View Poll Results: Would you leave your church if it did not stand against old earth creationism?
- Voters
- 38. You may not vote on this poll
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Yes
5 13.16% -
No
31 81.58% -
Undecided
2 5.26%
Thread: Should you leave your church?
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March 7th 2004, 11:19 AM #31
Re: Should you leave your church?
That's fine Kuboes1831, it is just so hard to tell when everyone is so tetchy with each other.
"Spirit of God my teacher be, showing the things of Christ to me." ~ More About Jesus
The grave could not hold the King!
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March 7th 2004, 10:55 PM #32So you left out the answer to the question: If mankind needed the Tree of Life in order to maintain his physical life, what kept the animals and sea mammals from death? This is why the question of the Tree of Life is so important. If man was subject to physical death apart from the Tree of Life, so were the animals, and yet we do not see a miraculous provision for them as we do for man in the Tree.
Originally posted by Socrates
For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
Ecclesiastes 1:18
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March 8th 2004, 12:33 AM #33
Tree of Life, Calvin and Wesley on death as the result of sin
Who knows? Let's go by what Scripture DOES reveal, and that is original vegetarianism for humans and animals.
Originally posted by A Beautiful Truth
Once again, it's not that he was subject to death, but merely that God ordained that he would not die physically and the Tree was His means, somehow.
Originally posted by A Beautiful Truth
Calvin agreed with AiG (Genesis, 1554; Banner of Truth, Edinburgh, UK, 1984, p. 110):
John Wesley likewise (God’s approbation of his Work, Sermon 56 (Genesis 1:31), 1872; http://gbgm-umc.org/UMhistory/Wesley...s/serm-056.stm ):
Argument from silence. And Wesley agreed that there was no animal violence before the Fall:
Originally posted by A Beautiful Truth
This just shows that AiG's views are just the same as those of esteemed Christian commentators throughout the ages. So Ross and his devotees are misleading to claim that YEC is a modern aberration invented by SDAs.Last edited by Socrates; March 8th 2004 at 12:39 AM.
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March 8th 2004, 12:44 AM #34
Animal death
So, please translate this for me in your own words so I am sure I have this right.
Do you believe that animals would have died without the Tree of Life or not?
It is pretty clear the Tree of Life was the thing that kept Adam from physical death.
It is pretty clear the animals were not given the Tree of Life.
Therefore, you argue out of ignorance if you say there was some miraculous provision for them. And this is aside from our differences about carniverous activity before the Fall. Would soulish animals have died, period, before the Fall, in your opinion, without a miraculous Tree of Life? In your own straightforward words, please.For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
Ecclesiastes 1:18
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March 8th 2004, 12:59 AM #35
It doesn't show.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
They were still rejectors of biblical history.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Come off it -- he was most influential, even though he was a lawyer and not a geologist.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Not at all. Hutton said:
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Lovely ipse dixits all round. Conversely, I documented my claim.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Certainly not biblical reasons, otherwise they would have been thought of before. And not even scientific reasons, but based on placing their fallible interpretations of geology above Scripture.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Not so as shown with Hutton.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
Please explain.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
What piffle -- he shows that canyons, fossilized vertical tree trunks and fine laminae NEED not take long ages.
Originally posted by kuboes1831
• Edited by a Moderator •
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March 8th 2004, 03:29 AM #36
There is no answer to utter nonsense.
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March 8th 2004, 05:54 AM #37Nochyu mokraya ptitsa nikogda ne letaet.
A wet bird never flies at night. -unknown [old Russian proverb]
Eudyptes: you are....as usual....100% correct
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March 8th 2004, 07:24 PM #38
To keep everyone happy I shall attempt to explain things briefly and hope all have sufficient neurons to cope.
Geologists did not start with a belief in an Old Earth. Period. If we go to 1660s with Steno who looked at strata in Italy and worked out the principle of superposition – oldest always at the bottom of any pile unless something inserted later. He assumed a young earth pretty much in accord with 6 days and a big flood. (I don’t know whether like everyone else except Ussher and Henry he allowed for chaos and then reordering in 6 days.) The theorists of the earth Ray, Burnett, whiston, Woodward took for granted a young earth (6 days + chaos), and that all strata were laid down in the flood. Their biblical interpretation which pre-dated any field work let them be open to more than a straight 6 days. Many imply a long chaos but don’t define it. Lhwyd wrote to Ray on 30 feb 1691 suggesting from field evidence that the earth must be older than everyone thought. Letter in Ray Three Physico-theo discourses p285
It carried on in 18th century and slowly field work made people revise their young earth stance;
William Hamilton on Mt Vesuvius and at Pompeii in the 1770s realised that old lava flows developed soil and then covered by more lava and some of these were more than a few thousand years old because so many of them
De Saussure in the Alps in 1770s assumed rocks in the centre of the Alpine chain were creation rocks i.e. c4000BC until he noticed that at Vallocine by Chamonix these rocks had water rounded pebbles and were vertical bedded and thus “tres vieux”. His friend de Luc also found similar things and reckoned the earth had to be 10s of thousands (but objected to Hutton’s millions)
In 1880s Rev Jas Douglas gave paper to Royal Society saying that evidence pointed away from young to an old earth
Also William Smith abetted by the Evangelical rev J Townsend who stressed that the age was more than Ussher’s as a result of extensive field work. 1790s
There are many more excluding Hutton.
Only one who assumed YE and didnt agree with evidence for OE was the High church Rev William Jones of Nayland 1790s
Result they began with YE assumptions found them wanting and became OE at differing rates and to different degrees.
At first they argued that all strata were laid down in the flood but realised that there were too many strata for one flood and suggested more, - hence multiple catastrophist.
So in period from 1660 to 1800 “geologists” began with YE assumptions and moved to OE because of what they saw. Many were devout Christians and anti- desist and Hutton’s approach.
Reading matter Stuart MccReady ed The Discovery of Time 2001 p172-204
Evang Quarterly April 2002 vol lxxiv p 143ff
The Churchman 1998 vol 112 no 3 225-56
Austin’s extreme Uniformitarianism.
Austin rightly saw canyons which had been formed quickly after the eruption on Mt St Helens. But falsely extrapolated from that to a canyon the size of the Grand Canyon and suggests that the GC was eroded in a hundred years or so. He also assumed that the sediments were unconsolidated and these erodable – there is no evidence. It is simply Young Earth Creationists stating that the GC was deposited during the Flood and eroded soon after. If that isnt extreme Uniformitarianism I don’t know what is. It makes Lyell look positively anti-uniformitarian in his book, which is far more restrained than Socrates claimed.
Austin is far more uniformitarian than Lyell .
To save Socrates replying he will say that this is ipsi dixit. But he has never given any evidence to back up his claims.
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March 8th 2004, 11:17 PM #39There must be something wrong with this post. Austin is far more uniformitarian than Lyell?
Originally posted by kuboes1831
THE leading cause of atheism is evolution, closely followed by compromising Christians.
Socratism
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June 1st 2004, 11:00 AM #40
Great exegetes Basil, Calvin and Wesley affirm no pre-Fall human or animal death
St Basil the Great (On the origin of Man 2:6-7):
Calvin agrees that death came through sin (Genesis, 1554; Banner of Truth, Edinburgh, UK, 1984, p. 110):
John Wesley likewise (God’s approbation of his Work, Sermon 56 (Genesis 1:31), 1872; http://gbgm-umc.org/UMhistory/Wesley...s/serm-056.stm ):
Wesley also greed that there was no animal violence before the Fall:
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June 1st 2004, 11:03 AM #41
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June 1st 2004, 12:21 PM #42
Re: Should you leave your church?
Please can you clarify? When you say you're a "straight down the line Creationist", does that mean you reject the concept that all living organisms descended from a single common ancestor (or a very few original ancestors)? I know that some theistic evolutionists also like to call themselves creationists - but this part of TWeb specifically excludes those advocating theistic evolution. So that isn't your position, correct?
Originally posted by kuboes1831
"Just as the doctrine of evolution is universally accepted among biologists, so also the geosynclinal origin of the major mountain systems is an established principle in geology." Clark and Stearn's 'Geological Evolution of North America' (1960, p. 43).
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June 2nd 2004, 02:43 AM #43
Re: Should you leave your church?
what is an "ipse dixit" anyway?
Last edited by jason; June 2nd 2004 at 05:46 AM.
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June 2nd 2004, 11:13 PM #44
Re: Great exegetes Basil, Calvin and Wesley affirm no pre-Fall human or animal death
As I've said before, I'll give you a Garden with not carniverous activity. But the whole earth was no Garden, Socrates. The Garden was set apart from the rest of creation.
For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
Ecclesiastes 1:18
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June 2nd 2004, 11:15 PM #45
Re: Should you leave your church?
I've been wondering that, too. I never asked since it was always directed to me in a negative way.
Originally posted by apostate
For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
Ecclesiastes 1:18
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