Jim Parker
Member
- Apr 17, 2015
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The most frustrating thing about the conflict between science and religion is how utterly unnecessary it is.
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The most frustrating thing about the conflict between science and religion is how utterly unnecessary it is.
It shows just how hardened your heart is towards God ideas. Even the simple parables you have difficulty understanding. It's like trying to explain to a blind man from birth what the color red looks like.I don't think the Gospel is at all simple--at the heart of Christianity is a God who chooses to teach through parables, explicitly so that people will have difficulty understanding him.
The most frustrating thing about the conflict between science and religion is how utterly unnecessary it is. Does science have a decidedly atheistic bias?
It shows just how hardened your heart is towards God ideas. Even the simple parables you have difficulty understanding. It's like trying to explain to a blind man from birth what the color red looks like.
As the Bible says: And he said, “This is why I told you that no one can come to me unless it is granted him by the Father.” John 6:65.
later you said:
Personally I couldn't make such a claim. I can see the fingerprint of God in a lot of scientific. The heavens declare His glory.
I can also see it on the microscopic level as the atheist...and even the theo-evo sect ...try to explain how process such as this can happen naturally.
1 Corinthians 2:14Ooh, ad hominem. My favorite logical fallacy.
The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.
1 Corinthians 2:14
1Co 2:14 The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him, and he is not able to understand them because they are spiritually discerned.
Scripture is never a logical fallacy.
But that would not be from scripture; it would simply be your opinion. Now, if you have a scripture that says your POV is correct/mine is wrong then I need to listen.I could just as easily say that you guys are spiritually blind for not reading Genesis the way I think it should be read.
It is not designed to shut down discussion, it is a statement from 2000 years ago explaining why those without the Holy Spirit struggle to understand scripture and so frequently get it wrong.It's not necessarily a logical fallacy to say that people are susceptible to spiritual blindness, but it is very much an ad hominem attack to use that particular passage to shut down discussion whenever you feel like it.
Ooh, ad hominem. My favorite logical fallacy.
Pretty ironic use of it, though, all things considered.
The way science is approached has an atheistic bias, I meant. People assume naturalism and then write off any other worldview as unscientific. You can assert evolution and then not make assumptions about how it might work, but people with a strong anti-teleological bias will rush in and start screaming that natural selection is the only possibility. It's frustrating.
I think part of the problem is that you're making a distinction between natural and supernatural that theistic evolutionists do not make. We go back to the classic theism of Acts 17:28: "For in him we live, and move, and have our being." If you think that if God withdraws his grace, the entire universe ceases to exist, it no longer matters if speciation is a matter of special creation or not. That processes occur naturally does not mean that they occur independently of God--that is an incoherent position for any theist.
But that would not be from scripture; it would simply be your opinion. Now, if you have a scripture that says your POV is correct/mine is wrong then I need to listen.
It is not designed to shut down discussion, it is a statement from 2000 years ago explaining why those without the Holy Spirit struggle to understand scripture and so frequently get it wrong.
I would think the video I presented easily refuted you..before you even replied.
Perhaps as an atheist you'd like explain how the organelle evolved.
What, in scripture, would lead you to believe it should be read allegorically and not literally? Certainly not the lineage of Jesus traced back to Adam.I haven't yet seen a reasonable argument from Scripture that Genesis cannot be read allegorically, so all we're dealing with is opinions.
No, Paul was quite clear in stating that the 'natural man' (kjv) cannot understand scripture because it is spiritually discerned. That spirit is the Holy Spirit.This is ridiculous. Paul was quite explicitly talking about people who look at Scripture, decide it's nonsense, and then discard it as such. You'll see plenty of that if you venture into the parts of the internet where atheists tend to congregate. In that case, I'd agree that they don't know what they're talking about, but I don't think I'd start quoting Paul at them because of it.
I haven't yet seen a reasonable argument from Scripture that Genesis cannot be read allegorically, so all we're dealing with is opinions.
Would you like to explain exactly how you think God brought the organelle into existence?
I love dropping this on the nay sayers such as you. You see, Paul wrote a letter to Timothy. In that letter Paul instructed the women on how to act in church. So, one might ask....just what did Paul base this rule upon? The answer is a literal reading of Genesis. Why would Paul base a rule on an allegorical story? That makes no sense. So, as you see there is an extremely reasonable argument from scripture that shows Genesis can't be read as allegorical.
Oh my....now you feel the need to switch to an ad-hom style of argument?
Yeah, I had to come back in.....especially after your claim. You just demonstrated 1 Cor 2:14. It appears you believe Paul is calling the birht of Issac and Ishmael allegories but you are not specifying how they are allegorical. If you could understand scripture you would understand what Paul was saying. Are you willing to take a crack at what he meant or would you rather someone here tell you?We're going around in circles, because I have and will continue to maintain that Paul absolutely would base a rule on an allegorical story, and in fact did so in Galatians 4:24.
We're going around in circles, because I have and will continue to maintain that Paul absolutely would base a rule on an allegorical story, and in fact did so in Galatians 4:24.