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angellous_evangellous
Guest
No, I do understand your position. It is important to note that one can both understand and reject a particular point of view. Furthermore, my statement was not universal of all Christians, but some Christians who have false presuppositions or assumptions that make their theology scientifically verifiable or negatable, which I think is unhealthy. I do not think that anyone who believes in literal creationism is an idiot, but they are wrong IMHO in making theological assumptions scientific.NetDoc said:I seem to be quite healthy, and do not beat against the air any more than the next person. While you may not understand my position, please do not portray those that do as utter idiots who deny the faith.
Here's my example: Science tells us what constitues an orange. We say, no, theologically it is an apple. That's what creationists are doing. They are theologically saying that an orange is an apple. If you base your entire theology upon the false assumption that the scientific orange does not exist, you are not using faith but rather are imposing theology upon science (eg, using theological reasoning to answer scientific questions), and if we allow theology to answer scientific questions, then science is allowed to answer theological questions. If science can prove the scientific question of the existence of the orange, it negates the theological assumption that it is an apple. In this case, the theologians are insisting that the orange is scientifically an apple, that it really is an apple, not that it is somehow an apple naturally and an orange theologically (which is possible - science determines the natural substance of things, theology determines the divinity of things). If the theology is based upon the nature of the apple (which truly is an orange), then those who are convinced that the apple is really an orange have denied the faith.
Unfortunately, science can answer scientific questions. Theology can answer theological questions. If we make a theological question scientific, then science can answer the theological question and thus establish religious doctine. This is not faith.
EDIT: Netdoc, I want to be perfectly clear here. Faith comes from God, not science. For some creationists, their entire theology would fall apart if they weree convinced that evolution is true. That is, sin entered the world through a literal Adam, there was no death before him, so evolution is not true. Also, some think that their theology of Scripture depends upon literal creation: if evolution is true, then the Bible is not the Word of God, and my entire experience with God is a lie.
In these cases, the Christians who believe this must ignore all scientific proof that evolution is true. The proof is null, and the Christian must insist that literal creationism is true or deny the faith.
Such an attitude is an unhealthy beating against the air.