While that may be true, just as today you have those who believe all sorts of ways about God and what scripture is and means. But it's clear that Origin was speaking from an entirely different framework than them. And it is Origin who was largely responsible for Christianity being taken
seriously, as he moved it from a place of ridicule, to a well articulated philosophical/metaphysical system that had its place, that rivaled or surpassed the Greeks, whom he studied and taught.
This is a well-written article intended for both Atheists and Fundamentalists who misunderstand the reality of the early Christian church, and why is it wrong to assume the early church read the Bible literally.
The Great Myths 11: Biblical Literalism - History for Atheists
Will do the read.. but certainly no space to comment on it. And certainly the topic alone that you are suggesting deserves a thread in and of itself.
To be honest, I am confused as to why they are calling those scientific theories, other than using the words hypothesis may confuse the average reader? The Theory of Evolution however is different than what you referenced here, which are hypothesis regarding the origins of life itself. That's not what the ToE encompasses.
True. And believing ToE does not prevent someone from knowing God.
There are certainly different Christian perspectives on that story. For myself, I see the entire gospels themselves as parables. So the story has significance from a spiritual perspective. To try to dissect it with science, is to completely be missing the intended point of it. This is my major problem with Creationism as a supposed "science" (which it is not). They miss the point of the story and why it was written. It wasn't to teach the earth sciences!
Only if you are labeling "Creationism" as a literal day context. Creationism, in its basic understanding, is simply that God created what we see and it wasn't by chance. He does use sciences, He created sciences.
But I see the Jesus stories as historical. As Paul said, 1 For 15:14 And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. If it is only a parable, then my message is useless (even though you may find some spiritual truths within it)
Mythologies use the names of real people all the time. Homer's Odyssey certainly named real historical places and people, but I'm pretty sure the cyclops and Poseidon, were mythic figures. But this did not address my question to you, which was,
"Do you understand how that can be so, that something can be true in its meaning, while the actual story that carries that message, may be a creative invention designed in order to effectively tell a story that conveys that truth?"
Can the story of Adam and Eve been true, while the actual events of the story were purely allegorical and mythic? Can it convey the same, if not more depth of meaning to you, even if you understood they were not historical in the sense we think of historical facts today? If not, then can you explain how it can have meaning to those like me, who do not accept that they were two actual people identical as the story presents them?
Yes, mythologies do that. Yet the autobiography of George Muller, though it has places and names, remains historical. And I trust the biography of George Washington, which also has places and names, is true.
Regardless... you still can get "messages" or "truth" out of parables.
If it isn't necessary for some for them to be true to find the meaning, then why do some feel it necessary to deny science when it appears to them to be encroaching on sacred ground, that being their beliefs about God and the Bible? You won't see me trying to "disprove science" in order to protect my views of scripture. You'll see it the other way around actually welcoming the insights, in order to better understand the nature of symbolic truths.
Yes, for some this is true but I don't see science disproving it. I believe it enhances it.
I wasn't intending that analogy to be challenging that. I brought that up because you had repeated that argument I've heard out the Ken Ham camp, telling the young ones when they hear a scientist in school teaching about of evolution, to challenge them as say, "Were you there???" Which is an absolutely ridiculous argument. Yes, science was there, in effect, because they are studying real things that came from back then. That rock was there however many million years ago. It's not made up make believe. Why should he cast it that way to the minds of these impressionable youth? Fear of truth? I have to ask.
So sorry I said that and can understand why you related it to the Ken Ham camp. But I don't think that was the context of what I was saying. Communication is always difficult
because I know what I said,
but what you read may not have been what I said. (Through my lack of capacity.
That is why I believe in Einsteins theory of relativity where light and time are important and thus a day can be so much longer that the 24 hours we call a day.
But
I would still hold to the position that man, as we know him today, was created from the ground and not an evolutionary process. Other humanoid looking people? Yes... but not man
I accept evolution, because the science is solid. I believe in God, because I have both faith, and experience of the Divine. That said, I believe God is the Ground of all Being, to use Paul Tillich's term. All that is, arises from the Divine as Source. That is, God is the Creator of everything. Evolution, is God creating, in the present continuous tense. While we can think of 'the creation' as a single event of the past, the reality is, as the science shows as well, that was the beginning. Not the end.
While the story of the Garden of Eden is set at some "time" in the past, that is an origin story, meant to relate each and everyone of us to that time, which exists within ourselves. That core union with the Divine, and falling from that deep inner origins of who we are, as creations of the Divine itself, is the story of the 'creation'.
But it's a story in a
timeless past, not a fixed, historical date. Bishop Usher, had a very modernistic idea in his head, when he picked up sacred myth, and tried to approach it scientifically!
Sadly, that type of thinking has impacted many generations to follow him towards that same conflation of disparate narratives. It unnecessarily confuses faith, IMO.
Again... relate, yes, but I think there is fixed, historical data but not in the sense that most people might believe.
I'll agree that humans created classification systems as part of doing good science. But I want to call out something you let slip here.
Man did not decide that humans evolved from a common primate ancestor shared by other primate species today. They discovered that to be the truth of our origins and ancestry through the tools of science, such as DNA mapping, for one. They "decided" that the data was pointing to that, and they confirmed that data and conclusions from multiple other sets of examinations. All pointing to the same conclusion.
That, is not just arbitrarily imagining it and 'just deciding' that was the case. That is a bad-faith argument, if that is what you were intending to imply?
Actually, what I find is that there are viewpoints that consider what they see. In some cases, they try to interpret what they see. But how can you consider a case when you eliminate a whole section of possibilities such as the spiritual realm? Is one
really viewing what they see when they don't consider
all possibilities? IMV, no. So, as the opinion that I posted where even if it is suggested, it is ridiculed, so it is impossible to correctly interpret what you see when you don't consider all factors. It become more like "This is my theory and I will only accept those parts that support my theory and throw out what doesn't". And erroneous scientific approach.
Of course science does not examine these things. It's not the right set of eyes to use to examine it. We use other sets of eyes to examine the things of the Spirit. That's an interesting perspective on animals. How do you define spirit, and how do you define soul in this context?
The soul is the mind will and emotions. We see this both in humans and in dogs, whales, et al. The spirit is what makes us eternal and is breathed in by God. It makes us like God with authority and augmented creative powers with the power to create what we can imagine.