lvbuckeye
Silver Surfer
to address the first sentence, i am aware of what i was saying, and i said it that way intentionally. to address the second sentence, there is absolutely a belief system wrapped up in evolutionary thought. one quick peek at Erasmus Darwin's "Temple of Nature" exposes that belief system: it is a worship of nature. naturalism in philosophy is a view that only takes into account natural events and discounts any supernatural or spiritual influence. naturalism in theology is the view that all religious truth comes from the study of natural events and not from divine revelation. it is only once you realize the truth that evolutionism is bound up in philosophical and theological naturalism that you can see it for what it really is.Gatorubet;891107; said:Here you nail it for reasons you perhaps did not intend. Others do not have one - any - none -zilch - nada - ounce of religious belief wrapped up in this issue. To me, and many others, to embrace mainstream science and its revelations on the age of the earth and the existence of its earlier inhabitants is in no way a denunciation of Christianity. To people who think that every story in the Bible is true, if you move off of any of it, it all falls.
spiritualism is the philosophy of emphasizing the spiritual aspects of a being and the theology that asserts the separate existence of God. of course, the Bible takes that one step further and teaches that because the nature of God is SO separate from the nature of man, that God became a man Himself in order to redeem His Creation and ensure mankind's ability to spend eternity in God's presence.
i will freely admit that i fit your description in the last sentence, and will merely add that the reason that the debate is waged so strongly is because of what is at stake- for both sides.
see above, and you will understand that the open mind required is not available to those on the other side of the argument either.So the first requirement of a scientific inquiry - an open mnd - is not available to those who base their religion (and perhaps their idea of eternal salvation) on the literal word. To put it differently, those who are literalists cannot afford to look at this issue with an open mind. To even presume to admit evolution and the vast mainstream of scientific thought that through biology, physics, geology, etc. refute a 6,000 year old earth is to abandon your faith. So say what you will, insistance on a literal reading of the Bible as it relates to Genosis is not scientifc inquiry, it is a concentrated effort that is nothing less than a means to prove an end, that the Bible is right. Any proof that differs is to be disregarded.
you cannot serve two masters. you will either hate the one and love the other, or you will hold to one and despise the other. regardless of whether one considers himself to be "christian," if one is practicing in naturalism, that person by definition is not worshiping God, who exists outside of nature.If you could show that the world is full of non-Christian scientists, you might have some sort of bias. But as the bulk of modern science at the highest levels of government and university research is conducted by scientists who consider themselves "Christian", one has little to throw rocks at. OTOH, there are virtually no athiests or agnostics who think the earth 6,000 years old.
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm................
naturalism and spiritualism are diametrically opposed.
Upvote
0