reply to Vancouversailor post #43
If it means anything to you I feel your parents were mistaken for 'shunning' you. Instead of distancing themselves from you they should of embraced you. 'Fundamental Christianity' like 'fundamental Islam' taken too far, not allowing dissent and discussion etc, often perverts the religions into something they were not meant to be IMO. I can say the latter with more confidence about Christianity as I am not an expert in Islam. I should say that I began life as an atheist/agnostic, and become hardened activist atheist before searching for something that made more sense to me. Anyway I suppose it helps me understand you because I feel evolution is correct and is compatible with religious belief. The reason I have little problem with evolution is Evolution really does not concern itself with how life began but what happened to life after it began. So I agree with 95% of the theory. One reason I became attracted to religious belief was the PhD enabled Christian apologists, such as William Craig and others successfully rebutting some of the more aggressive atheists. All that happened about the same time as God was declared Dead by time and every professor on campus with a scientific related degree as attempting to convince the students to hate those with a religious conviction. So being an average angry adolescent student that hated authority I began rejecting the authority of my atheist professors
After college I began researching all the major religions and settled on Christianity as my long term bud. Oh lastly Van I agree 100% with you about the DP. To support the DP makes one an accessory to murder when an innocent man is murdered by the state. However I am pro gun and pro other things~
But not, it seems, pro-truth. Your signature line attributes a quote to Einstein that is one of a bunch of unsourced quotes in the 2006 edition of "The World As I See It." It was no where to be found in the 1949 edition of the same title. This, and other Johnie-come-lately quotes, are certainly not by Einstein. My reseach indicates that it should properly be credited to Doris Lessing, British author and 2007 Nobel Prize laureate. Here is a timeline of the quote's evolution prepared by Quote Investigator:
Below is a summary list with dates of the pertinent quotations. The shared theme was an examination of the connections between chance, coincidence, Providence, and God. The term “Providence” refers to the guardianship and care provided by God, a deity, or nature viewed as a spiritual force. Statements in French are accompanied with a translation.
1777: What is called chance is the instrument of Providence. (Horace Walpole)
1795: Quelqu’un disait que la Providence était le nom de baptême du Hasard, quelque dévot dira que le Hasard est un sobriquet de la Providence. (Nicolas Chamfort) [Someone said that Providence was the baptismal name of Chance; some pious person will say that Chance is a nickname of Providence.]
1845: Le hasard, c’est peut-être le pseudonyme de Dieu, quand il ne veut pas signer. (Théophile Gautier) [Chance is perhaps the pseudonym of God when he does not want to sign.]
1897: Il faut, dans la vie, faire la part du hasard. Le hasard, en définitive, c’est Dieu. (Anatole France) [In life we must make all due allowance for chance. Chance, in the last resort, is God.]
1949: Chance is the pseudonym of God when He did not want to sign. (misattribution: Anatole France)
1976: He defined coincidence as a miracle in which God chose to remain anonymous. (Dr. Paul F. of Indianapolis, Indiana)
1979: A coincidence is a small miracle where God chose to remain anonymous. (Anonymous in “Shop with Sue”)
1984: A coincidence is a small miracle when God chooses to remain anonymous. (attribution: Heidi Quade)
1985: Coincidence is when God works a miracle and chooses to remain anonymous. (attribution: Bonnie Farmer)
1986: Coincidence is God’s way of remaining anonymous. (Charlotte Clemensen Taylor)
1997: Coincidences are God’s way of remaining anonymous. (attribution: Doris Lessing)