Orion said:and a lot of the stupid wars probably would have been averted
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/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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Orion said:and a lot of the stupid wars probably would have been averted
Free said:Orion said:and a lot of the stupid wars probably would have been averted
I was just wondering if that was what he was getting at (since, as Jason has pointed out, it completely ignores what has been done in the name of godlessness) and what that has to do with the age of the Earth.Sir Pwn4lot said:Really? You can't think of any? Ok well:Free said:Orion said:and a lot of the stupid wars probably would have been averted
French Wars of Religion (4 million killed, 8th worst war of all time [off the top of my head ])
The Crusades (Many of which were approved by the Pope)
The 30 Years War (6-11 million killed)
Taiping Rebellion
It would seem worthwhile to say something.....
Free said:I was just wondering if that was what he was getting at (since, as Jason has pointed out, it completely ignores what has been done in the name of godlessness) and what that has to do with the age of the Earth.
jasoncran said:one must worship something or someone. but i will now go back to topic.
because everyone has that habit or thing that must have, be it money, women, tv, or even dare i say science, and rush to have it. never met an atheist that didnt have something or someone that had to have, addictions whether benign or bad are a form of worship, i have a freind who is into zen and is an atheist and he has to have that meditation daily, or he feels incomplete.Sir Pwn4lot said:jasoncran said:one must worship something or someone. but i will now go back to topic.
Where on Earth did you get this assertion from?
jasoncran said:because everyone has that habit or thing that must have, be it money, women, tv, or even dare i say science, and rush to have it. never met an atheist that didnt have something or someone that had to have, addictions whether benign or bad are a form of worship, i have a freind who is into zen and is an atheist and he has to have that meditation daily, or he feels incomplete.Sir Pwn4lot said:jasoncran said:one must worship something or someone. but i will now go back to topic.
Where on Earth did you get this assertion from?
Rick W said:Most Christians here believe the miracles Christ performed. One such example is the feeding of the masses.. twice. Those fish didn't have age but maybe a few hours at most before getting into the hands of those in attendance.
Without knowing or believing Christ created those fish one would be compelled to view the fish as having age. There could be no other deduction when creation is not believed. By all logic, by the evidence in one's hand the fish under examination would indeed appear to be at least some months old.
The scientific community has no law/s governing creation of something from nothing. There are no principles, no formulas, no laws by which we may know the mechanics of creation from nothing. Due to this fact only the observed can be used to deduce age. If I gave someone a newly created object, one created only moments before from nothing, it would be impossible for that person to rightly deduce it's age.
Christ created the fishes that fed multitudes. I'm not going to limit God's power of creation to the logic of men or their scientific conclusions.
Rick W said:Science provides the data, the evidence by such observation. Science says or states nothing. Science is not an entity of it's own. Science simply provides or generates the data. Man makes the conclusions. The science of forensics is used to provide evidence for both a defense attorney and a prosecutor. It is by conclusion a judgment is made. Scientists are men judging by what science provides to come to the conclusions they themselves make. Scientific conclusion. Unfortunately those conclusion are made without any regard for the possibility of creation simply because man and man's science cannot provide laws, rules etc for something being created from nothing.
The ultimate consequence of this argument is, of course, Last Thursdayism. The intellectual barrenness of the idea that observed age is only an illusion was exemplified by the underwhelming reaction to Philip Henry Gosse's 1857 work Omphalos. This reaction was typified by the comment of the Rev Charles Kingsley who observed that he found it impossible to 'give up the painful and slow conclusion of five and twenty years' study of geology, and believe that God has written on the rocks one enormous and superfluous lie.' It is impossible to determine whether or not the idea of 'created age' is wrong and so the concept is ultimately untestable and methodologically absurd: science is rendered pointless and we may as will sit trembling in our caves whenever the anger of the gods is made manifest in thunder and lightning.Rick W said:Is there a power that can indeed create something from nothing?
Just because the conclusions people make from the data science generates through observation of what has been created doesn't negate the possibility that something can indeed be created from nothing.
I can observe a car all day but that doesn't mean I know how it was manufactured. Observation does not teach metallurgy. It's just there. I have no clue of the processes required to build it.
I'm sorry if you thought this was what I was suggesting you were saying: what I was trying to point out is that this seems to be the ultimate consequence of this kind of argument.Rick W said:I'm not saying we should "sit trembling in our caves whenever the anger of the gods is made manifest in thunder and lightning.".
Observation is indeed not 'the only means of thinking'. However, observation, measurement and analysis and the inferences and conclusions about the natural world that we draw from those procedures either tell us something 'true' about that world, or there would seem to be not very much purpose in ether making them or trying to learn something from them. If multiple, independent methodologies all point to an Earth and Universe that are very much older than the age calculated from ancient legend by a minor sect of Christianity, then it would seem reasonable to conclude that the observations are correct and the sect mistaken.Heck, I had 5 sciences in my senior year in high school and pursued science to eek out a living.
I just don't see any reason to totally dismiss the possibility that God did indeed do as written as advocated by some, or the use of conclusions drawn by the observed to claim there is no God.
When reliance upon observation becomes the only means of thinking then we turn our backs not only on God but also upon the gift of the heart to know Him.
It would seem reasonable to agree with the Rev Kingsley that the creation that we observe and measure does not lie to us, however.Again, we cannot simply conclude creation of something from nothing is impossible when we ourselves are part of that creation.
Your conclusion does not follow from the initial premise. Admitting ignorance about something does not immediately open the door to the admission of God as an explanation for that ignorance, hence my earlier reference to thunder and lightning.Once we admit to ourselves that we can't know everything, that there is a limit to what man can understand then we can use observation to know the power and glory of God.
Well, it gathers data in an attempt to falsify hypotheses and, if the consequence of that data-gathering is that the hypothesis is not falsified then confidence in its validity as a description and explanation of the phenomenon in question is enhanced.Science proves nothing. All it does is generate data and nothing more.
But those assumptions are continually being tested by multiple researchers, which is how knowledge and understanding advances and expands. Science is not about proof per se, it is about this process of testing to determine whether an idea is more or less valid. Einstein's special and general theories of relativity are excellent examples of this process, I think.The conclusions drawn by that data are formed within the mind of the observer. Looking out into the universe, gathering the information sought to support one's assumption, is very much like the art of forensics. Depends on what one wants to prove. All research, debate or gathering of information must first be preceeded by some assumption/s otherwise there would be no point in one's efforts. It's that assumption, that motivation that dictates how the tools of science, the gathering of information, will be used to produce the information sought.
Why are you 'quite sure' of this? And if you are 'quite sure', you must also be able to see that 'created age' is intellectually barren: if something appears to be two billion years old, but in fact is only 2,000 years old, what can we assume but that the creator is deceptive?Rick W said:The problem lies in the fact that we have no means of testing creation from nothing. If I gave you something that was created from nothing just moments ago I'm quite sure the evidence would be undeniable that there is age much greater than 2 minutes.
Except that the observed ages of different phenomena appear to be different. Artifacts from Dynastic Egypt appear to be older than artifacts from the Magdalen Era. Fossil Ichthyosaurs appear to be older than fossil dolphins. How do we distinguish between real and created age? If created age cannot be tested for, it becomes an interesting exercise in theology, but remains wholly worthless scientifically.After all, even the atoms had to come from the Big Bang anyway. In that case it's a simple exercise of manipulation of matter and not one of creation.
Well, cosmologists are moving ever closer to observing the Big Bang. It is certainly the case that the consequences of this creative event can be observed and measured.We can't observe creation as it occurs or has occurred.
You seem to be assuming that creation cannot have a naturalistic explanation and that our observations of natural phenomena tell us nothing meaningful about the origin and history of those phenomena because we don't have minds capable of encompassing a proper understanding of them. On the basis of the history of knowledge, I disagree profoundly.With that simple premise in mind one can only conclude it doesn't occur or ever has. Why? Because we can't see it happening. Not only that but we don't have the intellectual horsepower to even develop a rudimentary set of rules governing such an occurrence. And I seriously doubt we ever will.
I can attempt to teach a chimp the theory of evolution but his mind just doesn't have what it takes. Likewise we are also limited even though we are presumably from the same family but just one rung up on the evolutionary ladder.