christundivided said:
ddgently said:
Where do you think your hostility comes from? Of course it (like many other verses) implies that the earth is stationary. I hope you realize that no one, Christian or not, thought the earth moved until the 16th century AD. So why would we expect Solomon to write assuming anything different?
No it doesn't. You only have their observation.
Whose observation? It's tough to debate you when you're so vague.
Its actually very hilarious that people like you say that the Genesis account isn't scientific and yet you demand that Solomon give a scientific view of the rotation of the earth. You are entirely inconsistent and dishonest in your methodology.
I'm not inconsistent. The Genesis account isn't scientific, but it does represent the cosmology of the time. I don't "demand that Solomon give a scientific view of the rotation of the earth." Rather, I recognize that he too uses language that reflects the cosmology of the time. If you read Solomon's words, without your "modern science" you would conclude, in the absence of anything else, that the sun goes around the earth. That's all I'm saying.
I'm not crazy. How do you presume to know what Solomon believed? You didn't know him either.
I'm not reading anything into what he said. I take it face value. You're the one READING INTO what Solomon wrote.
Explain to me, without referencing modern science, what that verse tells you about the sun's relationship to the earth.
Contrary to what you probably think, I take the biblical text very, very seriously. I want to know what it really says and means. The gospels are an entirely different genre of literature than Genesis 1-11. They were also written within a few decades of the events they record, rather than hundreds or even thousands of years after the events.
No you're not taking them seriously.
Thank you for the mind-reading. I usually have to pay a psychic $49.95 an hour for that.
Contrary to your imagination.
This sentence no verb.
GOD divinely GAVE MOSES the revelation of Genesis. Your instance do you mean "insistence"? it is somehow different because he was thousands of years removed from the event GOD DIVINELY revealed to him..... is entirely silly. You have abandoned the ideals of inerrancy and inspiration. If you want to make an argument concerning transmition of the texts..... then I'll listen. If you're going to say that They are less reliable or inferior than other texts of the Scriptures.... simply because the author did not personally experience the events.... then I'm going to classy you as a heretic My new signature line "DDGently: One Classy Heretic..... and I don't use those words lightly. There is big difference between being a textual critic and a "higher critic". I hope you're not the latter.
Allow me to answer your accusation with a question. Was the story of Adam and Eve known before Moses wrote it down?
This is where discernment comes in: What kind of text is this? Who wrote it? What was his motivation for writing? To whom was it written? How has the text been interpreted through the centuries? These types of questions, coupled with the rational minds God gave us, allow us to discern what God intends the text to communicate, and usually as a peripheral issue, whether the text is "historical" in the way we think of that word.
You know... this is really laughable. What makes you think God wrote it for your scientific mind to discern. You are actually saying you are the one that really understands what its trying God was convey more than those to whom it was written. Its really comical. Your mythology is self defeating. You sound just like rsca. I wouldn't wish that on anyone.
That's the thing. I don't think God gave scripture to instruct us in science at all. But I definitely think God gave us scripture for our minds to discern. So you disagree with my assertion that we need to look at scripture through the lens of who wrote it, to whom it was written, and for what purpose it was written? Are those factors irrelevant to you?
I have done a lot to educate myself. Which is why I reject a young earth and special creation. But we all trust others, with some degree of blindness, because we can't possibly know everything. Except for you, of course.
LOL. Okay. I know what I know from the Scriptures. I use the Scripture to constrain my ideals of modern science.
NOT true. You use what you already think Scripture must mean to constrain what it means. Everyone does this, but it's important to recognize it. Do you not think you have to interpret scripture to determine what it means. Or are you of the "God Said It. I Believe It. That Settles It." school of thought?
I don't use unproven scientific method to constrain my ideals of the Scriptures. Most here would tell you I am overtly liberal when it comes to the transmitting of the texts of the Scriptures, but I have never abandon the core values of Inspiration and Inerrancy. To believe what you believe..... You have to take the approach you've taken. Its progressive and destructive. One thought brings about another thought.... that brings about another thought. Lie upon lie... upon lie....
Why do you assume it is a lie upon a lie?
until you have the gall to cast aside the inerrant revelation of Genesis to be nothing more than a figurative account without any detail into a literal creative action of our Master.
Of course I blieve our Master is the creator. He just didn't tell us exactly how he did it in Genesis.
You have built a progressive theology that elevates one portion of Scripture above another.
So you give equal weight to all Scripture? Where do you get support for that? You don't think the words of, oh I don't know, Jesus, the Son of God, are a little more important than, say, a genealogy in Genesis or Luke?
You insult my intelligence by taking the Genesis account as a figurative expression without any literal/practical application and then claim the you still believe in a literal Christ that takes away the sins of humanity
I've NEVER said that Genesis 1-3 has no literal or practical application.
... Yet, you don't know exactly what "humanity" really is. Does it include neanderthal "man" or "Homo erectus". It doesn't matter to you.
Allow me spit out my snack so you can stuff more words in my mouth.
The origins of sin are important. It is a key part of the Gospel.
Is it? I thought a key part of the gospel was that I have a personal sin problem and Jesus has the answer. What difference does it make to me where the sin problem came from?
It explains why sin has passed along to every man. Its in his nature. Part of his being because he inherited it from a literal ADAM.
So there is a sin gene? So if, contrary to your belief, God made a covenant with a man who was one among many man, and that man broke the covenant, and sin entered the earth through that man, that wouldn't be good enough for you?
Actually, I did know about that verse. I know about lots of verses. I'm sure you do too. I don't agree with your interpretation, and you don't agree with mine.
Fair enough. I will leave it at that. I will take your word for it. I said I would and I try to be a honest person.
Great. Tell you what, if I make it to the New Jerusalem in spite of my "heresy" I'll buy you a beer.
LOL. I have very little tolerance anymore for false teachings.
And yet you promulgate so many...
I'd tell my friends the same things. Even though I have grown tired of such nonsense..... I am generally a people person. I don't try to treat anyone any different. Yet, I will not abandon my beliefs for the sake of friendship. I'll take you up on that offer as long as its bitter cold and comes with a good conversation...
Deal!
Why is it so important? Is there a "sin" gene? Like the Bible (the book we're arguing about) says, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." Not "All were born with the stain of original sin because they are biological descendants of a man named Adam." Pretty sure we're all sinners whether there is a literal Adam or not. Show me in the Bible where it says there are some sinless people out there who only need Jesus because of original sin.
You're arguing from silence and I don't understand the point you're trying to make. If there are generations of mankind that have no direct tie to a literal Adam.... then the Scriptures are nothing more than a myth.
Why? That's a bold assertion. How do you get there?
Jesus was genetically human. Just like you. Just like me. Sure, there have been other hominins, but Jesus didn't become like them. Where did I say that he did? I've also never said anything about a cooperative group called "Adam."
From what I've seen....you've grouped various "hominins" into the same group as Adam. I don't see how you're separating them. Can you draw the line a little clearer?
If there was one "Adam" I believe he was a homo sapien.