Danmac
Well-Known Member
I believe they go hand in handPardon me--request that the thread be started. In any case, are we here to discuss religion or science?
I am not a follower of Henry Drummond. I am a follower of Jesus Christ.Well, it's a theological term first used by a Christian evangelist, Henry Drummond, and it's an idea you might want to brush up on.
1)Specified complexity is empirically detectableO.K. that's what I feared. This is God-of-the-gaps, and it's bad theology.
2)Concerning the first life, all known natural explanations fail.
3) Empirically detectable evidence points to a creator.
4) ID is falsifiable. The Darwinist position isn't. Your position is not tentative or open to correction. Darwinists are closed minded. Therefore it is not falsifiable.
The Bible is the supreme authority, not Drummond. His is merely interpretation.Drummond chastises those Christians who point to the things that science can not yet explain "gaps which they will fill up with God" and urges them to embrace all nature as God's, as the work of "... an immanent God, which is the God of Evolution, is infinitely grander than the occasional wonder-worker, who is the God of an old theology. [wiki]
Here's more:
Bonhoeffer wrote, for example: "...how wrong it is to use God as a stop-gap for the incompleteness of our knowledge. If in fact the frontiers of knowledge are being pushed further and further back (and that is bound to be the case), then God is being pushed back with them, and is therefore continually in retreat. We are to find God in what we know, not in what we don't know."[4] The term gained some attention when it was used in the 1955 book Science and Christian Belief by Charles Alfred Coulson, where Coulson states: "There is no 'God of the gaps' to take over at those strategic places where science fails; and the reason is that gaps of this sort have the unpreventable habit of shrinking."[5]
The term was used again in a 1971 book and a 1978 article, both by Richard Bube. He articulated the concept in greater detail, most notably in Man Come Of Age: Bonhoeffers Response To The God-Of-The-Gaps (1971). Bube attributed modern crises in religious faith in part to the inexorable shrinking of the God-of-the-gaps as scientific knowledge progressed. As humans progressively increased their understanding of nature, the previous "realm" of God seemed to many persons and religions to be getting smaller and smaller by comparison. Bube maintained that Darwin's Origin of Species was the "death knell" of the God-of-the-gaps. Bube also maintained that the God-of-the-gaps was not the same as the God of the Bible (that is, he was not making an argument against God per se, but rather asserting there was a fundamental problem with the perception of God as existing in the gaps of present-day knowledge).
[all wiki]
More speculation
The laws of science do not permit it to be closed minded. Why do you not follow the laws of science? Your position is not falsifiable.In other words, if your God is the God of where science leaves off, then the more we learn from science, the smaller the space for your God. Far better to argue for a God who set forth the very laws of science, who does not depend on ignorance, a grand God of all things, known and unknown. That's the God you want.
I'm sorry, I don't understand. I'm politely trying to ask you for an alternative explanation, other than stupidity or dishonesty, for me having to explain the same simple concept to you twenty times. Do you have one, or must I have recourse to those?
I want to know why your position isn't falsifiable.