ZenMode
Well-known member
No.haven't I?
God/Jesus only made himself known when man was at his most superstitious and there were no video recording devices.
No.haven't I?
there we have it.That is a rather big mystery and conundrum that you casually blew by.
Why would a lawfully organized, mathematically rational, finely tuned universe just blink into existence by purely inanimate random chance?
There has never, ever been any situation in your life where the rational came from the irrational, and where something came from nothing.
You just took it for granted that a mathematically rational universe exists without even pausing to ask the deeper question 'why?'
Where did these universal laws of physics come from and why do they exist? Does it seem logical to you that they could just result from chance and purely inanimate reasons?
We don't know how the universe came into existence and I'm fine with that.That is a rather big mystery and conundrum that you casually blew by.
Why would a lawfully organized, mathematically rational, finely tuned universe just blink into existence by purely inanimate random chance?
There has never, ever been any situation in your life where the rational came from the irrational, and where something came from nothing.
You just took it for granted that a mathematically rational universe exists without even pausing to ask the deeper question 'why?'
Where did these universal laws of physics come from and why do they exist? Does it seem logical to you that they could just result from chance and purely inanimate reasons?
miracles aren't the point.No.
God/Jesus only made himself known when man was at his most superstitious and there were no video recording devices.
create the gap, fill it with god.We don't know how the universe came into existence and I'm fine with that.
You want to fill in the knowledge gap w/ a god.
God and the divine Jesus dont need to exist for the writings about them to matter.miracles aren't the point.
the point is morality and the golden rule is the solution.
everyone misses Jesus one most important teaching on purpose.
No need to create gaps. Religious people find them all the time and fill that gap with god.create the gap, fill it with god.
Zionist douchebaggery.
The Bible isn't a scientific report.You're running cover for ridiculous, anti-science claims of the Bible.
No, it is Protestants believe in strict literalism. And usually that's only the fundamentalists. Fundamentalist Protestantism is a minority in world Christianity.Most Christians believe the Bible is literal BECAUSE it's sold as the Word of God.
I believe that God, the creator of the heavens and the Earth, knows the ins and outs of his own creation.So, you believe God can change the atomic structure of water to make a liquid into a solid so a person can walk on it?
right. because Jesus's moral teaching is the payload, not his existence.God and the divine Jesus dont need to exist for the writings about them to matter.
Nothing random about them. They are universal mathematical principles which matter and energy conform to.Random equations are no the Universe, Clanker.
Atheism, specifically implicit atheism is nothing more or less than a failure to believe someone else's claims of a God.
You use the exact same reasoning every single day.
So why don't you allow it for atheists?
I do accept that people who call themselves atheists do NOT "believe" claims of others who claim a "belief" in a god.You don't believe me when I tell you I'm 8' tall and can summon lightning just because I claim it. So why don't you allow that atheism can be that?
you're a total fucking idiot.The Bible isn't a scientific report.
Genesis 1 is Hebrew poetry, you don't read poetry like it's a peer reviewed scientific report.
At the level of metaphor and poetry, Genesis 1 is actually a pretty decent description of life, the universe, and everything: there was a void, then a moment of creation, then the creation of land and waters, then the appearance of plants, then the appearance of animals, then lastly the appearance of humans.
That's really not a bad summary at the level of metaphor.
~100 years ago, Einstein and other scientists throught the universe was infinitely old and had always existed. In a way, Genesis was closer to the truth.
No, it is Protestants believe in strict literalism. And usually that's only the fundamentalists. Fundamentalist Protestantism is a minority in world Christianity.
But you should read everything literally. Science, poetry, history, Scripture. What you really have to decide is how to interpret those words, and understand what kind of genre you are reading. You don't read poetry the same way you read a physics paper or a historical biography.
Nobody has said it's a scientific report.The Bible isn't a scientific report.
That is not a fact. That is the opinion of some people. Again, even if you take away the creation story, there are a dozen other claims that go against science.Genesis 1 is Hebrew poetry, you don't read poetry like it's a peer reviewed scientific report.
Regardless of who believes what, the Bible is claimed to be the Word of God and there are multiple claims in there that directly go against science.At the level of metaphor and poetry, Genesis 1 is actually a pretty decent description of life, the universe, and everything: there was a void, then a moment of creation, then the creation of land and waters, then the appearance of plants, then the appearance of animals, then lastly the appearance of humans.
That's really not a bad summary at the level of metaphor.
~100 years ago, Einstein and other scientists throught the universe was infinitely old and had always existed. In a way, Genesis was closer to the truth.
No, it is Protestants believe in strict literalism. And usually that's only the fundamentalists. Fundamentalist Protestantism is a minority in world Christianity.
The Bible is claimed to be the Word of God and it repeatedly makes claims that go against science. All of the side stories and other assumptions will not change that.But you should read everything literally. Science, poetry, history, Scripture. What you really have to decide is how to interpret those words, and understand what kind of genre you are reading. You don't read poetry the same way you read a physics paper or a historical biography.
It strengthens my case that posters of the quality of you and IntoTheNightgown are so adamantly convinced I am wrongyou're a total fucking idiot!
He's an angry elf.It strengthens my case that posters of the quality of you and IntoTheNightgown are so adamantly convinced I am wrong
I'm happy with my position as well.It strengthens my case that posters of the quality of you and IntoTheNightgown are so adamantly convinced I am wrong
Yes, The Bible is the Word of God.The Bible, according to many, many, many Christians, is the word of God and is taken literally as such.
By some Christians, but not all. Were you there when the creation of the heavens and the Earth occurred? I know that I wasn't there. I have no clue how it happened. I can only go by what The Bible says (and be aware of the issues that can arise from translating between different languages).The creation of everything in 7 days is taking literally.
Yes. Adam and Eve literally existed.The existence of Adam and Eve is taking literally.
Yes, "The Fall" is a historical event.The fall is taking literally.
Some Christians believe that the Earth is thousands of years old (usually somewhere around 6,000 - 10,000 years old is believed). Other Christians believe that the Earth is millions or billions of years old. The age of the Earth is unknown (The Bible doesn't specify).A belief that the Earth is only 6000 years old is also taken very literally by many Christians.
You have yet to demonstrate how miracles didn't or can't occur. You have yet to demonstrate how you know more about the inner-workings of the heavens and the earth than the very creator of them.Even if you take away the age of the Earth, there are still a dozen events in the Bible that fly in the face of science. I've listed them multiple times.
What "gaps"? It seems that you have your preconceived notions about Christianity, and you are forever going to stick to them, regardless of any input from me, Into The Night, or anyone else.By the way, this is a separate topic from the god of the gaps discussion. It's clear that you and many others here are 100% on the god of the gaps bandwagon.
You haven't said anything intelligible or coherent.I'm happy with my position as well.
Why would the existence of video recording devices make any sort of a difference?No.
God/Jesus only made himself known when man was at his most superstitious and there were no video recording devices.