So, in conclusion, I am a Christian and believe in God. My evidence is that I am a Christian and I believe in God. Do you see any problem with that logic? Since you are claiming that you believe in a Son of a God, and a God, you have no burden of proof. But if you claim that you know your beliefs are true, then you DO have a burden of proof.
You admit that,
You believe that the Bible is errant and inconsistent.
You believe that the Bible is not a science or history book, especially its reference to flying insects.
You do not disavow the logic and reasoning of your academic training.
You accept the evidence, explanations, and knowledge derived from science academia
You claim, "Claiming something I believe, but cannot demonstrate, is evidence for a natural phenomenon is ridiculous. I am not going to do something ridiculous". Yet you clam a belief in God.
You believe life is an emergent property towards sentiency, but don't accept that those very properties are emergent.
You do not believe in the Creationist concept of Genesis, or in magic.
You believe in cause and effect, and the consistency of the laws of logic
You criticize the clearly scientific and logical inconsistencies that believers posit.
You don't believe that the Bible is the word of God.
This is not the resume or the characteristic of someone that avoids critical thinking, or the rules of logic. One might also consider you an Atheist, or maybe an Agnostic or a Pantheist? I'm sure how a Christian can not believe in the Bible as the word of God, and still be a Christian.
Your answer was that you did not know if a virus was classified as living or non-living. But that you had learned more since. I simply answered the question for you. You are certainly correct, that I am biased on the side of reason, and tend to read more than is necessary into a post. But unfortunately that is also part of the my human condition. It is how Spontaneous generation was being used by Creationist that was my concern. It is NOT a creationist belief or a creationist concept. it is simply the terms they use to discredit abiogenesis(something from nothing). Their own cognitive dissonance prevents them from seeing how that affects their own beliefs. I usually respond to the person, not the thread, but ok.
I also appreciate your posts. They are refreshingly different.
If I find a strictly religious discussion that interests me, I would participate, but I am here mainly to discuss science and the attempts to subvert it using religion. In discussions about science, my personal views have no context and standing and considering my proclivity to keep them out of science, that fact fits well with me. Yet, it seems it is a subject that cannot be avoided in more detail.
What I have noticed in forums like this is that those with a religious position, generally have a problem with the answer "I or We do not know". They have, what I would describe as a need in an uncertain world, for absolutes. They live by it and cannot accept anything short of it in their personal world views. I think this puts them beyond the ability to fully understand the world around them or limits that understanding. A fancy way of describing the condition called a closed mind perhaps.
On the other hand, I do not regularly see this need expressed by atheists or even agnostics and I think that I should have expected it to be of lower incidence in those groups before I even started taking note. Though, it is not completely absent, since we are talking about people here. These groups generally support intellectual curiosity, discovery and conclusion based on evidence and not on belief. You may not agree that I am complete in my description of those groups, but I think you would agree that the points I capture here would be included in some much fuller description.
What I wonder is, if there is room for another group with a religious philosophy and the ability to say "I do not know", coupled with the intellectual curiosity and honesty to look beyond for answers and not lie to themselves so that they can cling to dogma. People that believe there may be something more than this world, the universe and the physical laws that govern it, but also recognize that they do not have all the answers and see no threat to their personal belief in seeking those answers.
As I set here writing this, my mind is wandering through ideas and how to articulate them, but this may be the best I can do now without trying to write a book or drift off on tangents that are possibly interesting, but not to the point.
I have some ideas, but all I can say is "I do not know". But I am willing to find out. That may be the best that I can say about my interest here. It is another place to explore. To learn. To gain knowledge and change or reinforce that which I already have obtained.
One last remark, before I close and this will get me in hot water with the creationist Christians on this forum, but I have found it to be true almost everywhere I have looked. For a Christian to have discussions like this, he or she must turn to the atheists and agnostics, because as a group they have the characteristics I mentioned and are often, though not absolutely always, willing to join in a discussion like this. They have their biases like I do, but they tend to speak in facts, known information, and are clear when speculating and do not so often turn that speculation into facts. I have found this in some other Christians, but much more rarely and never on an internet forum. I await to be surprised there as well and have my absolute on that shattered to, perhaps.