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Author Topic:   Evolution != Atheism (re: the Rejection of Theism in Evolution)
Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3932 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 1 of 178 (170180)
12-20-2004 4:15 PM


I need to define some terms for the purposes of this thread:
Christian = One who believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ.
Creationist = One who believe that the universe is the product of creation from a higher power.
Biblical/Genesis Creationist = One who believe that the creation story as it is told in the book of Genesis is literally true. Not to be confused with Creationists.
Atheist = One who believe there is no god.
Evolutionist = One who accept the Theory of Evolution.
I had some reservations at first about starting this topic but I was feeling that this needed to be said. (or re-said)
Below are quotes from some of our most vocal self proclaimed Biblical Creationists both active and not. I did a casual survey of the archives after reading some of the things being said in the Who's Held To Higher Standards at EvC thread because I got really tired of reading this implied connection with atheism, religion, and evolution.
Maestro232 writes:
And the reason I do is because I am fairly convinced that they are enslaved by science in such a way that it has become a god to them; a very, very narrow god. And, I don't think that god will let them think outside its box. It is the nature of enslavement to the natural.
mike the wiz writes:
Even if it doesn't meet the "scientific method" we need to show that that is not necessarily important, because we don't put science on a pedestal and worship it like others do.
mike the wiz writes:
Exactly. All the evidence you look at is atheist. You support atheists. I won't judge you - but blimey Jar - you seem to be heavily in favour of atheism.
mike the wiz writes:
It just seems to me, that you seldom post a defense of theism. You say we blow smoke - like you almost consider yourself an atheist.
mike the wiz writes:
I'm not particularly a fan of this site anymore to be honest Jar. More opinions fly around rather than true objective endeavours, as can be seen with atheists in my objective Hypothesis of consciousness. The Bootcamp is an example of the power hungry Adminites that want to rule over any creationist fish that wanders up the stream, hence this farsicle approach to confining anyone whos opinion wanders from the mainstream atheist/evo train of thought. Thus this site is dead to activity it seems. I like a few people here but they're still heavily opinionated and think they aren't sinners, and that there's no God, which is obviously a wrongful mindset.
mike the wiz writes:
So, I'm not ignorant - I've seen the picture and I still am for God, as evolution supports mindless Godless chance deludants and random silliness. Therefore I cut myself off from this Godless theory which atheist's love as it supports their negative, which is unacceptable as you then convince yourselves you are sinless and don't answer to God. I urge you to all stop this confusion.
d_yankee writes:
Creation is not only obvious...which is why you atheist find yourselves saying things like "creation" and "created" so often without even noticing it. LOL!!! But Creationism and the Bible has, not everchanging assumptions, like evolution does...but obvious scientific and historic explanations to everything that scientists have discovered.
JAD writes:
As usual you completely misunderstand. I am delighted with your "Groupthink." It is the best evidence imaginable for the failure of the atheist, chance worshipping, neoDarwinian foolishness. It is the only reason I bother with any of you. EvC has proven to be very instructive.
WILLOWTREE writes:
Welcome to the atheist indoctrination camp for christians.
JAD writes:
EvC is nothing but a homogeneous collection of atheist Darwinian mystics who, never having had an original idea of their own, find it necessary to inflate their egos with arrogant pontifications and personal degradation of anyone, creationist or theist or dissenter of any other any stripe, who had the ordinary common sense to realize the total failure of the neoDarwinian fairy tale.
WILLOWTREE writes:
The three great atheist liars who could not tolerate the truth about evo dating nonsense.
...
Percy, Ned, and Jar are the most stereotypical God-hating/and/or lip service to God evos one could point to.
WILLOWTREE writes:
All of you atheo-evos are enraged and beside yourself. This is why you shifted the debate to a Forum you knew I would not participate in. You get to comfort yourself with the appearance of continuing while knowing the floor wiping will not continue. Fear of the truth and good old fashion atheist dishonesty has insulated yourselves from my irrefutable evidence.
Servant2thecause writes:
Honestly, neither Biblical creationism nor Darwinian evolutionism can be proven by science ("Science" = knowledge through demonstrated evidence and observation). Therefore, if any evolutionist, atheist, or otherwise anti-creationist has an ounce of honesty and integrity, he would freely admit that BOTH viewpoints have to be taken by faith.
6days writes:
That many people are religious who believe in evolution is certainly true, but I deny that they are mature Christians, if believer*s in Jesus Christ at all. The new-born believer can be swayed by evolution, etc, but a person in whom the Holy Spirit is actually residing will not be able to deny the Bible for long without internal opposition from God
peter borger writes:
The atheistic religion is called evolutionism. As mentioned "There are many good reasons to be an atheist, but the theory of evolution is not one of them.
peter borger writes:
Apparently you didn*t understand the above sentence. It means that since evolutionism can be demonstrated to be false, atheists do not have a religion anymore.
whatever writes:
I feel TOE is just a small part of the religion of secular humanism, to increase their following however they are using the state to place their godless religion over and above the other religions of the world, how is this fair to buddhists that too are a godless based religion.
P.S. Is not buddaisms more of a philosophy of self, than a belief in a god, yet this sect according to Thomas Jefferson was to be extended separation protection from the state, truely the athiest too are a godless based religion / sect, its called secular humanisms. If the buddists is not to be empowered by the government, then neither should the atheistic religion and their dogma side shoots dogma's be given government sanction powers to preach for more converts using state moneys, using the federal public school system to the gaining of converts, into their godless based belief in respect to origin, etc...
jazzlover_PR writes:
If you dont want to talk about God in schools well thats fine but the problem that i see is that your "well supported and robust scientific theory" is a religion of its own.
Jet writes:
I would not care to believe in such a world of lawlessness where there is no true consequence of action. That is why I must ultimately reject and totally deny any acceptance of such an inhumane concept as the theory of evolution. Perhaps it is the way I was raised, though I seriously doubt that is the reason I feel this way. In fact, despite my upbringing, I have far too much empathy in my being to ever pay homage to such a barbaric concept as the Godless theory of evolution. There is a reason some people refer to this concept as "EVILUTION"!
whatever writes:
TOE should be banned based on the separation freedom violations of the government supporting the atheists religion and their dogma of the origin of life, in respect to the Bill of Right.
Syamsu writes:
My argument that evolutionists have historically suppressed scientific, common, and religious knowledge of creation, and that this suppression facillitates their promotion of atheism / materialism / social darwinism, is as far as I can tell the only credible alternative to saying the creation vs evolution controversy is about religion repudiating anything contrary to it's teachings.
Robert Byers writes:
The reason evolutionists don't want evolution questioned or discussed in schools is because they have a higher agenda of fighting Christianity and its influence in society. They are still in combat with the Protestant origins of the country.
Jasonb writes:
So let me define terms. I define an evolutionist as someone who does not believe in a Creator and accepts the theories of evolution as to the origin of life.
Syamsu writes:
The prejudice to have natural selection as the fundament is sustained because evolution tends to deny creation by God, and the moral sort of language gives Darwinists a substitute pseudoscientific religion. It is sustained by atheism and scientism, rather then scientific merit.
DarkStar writes:
3. A set of beliefs, values, and practices based on the teachings of a spiritual leader.
...
Definition #3 could be perceived by some to apply to Darwin as the spiritual leader of all those who are adherents of the theory of evolution.
funkman writes:
The Bible teaches that there is no way to get to heaven apart from faith in the salvation work of Christ on the cross. Evolution undermines that. So if the pope believes in evolution, he has undermined the cross of Christ and is not a Christian.
Now I know that some of these are older but unfortunatly the sentiment is being repeated today. For these people there seems to be an automatic equivalence relationship between Evolutionists and Atheists or Evolution and Religion that I feel is a massive barrier to productive discussion in the larger EvC arena. Also, born from this equivalence there is this concept of Science vs Religion as if the two concepts were diametrically opposed.
There are stakes to all of this or else there would be no controversy. The stakes are education and how we choose, as a society, to educate our children. Certainly there are also stakes for those who make this automatic connection between Evolution and Atheism for the salvation of those who they feel are in this combined group. In order to further both rational discussion about education and a possible atmosphere for sharing religion in a positive way I feel we need to identify and destroy these ridiculous equivalencies. I hope that if/when ever this barrier is broken down that people will generally realize that science and religion are discrete things such that when you mix them you only get poor science and worse religion.
You can be both an Atheist and an Evolutionist.
You can be both a Creationist and an Evolutionist.
You can be a Christian, a Creationist, and an Evolutionist.
You can be both a Christian and a Biblical/Genesis Creationist.
All of which are valid positions to take based on faith, reason, authority, or however else you come to decisions in your life about what you believe is true.
I would prefer not to get bogged down on the "is atheism a religion" path because I am beginning to think that you can flounder around with evidence that pretty much anything is a religion. Watching too much reality TV could be a religion based on a lot of the arguments I have seen for what is and what is not a religion.
I want to focus a discussion on why some Biblical Creationists feel the need to make this assumption that Evolution = Atheism, why to some is being a Christian Evolutionist invalid, and what this has anything to do with what is at stake for the EvC debate.
This should probably go in the Misc Topics in EvC.

Replies to this message:
 Message 5 by Rrhain, posted 12-20-2004 11:34 PM Jazzns has replied
 Message 7 by Trixie, posted 12-21-2004 4:07 AM Jazzns has not replied
 Message 17 by PurpleYouko, posted 12-22-2004 2:10 PM Jazzns has replied

  
AdminNosy
Administrator
Posts: 4754
From: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Joined: 11-11-2003


Message 2 of 178 (170246)
12-20-2004 6:23 PM


Thread moved here from the Proposed New Topics forum.

  
jar
Member (Idle past 415 days)
Posts: 34026
From: Texas!!
Joined: 04-20-2004


Message 3 of 178 (170250)
12-20-2004 6:32 PM


Damn I seem to get a lot of mention in there.

Aslan is not a Tame Lion

Replies to this message:
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Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3932 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 4 of 178 (170305)
12-20-2004 11:06 PM
Reply to: Message 3 by jar
12-20-2004 6:32 PM


Yea. I noticed it and it really made me mad. I think we share a lot of the same philosophy so I feel attacked by proxy.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 3 by jar, posted 12-20-2004 6:32 PM jar has not replied

  
Rrhain
Member
Posts: 6351
From: San Diego, CA, USA
Joined: 05-03-2003


Message 5 of 178 (170311)
12-20-2004 11:34 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by Jazzns
12-20-2004 4:15 PM


Jazzns writes:
quote:
Atheist = One who believe there is no god.
OK, I'm going to be picky.
An atheist is not one who believes there is no god. Instead, an atheist is one who has no belief in god. Belief in non-existence is not the same as non-existence of belief. Atheists do not go around contemplating the non-existence of god just as you do not go around contemplating the non-existence of invisible pink unicorns. It never enters your head unless somebody else makes you think about it.
quote:
I would prefer not to get bogged down on the "is atheism a religion" path because I am beginning to think that you can flounder around with evidence that pretty much anything is a religion.
I know, but that is an important point. If you water down the word "religion" so much that anything is a religion, then you rob the word of any usefulness. Atheism stands apart from religion in that it has no tenets, no doctrine, no commandments, no pronouncements. It is defined by absence, not presence.
And, in the end, that is part of the problem. Theists want atheists to be just like them. They want to be able to say, "But you're in just as precarious a position as I am," and therefore declare that their opinions about science are just as valid as anybody else's...as if atheism has something to say about science. Not only have they conflated science and atheism, they have decided that the two are direct influences on each other as if an atheist can't have any mystical opinions.
Science doesn't declare there is no god. Instead, science is interested in things that happen on their own. Just as science tries to determine what happens when god isn't directly intervening, it also tries to determine what happens when you aren't directly intervening. But surely you exist. Unless one is going to say that god deliberately, consciously, and purposefully directs every single action of everything in the universe, then we must let science investigate those things that happen despite god, not because of god.
And in the end, the fundamental problem is that these theists have a preconceived notion about how god did it. Rather than looking to god's creation to read the signs of god's handiwork, they have read a book and decided that it must be so. Anything that contradicts the book must be an affront against god.
As if god were a book. It would seem they don't worship god so much as the idol of a book.

Rrhain
WWJD? JWRTFM!

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Jazzns, posted 12-20-2004 4:15 PM Jazzns has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 6 by Jazzns, posted 12-21-2004 12:02 AM Rrhain has replied
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Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3932 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 6 of 178 (170320)
12-21-2004 12:02 AM
Reply to: Message 5 by Rrhain
12-20-2004 11:34 PM


OK, I'm going to be picky.
An atheist is not one who believes there is no god. Instead, an atheist is one who has no belief in god. Belief in non-existence is not the same as non-existence of belief. Atheists do not go around contemplating the non-existence of god just as you do not go around contemplating the non-existence of invisible pink unicorns. It never enters your head unless somebody else makes you think about it.
Fair enough to be picky. From dictionary.com:
One who disbelieves or denies the existence of God or gods.
Lets go with this as a working definition? In the minds of the people we are talking about it might be better to use atheist rather than other words we could choose to mean "not believing what they believe". Heathen, infidel, come to mind...lets stick with atheist since it dosen't carry the negative connotation. Agnostics could also be grouped into this category even though the exact terminology really isn't fair. Just trying to keep in simple.
I know, but that is an important point. If you water down the word "religion" so much that anything is a religion, then you rob the word of any usefulness. Atheism stands apart from religion in that it has no tenets, no doctrine, no commandments, no pronouncements. It is defined by absence, not presence.
Right. That is exactly what I don't want to do. Take the recent quote from Maestro for example. He is giving the characteristics of a religion to the practice of science where it really dosen't fit. I don't want to get into a battle of "this is a religion because you do it a lot or it is a major component in your life" garbage. Watered down enough anything can be called a religion and I don't want to go there. If this thread goes down that road I really want to tell people to take it to another thread. I really just want to know why acceptance of evolution automatically denies ownership of other beliefs, namely Christianity, in the eyes of most Biblical Creationists.
The rest of your post pretty much is totally on par with what I think. I believe that if more people realized that, "Science doesn't declare there is no god." That we could get rid of this nonsense that you are not really a Christian/Moslem/LDS/Whatever if you believe in Evolution.
The whole point I want to make is Evolution != (whatever it is you want to call not believing in the Biblical Creationist's God)
This message has been edited by Jazzns, 12-21-2004 12:03 AM

This message is a reply to:
 Message 5 by Rrhain, posted 12-20-2004 11:34 PM Rrhain has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 31 by Rrhain, posted 12-22-2004 11:02 PM Jazzns has replied

  
Trixie
Member (Idle past 3727 days)
Posts: 1011
From: Edinburgh
Joined: 01-03-2004


Message 7 of 178 (170337)
12-21-2004 4:07 AM
Reply to: Message 1 by Jazzns
12-20-2004 4:15 PM


Good topic
Atthe risk of sounding totally shallow and missing the finer points of the debate, it seems to me that if you can find a single Christian/Muslim or whatever who believes in a higher being AND accepts the theory of evolution then you have falsified the statement that evolutionists are atheists.
OK, count me as one. I'm a practising Christian, I have no problem with evolution and I'm a molecular biologist. I'm sick to the back teeth of being informed that because I accept evolution I can't be a proper Christian, whatever that is. Why is it that most branches of science can be embraced by Christians without aspertions being cast on their faith, but evolutionary sciences can't?
Until we can get the message across that science only tries to answer questions about the natural world with no consideration of supernatural input, we're spitting in the wind. If science is out to disprove God, as many YECs claim, why are there so many Christians in science? If paleontologists are so intent on proving that God doesn't exist, why do many of them go to Church? If many molecular biologists are working every day with changes in genetic material and mutations and actually observing mutation and natural selection in action (I'm one of them) why would they still believe in God? Maybe its because they can see that a belief in evolution doesn't require God being removed from the equation.

This message is a reply to:
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Dr Jack
Member
Posts: 3514
From: Immigrant in the land of Deutsch
Joined: 07-14-2003
Member Rating: 8.4


Message 8 of 178 (170339)
12-21-2004 4:43 AM
Reply to: Message 5 by Rrhain
12-20-2004 11:34 PM


As an Atheist I disagree, I believe there is no God.

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 Message 5 by Rrhain, posted 12-20-2004 11:34 PM Rrhain has not replied

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Quetzal
Member (Idle past 5893 days)
Posts: 3228
Joined: 01-09-2002


Message 9 of 178 (170355)
12-21-2004 8:37 AM
Reply to: Message 8 by Dr Jack
12-21-2004 4:43 AM


Although I'm of the same mind as you, Mr J, I don't think Jazzns wants to get the thread bogged down in a discussion of "strong" vs "weak" atheism. As such, I think accepting Rrhain's generic definition is probably good enough for this discussion.

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Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3932 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 10 of 178 (170446)
12-21-2004 1:48 PM
Reply to: Message 9 by Quetzal
12-21-2004 8:37 AM


Rejection of Theism in Evolution
The above might have been a better title to the thread. What you said is correct. I don't want to get into semantics of what is a religion and what is an atheist if at all possible. A good enough definition of these is all I am asking for an agreement on.

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Adminnemooseus
Administrator
Posts: 3974
Joined: 09-26-2002


Message 11 of 178 (170458)
12-21-2004 2:25 PM
Reply to: Message 10 by Jazzns
12-21-2004 1:48 PM


Re: Rejection of Theism in Evolution
Added "(re: the Rejection of Theism in Evolution)" to topic title.
Adminnemooseus


This message is a reply to:
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Nighttrain
Member (Idle past 4015 days)
Posts: 1512
From: brisbane,australia
Joined: 06-08-2004


Message 12 of 178 (170568)
12-21-2004 5:33 PM


In spite of your quotes cited above, or possibly using them as corroboration, I would have thought Creationists/most Christians would be perfectly at home at EvC. Don`t they wallow in persecution?

  
cmanteuf
Member (Idle past 6787 days)
Posts: 92
From: Virginia, USA
Joined: 11-08-2004


Message 13 of 178 (170632)
12-22-2004 1:26 AM
Reply to: Message 7 by Trixie
12-21-2004 4:07 AM


Re: Good topic
Trixie writes:
Why is it that most branches of science can be embraced by Christians without aspertions being cast on their faith, but evolutionary sciences can't?
I disagree. I think that a YEC rejects an enormous amount of information, not just in the evolutionary sciences.
Besides almost all of biology, geology, anthropology, etc. they decide that somehow, in some way, there is something wrong with the general consensus in:
* almost all of Astronomy, from cosmology to planetary geology
* almost all of physics, from the relativity and the speed of light to quantum physics and radioactive decay
* petrochemistry (where does oil come from? why are some strains of oil different from others?)
* mathematics (We can show that Supernova 1987A happened 170,000 years ago via nothing more complicated than trig)
In addition, anyone who believes in a global Noachian flood as described in the Bible has problems with the general consensus in the following topics, irregardless of whether they are OEC or YEC:
* geology (rock formations don't match flood formations, Grand Canyon, etc.)
* biology (how much food would be necessary? how much space would they take up? how much heat would they give off?)
* art history (Hebraic influence on the Cycladic culture?)
* history (the pyramids built 300 years before the flood, among many others)
* archeology (Jomon continuity?)
* mathematical biology (how large was the population after the flood?)
* linguistics (watch a professional linguist sputter when they are told that Babel explains all)
And that's ignoring controversial issues like the popularity of the Documentary Hypothesis in Jewish Studies departments.
In short, I think that YEC's most openly reject the evolutionary science, but must ignore an awful lot of the general scholarly consensus in order to find support for their intrepretation of the Bible. Note that none of these general consensuses have to conflict with the Bible, merely one interpretation of it, the fundamentalist one[1].
As both Trixie and I demonstrate, it is not that difficult to be both a Christian and a believer in evolution, a 13.7 billion year old universe, etc. So why do some people have such difficulty comprehending that? I think for some people it because they simply can't comprehend how anyone could worship in a different way than they themselves do.
A good friend is a Fundamentalist YEC and she can't understand how my (Episcopalian) faith works at all. To her the Bible as a whole has a binary truth value. Either every word of the Bible is the literal truth [2] or it's all a bunch of stories made up by some guys who didn't know anything. The idea that stories could be told *for their value as stories* rather than *for their value as truth* seems to elude her, no matter how often I try and explain it. She always comes back to a binary truth value, when I want to assign it a 0.8 or a 0.6 or whatever.
[1]: In a different thread, now closed, a discussion came up of what a Fundamentalist Christian was. Anyone who adheres to the Five Fundamentals, as defined by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in 1910 would be the standard definition I would think.
[2]: Except where it isn't and it's a metaphor- no to a woman must cover her head in church, but yes to women not in a position of authority over men in the church in any way (including voting on issues of general concern to the church body!!), in other words, what is a metaphor and what is the literal truth seems, to me, to be rather arbitrary.
Note: This message has a high potential for thread drift. If anyone wants to dispute one of my claims about YEC or Flood believers rejecting the generally accepted consensus it would probably be wise to go to a different thread.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 7 by Trixie, posted 12-21-2004 4:07 AM Trixie has not replied

Replies to this message:
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Minnemooseus
Member
Posts: 3945
From: Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. (West end of Lake Superior)
Joined: 11-11-2001
Member Rating: 10.0


Message 14 of 178 (170639)
12-22-2004 3:23 AM
Reply to: Message 13 by cmanteuf
12-22-2004 1:26 AM


Second the POTM nomination (and suggest a spin-off topic)
Note: Message 13 got a POTM from NosyNed - Most rightfully so!
quote:
To her the Bible as a whole has a binary truth value.
I think that "Fundimentalist Binaryism" would be a fine new topic. Judging from the past U.S. election, I'd be inclined to expand such a thing to be a part of "Republican Binaryism". My impression, however, is that I'm pretty much incapable of properly starting a topic - So I'll leave it to someone else (Please).
Moose
(He who can't start topics, gets to judge if someone else can )

This message is a reply to:
 Message 13 by cmanteuf, posted 12-22-2004 1:26 AM cmanteuf has not replied

  
Jazzns
Member (Idle past 3932 days)
Posts: 2657
From: A Better America
Joined: 07-23-2004


Message 15 of 178 (170687)
12-22-2004 9:12 AM
Reply to: Message 13 by cmanteuf
12-22-2004 1:26 AM


Re: Good topic
I want to expanding on what you said a little bit while trying to steer things back on topic.
Do you think that the more basic problem is really that deep down your average fundamentalist Biblical Creationist feels that all science goes against theism? I mean, I kind of gathered some of that from your post but it seems like it would be rare for one of them to admit it. Even though they may even say that they are "science friendly" it appears by their actions that they truly do reject some of the most basic principles behind modern science.
My favorite example of this is a quote from one of Hovind's "sermons":
If you are traveling down the highway at sixty miles an hour, and turn your headlights on, how fast is the light going from your headlights? Compared to you, it is going at the speed of light. Compared to someone on the sidewalk it is going at the speed of light plus sixty miles an hour."
Which displays an obvious dire ignorance about physics and relativity. In this case all of realativity is rejected and therefore if you believe in it you might be going against Hovind's idea of what a Godly scientist would believe.
The more I think about it, other than our most basic/trivial principles of science, Biblical Creationists must reject most of the modern advances of nearly all realms of science and therefore it becomes a Scientist == Atheist issue for them from the core.
I really hope we can get some Biblical Creationists in here to see what they think about this opinion. How much of science must be rejected to get the Biblical Creation account to even be possible under current knowledge? How much then is left and how many centuries of time have we "wasted" cooking up all these "ungodly lies"?
I think these questions are not too far off topic since it is investigating into a potential reason for the often automatic association between evolution and atheism.

This message is a reply to:
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Replies to this message:
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