a modern Origenist.

Magic science and evolutionary thinking ultimately deny that Jesus Christ is I AM, and this is a very dangerous position, for as Christ Himself warned,

“...if you believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins.” John 8:24


471 posted on 10/13/2013 4:56:32 AM PDT by spirited irish (we find Gilgamesh)
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To: spirited irish

So the bait worked, and found you some heretics to rag on?


472 posted on 10/13/2013 5:03:40 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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To: Alamo-Girl; betty boop; spirited irish
Alamo-Girl: "Jefferson's concept of God is irrelevant, ethics and law both are steeped in our present concept of philosophy and theology, e.g. acceptable behavior, personal responsibility."

Sure, doubtless "Jefferson's concept of God is irrelevant" to you.
But it was certainly not irrelevant to Jefferson, whose list of "natural-sciences" you posted above.

Jefferson's list does not include subjects like theology, metaphysics, ontology, teleology or epistemology.
All of those, in Jefferson's mind, were outside the realm of practical "natural-sciences".

So, the fact that Jefferson did include ethics and law tells us he considered those also as practical natural-sciences, not necessarily requiring reference to theology derived from the Bible.

Point is: I am not at all clear as to why you resist the Thomistic idea that knowledge has two categories: 1) theology based on the Bible and 2) natural-sciences beginning with input from our senses?

473 posted on 10/13/2013 8:36:43 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: spirited irish; Alamo-Girl; betty boop; YHAOS; tacticalogic; HiTech RedNeck
spirited irish: "In a pre-incarnate theophany, Jesus Christ spoke to Moses from the burning bush (Exodus 3:14).
The name He used when He spoke to Moses is “I AM.”"

First of all, the Old Testament itself insists that YHWH spoke to Moses, so why would an alleged "biblical literalist" tell us it was somebody else?
Wouldn't a "strict interpretation" require us to use His actual words, and not some later theological interpretation of them?

spirited irish: "According to the inner illogic of BroJoeK’s claims, Jesus Christ must have been a really stupid, inept God to not have known that Moses, let alone the Prophets, early Church Fathers and all of today’s faithful Christians could not possibly understand “in scientific” terms."

So, FRiend spirited irish, why are you changing the subject from Genesis to Exodus?
God's conversation from a burning bush with Moses said nothing about Creation, or Intelligent Design, or Young Earth.
Why then are you injecting it into this discussion?

Clearly YHWH's identification of Himself as "I am who I am", is a theological Truth, easily understood by any human soul, and having nothing directly to do with natural-sciences, isn't it?

spirited irish: "No, true understanding is only knowable, only possible, for ‘scientifically enlightened’ modern Gnostikoi like BroJoeK."

In fact, FRiend, I've said the opposite: theological Truth is knowable by any human soul, while natural-science deals only in "observations" and "confirmed theories".
So science is neither Truth nor truth, but basically a metaphor (based on what works) of natural explanations for natural processes.

spirited irish: "As BroJoeK has admitted elsewhere, ‘natural science’ is not a search for truth.
What is left unsaid is that it is a search for personal power.
Knowledge is power, and this is what ‘science’ is for BroJoeK whose ‘science’ is the perversion described by CS Lewis as magic science."

Sorry, but you are way, way off base here.
"Truth" by definition is a higher level of knowledge that mere science.
Science itself is only concerned with explanations that can be confirmed to work -- so "what works" is its basic standard.

As for my alleged "search for personal power", that is beyond ridiculous, since I am long since retired and have barely enough "personal power" to keep body and soul together.
So, what science provides me is only the same things it provides spirited irish and anybody else: enough know-how to make things work.

So, perhaps you can point to chapter & verse in the Bible where "know-how" is condemned as immoral or illegal?

spirited irish: "Magic science and the Wizard of Oz are twins animated by maestros of pompous pretense speaking presumptuously and with great authority about things which cannot possibly be known.
Hiding behind both the curtain and magic science are mere mortals pretending to be what they are not."

Sorry, but I cannot make sense of those words.
Who & what, after all, might you be speaking of, specifically?

So I would only remind you that natural-science is what it is, and you are not required to believe a word of it.
But just don't pretend that whatever it is you do believe is somehow "scientific", because it's not.

474 posted on 10/13/2013 10:00:59 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: spirited irish; Alamo-Girl; betty boop; YHAOS; tacticalogic; HiTech RedNeck; R7 Rocket
spirited irish: "For individuals like BroJoek, not only are natural science and the Wizard of Oz twins, but crystal balls.
Thus when BroJoeK stares into his crystal ball in pursuit of answers the spirit of the glass informs him that ‘science’ is the ongoing, always ‘new’ revelation that must always supplant (replace) the Word of God."

Speaking of metaphors!
But yours aren't even honest, nothing accurate about them, which sort of suggests they are pre-programmed -- ammo loaded into your rhetorical guns, ready to be fired off at will.

The truth is, I've said the opposite of "‘science’ is the ongoing, always ‘new’ revelation that must always supplant (replace) the Word of God."

But truth doesn't seem to faze you, does it, FRiend?

spirited irish: "Unable to believe, Origenists argued that the first three books should be reduced to metaphor, allegory and myth.
In company with all evolutionary theists BroJoeK argues for the same position thereby identifying himself as a modern Origenist."

Origen (AD 184 - 254) is considered a Church Father, but not a saint, due to his condemnation by the Second Council of Constantinople in 553 AD.
That council in turn is not recognized by most Protestant denominations.

Here is some of what the Catholic Encyclopedia says about Origen's views on metaphors.

the Catholic Encyclopedia:

So, that sounds to me as if the Catholic Church itself is rather tolerant of Origen's views on metaphors, despite the Council's condemnations in 553 AD.

spirited irish: "Magic science and evolutionary thinking ultimately deny that Jesus Christ is I AM, and this is a very dangerous position, for as Christ Himself warned,

Well, FRiend... precisely who Jesus claimed Himself to be is fully explained just a few sentences later (John 8:25-29):


475 posted on 10/13/2013 11:27:24 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: tacticalogic; spirited irish; YHAOS
tacticalogic to spirited irish: "So the bait worked, and found you some heretics to rag on?"

spirited irish and her cohorts do seem to be on something of a witch-hunt here.
Well, considering that she throws two recently beautified popes (John XXIII & John Paul II) into the same category, I'm not so certain how much of a put-down it really is...

;-)

476 posted on 10/13/2013 11:36:13 AM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: BroJoeK

Is this some kind of contest as to who can out geek whom on the screen? This is ludicrous. Where does the love of the Lord enter here.


477 posted on 10/13/2013 11:42:12 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (The Lion of Judah will roar again if you give him a big hug and a cheer and mean it. See my page.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Referring to what, exactly?
Did you object to the quotation from John 8, or was it the Catholic Encyclopedia which has you claiming "ludicrous"?

FRiend, I do my very best to respond with love and respect, even when being accused of the most terrible heresies.
But maybe you have some advice which could help our FRiend, spirited irish see the light?

478 posted on 10/13/2013 2:17:42 PM PDT by BroJoeK (a little historical perspective....)
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To: BroJoeK; YHAOS; Alamo-Girl; spirited irish; tacticalogic; R7 Rocket; hosepipe; MHGinTN; TXnMA; ...
...[T]he question: what do we do if/when it seems that Biblical Truth and scientific theory contradict each other?

I have no idea. For they do not seem to contradict from where I sit. Therefore, I see no problem there.

Indeed, I would point your attention to the scientific physical cosmology that is called "big bang/inflationary universe theory." The nifty thing here is that there has been a tremendous amount of "human observation" that has gone on, as technologically extended by satellites and great mathematics to capture, say the WMAP data....

You denote three species of folks who you (from the context) might regard as "opponents" of your own point of view: creationists, intelligent design investigators, and YECs. But you do so in a way that suggests there is not a dime's-worth of difference between them.

To which I would respond: The three positions are not equivalent. Creationists and people interested in intelligent design have no reason to think such positions are contrary to the large-scale description of universal Nature given by state-of-the-art physical science.

Though I think the YECs may have a problem here: They seem to have a habit of projecting and imposing "time" as human beings understand/experience it, onto a timeless, eternal God.

But logically, I don't think one can get very far with that presupposition: For God Creator is not subject to the Laws of His Creation.

There is more I'd like to say tonight in response to your last. But it'll have to wait until tomorrow. The hour is growing late, and I still have to get dinner on the table....

So, good night and pleasant dreams, dear Bro! 'Til next we meet!

479 posted on 10/13/2013 6:26:33 PM PDT by betty boop
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To: betty boop
I have no idea. For they do not seem to contradict from where I sit. Therefore, I see no problem there.

The three positions are not equivalent. Creationists and people interested in intelligent design have no reason to think such positions are contrary to the large-scale description of universal Nature given by state-of-the-art physical science.

Though I think the YECs may have a problem here: They seem to have a habit of projecting and imposing "time" as human beings understand/experience it, onto a timeless, eternal God.

I believe you've just imposed your own religious beliefs as a litmus test of the validity of scientific theories.

480 posted on 10/14/2013 5:36:14 AM PDT by tacticalogic ("Oh, bother!" said Pooh, as he chambered his last round.)
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