Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Strengthening families through biblical principles.
Focus on the Family addresses the use of biblical principles in parenting and marriage to strengthen the family.
Read daily articles from Focus on the Family in the Marriage and Parenting Resources forum.
DivineNames said:And the fact is, many Christians simply aren't able to participate in adult discussion. It is beyond them. And so they certainly waste their time here.
And what does that say about Christians? :roll:
ArtGuy said:DivineNames said:And the fact is, many Christians simply aren't able to participate in adult discussion. It is beyond them. And so they certainly waste their time here.
And what does that say about Christians? :roll:
That they have the same propensity for industrial-grade stupid as any other group? I see plenty of rolleye-worthy discourse from people of all stripes, here.
JM said:What's the difference between so-called Christian dogma and the dogma that surrounds "theory" put forth from science?
reznwerks said:JM said:What's the difference between so-called Christian dogma and the dogma that surrounds "theory" put forth from science?
Christian dogma has no evidence and evidence isn't dogma.To put it further there are reasons to believe and unfounded belief.
As others have stated, science is all about constructing models of the world that are subject to confirmation / disconfirmation based on observational evidence that is accessible to the third person world of "objective experience". We all can agree that the apple falls at 9.8 meters / second / second. This observation is in the domain of "public" experience.JM said:What's the difference between so-called Christian dogma and the dogma that surrounds "theory" put forth from science?
Short answer: I see faith as involving a willingness to commit to the realilty of "things not seen" - things which are outside the publically accessible domain of the "objective" and also outside my private inner world of the purely subjective. This is probably what most Christians would say. I do not need faith to know that apples fall at 9.8 m/s/s, nor do I need faith to apprehend the reality of a whack to the knee. I do need it, however, to believe, for example, in the proposition that Christ will return.JM said:Drew, how does the Bible describe faith and how does that description of faith [as a substance of things not seen] affect your understanding of the faith science relationship?
JM said:What's the difference between so-called Christian dogma and the dogma that surrounds "theory" put forth from science?