triadboy
Master Poster
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- Aug 4, 2001
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040423/sc_nm/science_lava_dc
How do xians view this?
How do xians view this?
triadboy said:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040423/sc_nm/science_lava_dc
How do xians view this?
triadboy said:How do xians view this?
hammegk said:What will be more interesting is when CEbSM (current estimate by Scientific method) age of life is dated in a comet or asteroid at CEbSM age of earth plus a hundred million years or so. At least then evolutionists won't have to depend on terran abiogenesis; it would have occured elsewhere/elsewhen and completely out of our reach for analysis.
jaderook01 said:Christian here... Rachaella got it in one. Triadboy, you need to clarify which Christians you are referring to, although I have an inkling of an idea.![]()
triadboy said:
You're right. Young Earthers won't like it, But how does this jive with the Genesis story? How do Old Earthers see Genesis?
I enjoyed reading the article and I don't have an axe to grind - I'm fairly sure that the Earth is older than 6K years based on scientific evidence. The Genesis story? Written to communicate creation to the people in a way that made sense at the time (my guesstimate). The verse I always thought was really interesting is Genesis 1:28: "And God said to them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and REPLENISH..."triadboy said:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20040423/sc_nm/science_lava_dc
How do xians view this?
rachaella said:
Probably metaphorical.
I thought the subject was about evidence of ancient life in volcanic rock.triadboy said:
But if the Fall of Man is a metaphor - what good is Jesus?
I thought the subject was about evidence of ancient life in volcanic rock.
Yes, but when is it obvious and when not? I've been studying and pondering for a very long time and still wonder if I've botched interpretations. Plus, the leap from Genesis to Jesus is 4K years - a big leap, indeed!jaderook01 said:
So did I, but I can see the leap of thought here. Yes, taking everything entirely metpaphorically would present the problem of Jesus being unnecessary. This is why I don't take everything to be metaphor. On scriptural interpretation, I've heard it put this way before: Take it literally when obvious, metaphorically when not.
geni said:Any interpritation of the bible that conflicts with scientific facts is wrong.
Any interpritation of the bible that conflicts with scientific facts is wrong.
Yes, but when is it obvious and when not? I've been studying and pondering for a very long time and still wonder if I've botched interpretations. Plus, the leap from Genesis to Jesus is 4K years - a big leap, indeed!
Abdul Alhazred said:
I disagree. An interpretation is correct if it properly explains what the author intended.
If that in turn is false, it is the author who is wrong, not the interpretation.