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dogmai Guest |
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Author | Topic: We are the gods.. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Tokyojim Inactive Member |
[QUOTE]Originally posted by John:
[B] quote: You have a really warped perception of non-Christians. TJ replies: John, if a person is looking for such an excuse, evolution presents a perfect one for them. Of course not everyone is like that, but some are. Some people realize that if evolution is true, then their conscience is not binding. There are accountable to no one and there is no ultimate moral code which they must adhere to. By the way, students are no dummies. If we teach this evolution stuff to them, it doesn't take much to put 2 and 2 together.
quote: As I have pointed out, the IDEA of God has been around for all of recorded history and the tale is pretty bloody. It seems to me that the evidence is that the IDEA of God is pretty damned dangerous. TJ replies: The existence of God is only helpful if people believe it and voluntarily decide to submit their lives to Him. The vast majority of peeople in the world do not honestly believe from their hearts in God in such a way that they are really willing to follow Him. Most people say they believe in God, but their lifestyle shows they really don't. Well, their belief may affect their lives to a certain extent, but when the rubber meets the road, they aren't ready to make the hard choices that are involved if we genuinely want to follow God. So yes, the idea of God has been around from the beginning, but as more and more people choose not to follow Him, His existence has less and less influence on our society.However, I still argue that our conscience that we all have comes from God and the work of the Holy Spirit in the world of restraining evil has kept the human race in existence. We may have already destroyed ourselves if it weren't for the existence of God and the laws of God that are written in our hearts. Romans 2:14-16 "for when Gentiles, who do not have the law, by nature do the things in the law, these, although not having the law, are a law to themselves, who show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and between themselves their thoughts accusing or else excusing them) in the day when God will judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ, according to my gospel." quote: I'm skipping this. It belongs in another thread. TJ replies: Skip it but nevertheless, it shows the problem we have if there is no absolute moral law. In essence, nothing is ultimately wrong. As soon as majority opinion shifts to accepting this we could have humans being cloned and harvested for organs or more and more fetuses killed for stem research. According to science, there is no ultimate right or wrong, so what is the problem with killing a few fertilized eggs if the result is helpful to mankind? WHat is the problem with killing a few clones if the result is a longer life for the human who is cloned. And all the suffering and failures of the experiments to get the technology to a working level, who cares? It is worth it for the sake of science. Science becomes the authority.
quote: Right... because scientist are all Hollywoodesque Dr. Moreau mad-man types. Try getting a grip on your mis-perception of non-Christians. TJ replies: Of course not. I don't have a misperception of non-Christians. The Bible says that all humans are sinners in nature. Not that we never do anything right, but that we have a natural tendancy to do what is wrong or even if we do what is right, chances are it is for impure motives.(selfishness, pride, personal gain, etc.)However, don't tell me that you are willing to trust scientists to make good moral choices in their research. There needs to be some kind of check on them or SOME will go astray. It is interesting that even non-christians here in Japan are concerned about this. In fact, there were a couple of days over New Year's a few years ago here in Japan that the newspapers featured long articles about science and the need for moral standards. People realize the danger and they want some controls and they are not even Christians. quote: Eugenics is selection for traits without knowing which traits will eventually be useful. Hence, it makes no sense. TJ replies: Oh, so if you could come up with some way to make scientific sense of it, it would be OK. See, John, this is the problem. Everything is relative. Someday someone will come us with just such an idea and then what. Or technology will improve to the point where we will be able to do that and then what? Even now, we know that certain traits are harmful so why not try and get rid of them. (Down's Syndrome, retardation, etc.) To me, it does make sense if evolution is true and there is no God.
quote: Your phrasing abortion as 'torture' is misleading. What you want to ask is whether I know of any cultures who consider abortion/infanticide to be a moral act. Yes. Numerous cultures have taken this stance. The Spartans for one. TJ replies: John, I didn't make myself clear here. Abortion is a little different than torture since torture is purposefully inflicting pain on the victim. In abortion, pain iss inflicted on the baby, but it isn't done for the sake of making the baby suffer. How about we leave abortion out of it and make the issue purposeful inflcting of pain on babies? Do you know of any cultures where this is thought to be a moral act? I don't and I don't think you will find one. And just because some cultures practiced infanticide doesn't mean that they really thought it was a moral act.
quote: Yanomamo. oh.... and the ancient Isrealites as long as 1) the victim wasn't an isrealite, 2) you married the victim in the aftermath, 3)certain special circumstances apply-- such as in the case of Lot and the angels. TJ replies: Don't know anything about the Yanomamo. Indians? And as I said above, I would doubt that these Indians really thought that this act was a moral act. It may have been practiced and tolerated, but I doubt the women thought it was a moral act. Is it only the men's opinions that count? Even overall, I bet the majority of the people would not have thought rape to be a morally good thing. I have no evidence to back up that opinion. I'd like to read more about the Yanomamo.Did rape happen in the OT among the Israelites? Yes it did, unfortunately. No surprise there. However, it was never condoned or left unpunished. Marrying the victim in the aftermath was actually a punishment for the man. It made him take responsibility for his sin. If he didn't marry her, the woman would be left unmarried forever. Marriages weren't love marriages so much back then anyway like they are today. There is one example in the Bible of when a guy raped a women. She asked him to marry her and when he wouldn't, she got all upset. She wanted him to marry her. Lot's case is very unique. Don't tell me he wanted to give his daughter to those men to rape. Where's your head at? He only did it to spare the angels who were sent from God from homosexual rape. I think he was wrong to do that. The angels could certainly have defended themselves I'm sure, but that is what Lot did. In that case, he chose the lesser of two evils. Give the men the angels sent from God to be gang raped or give them his daughter. No one would want to be in that position, but to take that example and say the Bible sanctions rape is misguided. quote: You need to read your Bible. TJ replies: OK then I'll answer my question. It is wrong not only becuase it hurts someone else, but at a more fundamental level, it is wrong because of who God is. He is holy and pure. He is love and acts on our behalf and tells us love others in the same way. All men are made in God's image and deserve respect and rape goes against this principle. In the 10 Commandments, we are told that it is wrong to commit adultery. This has a broader meaning too - purity in sexual relationships which comes from God being pure and holy. Rape fits under this commandment in a broad way.
quote: Why is it dangerous to leave God out of the picture when with God in the picture it is sometimes OK? TJ replies: Did you cut out some of my post here? Doesn't seem to flow. Maybe it was just my poor writing.Nevertheless, imagine how much worse it would be if it was never even prohibited. Plus it is not right even with God in the picture so your statement doesn't make sense. quote: This knee-jerk reaction is sidestepping the issue. I did not say that God is responsible. I said that God-- the idea of God-- has been in the equation all along and that the result has been pretty nasty. TJ replies: I dealt with this misguided statement above. History is bloody because men and women have made choices to do their own thing rather than follow God. You can't blame all the blood and nastiness on Christians. They are only responsible for a small part of it. Stalin, Mao Tse TUng, Hitler, and their many cronies in just this past century, godless dictators like Idi Amin, Pol Pot, etc are responsible for far more meaningless murders than are Christians over the whole dawn of time! They pale in comparison.
quote: Don't tell me that you have read the OT and missed all the conquest, murder and kidnapping? Please, TJ, don't play dumb. TJ replies: John, I'm not playing dumb. You misunderstand what I am saying. There are never any statements in general terms like the 10 commandments to this effect. "You may go out and kill whoever you want." On the contrary, it says "You shall not kill". Now there are times when God commanded the Israelites to go and destroy a neighboring people as judgment for their sin etc., but it is a specific directive to the Israelites for a specific time and cannot be interpreted as God condoning anyone going out and doing in their neighboring country. No one would argue that that is what God is saying in the Bible.
quote: Then why not ditch the OT? TJ replies: No way. The OT has a lot of value. It gives us a valuable historical record of human history. THere are lots of lessons we can learn from the mistakes of others in the past. We learn much about God in the OT. We have a record of prophecies that validate Jesus as the Messiah. There are many types of Christ in the OT that further confirm the identity of Jesus. We have the Law in the OT through which we learn much about the character of God. It is very valuable. Jesus came to fulfill the Law, not to abolish it. Ditch it? No way.
quote: I was going to post some verses for you but why bother? You are aware of precisely what you deny. TJ replies: John, on the contrary. I am not aware of any general command that God gives to humans to go out and kill their fellow humans. Please go ahead and post them. Thanks.
quote: quote: Right... like a woman's deserving death for touching a man's pee-pee during a fight. TJ replies: John, you confuse judgement for sin and murder. I'm not sure what you are talking about here, but I think you have twisted it a little to make it look foolish. Plus you have to understand that God gave many rules concerning ceremonial purity. They had to be ceremonially clean when they approached God and worshipped Him. This was to emphasize the holiness of God and our own sinfulness. If people directly violated these commands it was a direct acto of rebellion against God and his holiness. Eventually we will all die because of our sins against God. Some of us will suffer eternal death, eternal separation from God, because of our sins. The Bible says "The soul that sins will die." God means it. He made rules to show the people of Israel that taking His holiness and His Law lightly is not permissable. God meant business and some found that out the hard way. Having said that, I don't understand all of God's judgments in the Bible, but I am not God. I cannot see things from his persective, only from my warped finite sinful perspective. Sin is a natural thing for us humans, me included. I commit sins every day and I live among people who do the same. Small sins don't seem so serious sometimes, but sin is sin and the wages of sin is death, both physical and spiritual. Or, obviously, a rape victim not crying out loudly enough. Deut. 22:23-24. TJ replies: John, lets look at this in context."If a young woman who is a virgin is betrothed to a husband, and a man finds her in the city and lies with her, 22:24 "then you shall bring them both out to the gate of that city, and you shall stone them to death with stones, the young woman because she did not cry out in the city, and the man because he humbled his neighbor's wife; so you shall put away the evil from among you. 22:25 "But if a man finds a betrothed young woman in the countryside, and the man forces her and lies with her, then only the man who lay with her shall die. 22:26 "But you shall do nothing to the young woman; there is in the young woman no sin deserving of death..." Notice that this is only true if the adultery happens in the city. They are condemned for committing adultery. It is assumed that if she had cried out, people would have heard her cries. Everyone knew this law to start with. It was designed to discourage such a thing.Obviously rape is wrong. Remember, we're talking about ancient housing, not modern sound-proof housing. It isn't all that unreasonable. However if the attack happened in the country, the woman is assumed to be innocent. It is assumed that she cried out and that no one heard her. Pretty advanced women's rights for an ancient civilization, I think. Did mistakes ever happen? Perhaps, I don't know, but this was how God set things up. Gotta stop with this. I'll get to the rest of it next time. I answered the whole thing yesterday and then lost it after spending a couple of hours on it. Forgot to enter my password so it never got posted. I'll be back sometime.regards, Tokyojim
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
quote: I was thinking more about how the Isrealites pretty much get to kill, rape and pillage at will and with God's blessing. It doesn't speek much for the theory that we are all equal and have worth.
quote: Like bloody hell! The OT is full of orders from God to kill other peoples. Ex. 23:24, 34:11-14, Num. 21:1-5. TJ replies: Sorry, I didn't mean to cause you to sin. In spite of your passages(first one doesn't apply anyway), I maintain what I said. God is not racist, no matter what you may think. It is not because of prejudice, but because of sin that God ordered the Jews to destroy those people. He is not racist, but it doesn't mean He won't judge sin. If you don't believe in God, you will never understand what God is doing in the OT through the Israelites. God loves all people and sent his Son to die for them all to prove it. He speaks about blessing all the nations of the earth through the Jews. In fact that was His purpose in choosing a people to work through to begin with. He didn't choose the Jews because of who they were. He chose them before they were even a people. It was important that the Jewish nation not be corrupted by idolatry and fall away from God. It was through the Jews who God had promised to send the Messiah adn it was the Jews through whom He gave us the Bible.
quote: How do you breathe with your head under so much sand? TJ replies: It's hard, but I'm getting better at it. Verses like this help though. Colossians 3:9-11 "Do not lie to one another, since you have put off the old man with his deeds,and have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of Him who created him, where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncir-cumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave nor free, but Christ is all and in all."John, God is the giver of life and He has the right to take life as well. He is God. Actually when you think about it, God is rather patient. He allows sinners like us to go on living when we have already sinned and therefore are worthy of the punishment of both spiritual and physical death. He would be totally just in destroying the world again just like He did in the past. However, He has promised not to do that again with a flood at least. We look at God's judgments and forget just how merciful, longsuffering, and patient He really is. For instance, He allows scoffers like you to exercise your free will and say whatever you want to about Him. If you were God, would you allow that? I probably wouldn't. My patience, love, and grace run out far too quickly. No, God is not racist, but nothing I can say will persuade you so again we will have to agree to disagree. Aren't you glad we have the freedom to do that? I disagree with you but respect your right to believe whatever you want. quote: I've covered this. TJ REPLIES: Yes, but in other words, who is to say how we apply evolutionary philosophy to society.
quote: Funny thing, the Bible is interpretted by fallible people too. So would you like to retract the objection or shall I dismiss your religion-- with your blessing-- based on the same grounds? TJ replies: Yes it is. But no, I will not retract my statement. Just because evidence is interpreted by fallible people doesn't mean there isn't a right and a wrong interpretation. I'm sure you would agree. We might not always be able to agree on that interpretation, but that doesn't change that fact that one is right and the other is wrong. I do not dismiss science for this reason or for any reason actually. Science has an important and valid role to play in society and life. The point is that it is not infallible. This is especially true when it comes to historical science or origins science. If scientists would admit that their interpretation of the facts is influenced by their worldview, I would be much happier, but instead they try and pass off their interpretations of the facts as true science while claiming that creationists, who look at the same facts but interpret them differently, are ridiculed for being biased. Both are biased and this needs to be made clear. This is what the problem is.Plus then you have those scientists who actually claim that evolution is fact! I think many even are deluded enough to think it is a proven fact too. They forget that it all depends on whether their presuppositions are true or not. They can never be proven so when it comes to the science of our origins, all we can ever have are different hypothesis. quote: Only creationists push this characature of science. Scientist know damn well that scientists are biased and fallible. This is why science must be reproducible and conclusions testable. Different people, different biases, same answer--- well gee, maybe it is true. TJ replies:John, now your head is in the sand or else you are ignorant or something.First of all, evolution is not reproducible. No one ever witnessed the origin of life, nor has it ever been reproduced. Even by cheating in the lab to make conditions much more optimal than they would have been in the supposed pre-biotic soup, all you get are a few simple amino acids that can't remain stable anyway unless they are separated from the mixture as soon as they form. When it comes to evolution, we have to do a lot of interpretation and guessing. We look at some bones and since we already believe evolution to be true, we interpret the bones on that basis and then use that interpretation as proof for evolution. Most people fall for this trick. We can't produce any missing links in experiments, yet we have faith to believe that even without intelligent human help, billions of them have come into existence. What do you mean reproduceable? On what terms? COnclusions must be testable. Good point. How can we test the current day theory on the origin of life? We can't! Or at least so far whatever tests have been attempted have failed. Then how can we in all honesty tell our kids that it happened?. Some say, "Well, we're here so that is the proof." Yes, if you take God out of the picture, that is all you have left. That is a statement that is believed in faith without any proof. It is not reproduceable nor is it testable. Yet we call this science! No wonder the non-christian microbiologist Michael Denton who wrote Evolution: Theory in Crisis, called evolution the greatest myth of the 20th century. Here is his quote: "The twentieth century would be incomprehensible without the Darwinian revolution. The social and political currents which have swept the world in the past eighty years would have been impossible without its intellectual sanction. ... The influence of the evolutionary theory on fields far removed from biology is one of the most spectacular examples in history of how a highly speculative idea for which there is no really hard scientific evidence can come to fashion the thinking of a whole society and dominate the outlook of an age. Considering its historic significance and the social and moral transformation it caused in western thought, one might have hoped that Darwinian theory ... a theory of such cardinal importance, a theory that literally changed the world, would have been something more than metaphysics, something more than a myth."pg 358. quote: LOL..... ask a scientist!!!!!! TJ replies: I will admit that not all scientists are such fools to think that evolution is a proven fact. Some are honest, others are not when it comes to this area. Others are just deluded and swallow the party talk hook, line, and sinker. Others say, even though the evidence is against us, I'm not going to abandon the ship. I'm going to hang in there and keep believing in evolution. Here is one example: Professor Richard Lewontin is one of the world's leaders in evolutionary biology. He wrote this very revealing comment. It illustrates the implicit philosophical bias against Genesis creation regardless of whether or not the facts support it. "We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is an absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door." Reference:Richard Lewontin, Billions and billions of demonsE The New York Review, January 9, 1997, p. 31. Now, there's a real fool for you, but at least he is honest. In spite of the evidence, I'm going to believe in evolution because I want to. Fortunately not all scientists are this stubborn or committed to their naturalistic religious views. But most scientists try and paint the creationist as a dishonest fool. Let's remember that we're both 100% biased.
quote: If that is all you want, I have no problem; but I bet you want more than that. I'd bet that you want to include theories for which there is no evidence. TJ replies: Hmm. According to some scientists, there is no evidence for evolution either. But wait a minute, are you implying that there is no evidence for intelligent design? I didn't think you were that brainwashed.Yes, I think both the evidence and problems with evolution need to be fairly presented. Intelligent design could be presented in the same way. Of course, whoever does the teaching, will present the evidence for their worldview and the opposing worldview in a biased way, but at least both views would get a hearing. [quote][b]TJ replies: No it is not so simple. Let's take a group oof Great Danes..... But if small size were to suddently be an advantage for survival, this species of dog would go extinct.[quote][b] Exactly what I said. TJ replies: And you call this evolution? From a stable well-adjusted species of dog to a species that is less stable and cannot adjust to the environment as easy? That seems like devolution rather than evolution. From changes like this we're going to go from a dog into a new animal? You do have faith, don't you!
quote: Breeders are not working with time-frames of millions of years, and ten's of thousands of generations. TJ replies: Yes, it is too bad we cannot give breeders millions of years to do their research. But ask any breeder and they realize the limits of genetics. Genetics is science too and these limits are clearly defined and contrary to evolution. You can only go so far and then you are stuck. But even then a tiny dog is still a dog and a large dog is still a dog. You have no evolution, just change within the dog genre or whatever you want to call it. Unimpressive! Even creationists recognize this type of change, but let's be honest. This is not support for the ToE.
quote: This is the biggest problem with the cartoon creationist version of evolution. Thankfully, that isn't the ToE. Here is an experiment-- difficult but not impossible. Take two dogs and sequence their DNA. Breed the two. Sequence the DNA of the pups and check for mutations. Wham-bam!!!! There is the new genetic material. TJ replies: Ah, don't you wish it were only that simple?! Everyone recognizes that the children of any two animals will have some new combinations of the genetic information in the parents. Some of that might be due to mutation as well. Every human is different, but this is not evolution. What you need for evolution to take place for example is new coded information in the genes to allow the DNA to produce something that previously was not coded for in the genes. When I say new information, I mean this. The simplies known cell right now is mitoplasma I think. It is a parasite so it cannot live on it's own, but anyway it has about 500,000 letters in it's genetic code. Whereas a human has 3 billion letters in it's DNA code. This is the problem. How do you get information to build itself. Do you really think that chance undirected mutations can change one or two letters at a time in this code in such a way as to make each change more viable than the last until you have a human being? You are placing your faith in chance. All the evidence we have today shows that information does not arise by chance, yet you choose to believe this. You gotta admit, it takes a lot of faith to be an evolutionist these days, much more than in Darwin's day when no one knew just how complex living things were.
quote: Patently false. See above. TJ replies: OK, you are right. I didn't state that properly. Thanks for correcting me. But you will never get more information in the offspring or shall we say better or higher quality information in the offspring. When information is copied and passed on, we mainly find degeneration of the information, mistakes in copying, and a lower quality of information. That is why mutations are almost all harmful. Perhaps 1 out of every 100 mutations are neutral or perhaps there is even a rare beneficial mutation. But even then, a beneficial mutation doesn't mean that the new organism contains higher quality information than the parent. For instance, a beetle that loses the ability to fly on a windy island will probably survive better than one which can fly but might get blown out into the ocean. But this is a loss of genetic information.Evolutionists say that you can take the highly ordered and complex DNA information storage molecule and introduce mutations and come up with a higher quality of information. I think we usually call mistakes in a computer program a "bug". I don't have the faith to believe that random mistakes made in the information code of DNA can take a one-celled molecule to a mouse to a man. And that is ignoring the huge problem of the who origin of life which is a pre-requisite for this other kind of evolution to occur. I am told that no one has ever been able to come up with an example of one information producing genetic mutation yet. Funny though. There should be thousands of this kind of mutations happening even today. quote: Really, you have just given a nice pro-racist sermonette. TJ replies: John, I told you you wouldn't believe. You don't understand God's plan for this world or His plan to bless the world including you through the Jews. You impose your views of things on God and you think He should act in accordance to your convictions. Not so. That is why He is God. And if you could see things from His perspective, you might even see that He is pretty wise and even right. But then, you don't need to worry about that since God is only an idea inside our messed up heads.
quote: Sure there is, theoretically. TJ REPLIES: Just like an evolutionist, a Christian must have faith. THere will never be 100% proof of GOd's existence and God wants it that way. He doesn't want people following because they have been forced into it. No He wants people to follow Him who choose to follow Him. Who love Him and want to follow Him. THe Bible says this in Hebrews 11:1,6 "Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." "But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him."Like it or not, this is how God set things us. So if you are holding out for 100% proof, forget it. But then you don't have 100% proof for your worldview either. God gives us enough evidence to be able to believe in Him without throwing out our intellect. In fact, as Kenyon I believe it was once said: "The more you study science, the more you will be forced to believe in God." The Bible says in ROmans 1:19-23 "because what may be known of God is manifest in them, for God has shown it to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse, because, although they knew God, they did not glorify Him as God, nor were thankful, but became futile in their thoughts, and their foolish hearts were darkened. Professing to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into an image made like corruptible man-and birds and four-footed animals and creeping things." There is enough evidence around us that God can honestly say that we are all without excuse. Even a first grader knows that a watch needs a designer. A book needs an author. A machine needs an assembler. A noise must have a cause(In other words, an effect(universe) must have a greater cause outside of itself(Creator)).
quote: And we know the prophet were no lying or tripping becasue they said so? You have got to joking.
quote: Lots 'o prophets spoke falsely. TJ replies: Good point. And that is exactly why God gave the Jews strict instructions on how to judge a prophet. It was dangerous to be a false prophet back then because the penalty for that was death. It wasn't always carried out though it seems.
quote: Or so says a book for which we have no external verification of its accuracy. Many religious texts claim miracles. You believe all of them I suppose? TJ replies: No of course not. But the Bible has lots of support. There are good reasons to believe the Bible in my opinion.
quote: More like, miracles don't happen. Miracles conveniently stopped happening at some point in the distant magical past. TJ replies: No, some miracles still happen today. They do not happen as regularly as they did in Jesus time or in the time of various prophets. Now we have the Word of God through which God speaks to us. They didn't have that back then. Although I have never personally experienced a miracle so I cannot speak from experience. I thought you were honestly searching for the truth? TJ replies: It will sound arrogant to you, but I believe I have found the truth, as do you I think. At least, it seems like you think you are right and that I am wrong. If I am persuaded that I am wrong, then I would be forced to give up my faith. But I really am not concerned about something like that happening. (and probably you are not worried about that happening to you either.) Regards,Tokyojim
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
Here is the second part of my reply to John's post #121.
Originally posted by Tokyojim:TJ replies: John, if a person is looking for such an excuse, evolution presents a perfect one for them. JOHN:So does God's Will... and that has been used as an excuse since the beginning of recorded history. TJ REPLIES: Yes, you have a point. Some people have used God’s will as an excuse to do wrong and that is perhaps even worse! ********************************************************** TJ: John, the existence of God is only helpful if people believe it and voluntarily decide to submit their lives to Him. JOHN:You seem to be saying that the idea of evolution is respoinsible for bad behavior, but that the same criterion cannot be applied to the idea of God. This is a double standard. TJ REPLIES: I take my comment back. Even I disagree with it. I believe the existence of God is of benefit to the whole world even if people do not believe in Him. First, we cannot even exist apart from His sustaining the order of the world and holding it together. Second, even atheists benefit from God’s existence when they follow their conscience which is really God’s laws written on their hearts. This is what the Bible says and what I believe. I know you have a different way to try and explain away our moral feelings. There is also what the Bible calls the restraining power of the Holy Spirit which prevents the world from going totally amuck. And the existence of God is beneficial to all people because it has influenced countless of Christians to show love in the name of Jesus. Countless schools have been started, medical works, relief efforts, individuals strengthened, changed for the better, and lives changed. America has been greatly influenced by Christianity as well. I’m not denying there has been some negative, I’m just saying the positive far outweighs the negative. That is what I was trying to say.Yes, the idea of evolution is responsible for much bad behavior. Because it removes the whole idea of moral responsibility, destroys the meaning of life by reducing us to meaningless accidents of nature, provides no hope for our future outside of our own accomplishments, influences people to chuck belief in their Creator, etc. Of course, if evolution is true, then there is no such thing as good and bad behavior. Even many non-christians realize this truth. Like Richard Dawkins said in response to some evolutionists who feel uncomfortable with morality being reduced to human opinion and pure relativity, “That’s tough.” He is right. That’s tough. If evolution is true, than we must have the courage to face the truth " that is if truth is really an absolute moral value. **************************************************************quote: TJ: Nevertheless, the worry about moral controls on scientists shows the problem we have if there is no absolute moral law. JOHN:There is no absolute moral law anyway, despite the claims of religion to the contrary. Why? Because people simply incorporate their whims into their faith. TJ REPLIES: Some do John, but others really do seek to follow God’s laws wholeheartedly. You accuse me of misjudging non-christians. It would seem here that you are guilty of the same. We are all imperfect and no one can ever follow them perfectly, but your statement is not fair. I’m sure everyone has done that at one time or another, but as a basic pattern in their lives, I disagree.What I was trying to say was that, without an absolute moral law, scientists become the supreme authority and so if a particular thing benefits science and the future of mankind, even if it is morally wrong (like experimenting on fertilized eggs and throwing them away when done, abortion, making clones to harvest organs, etc.) it can be so easily justified and that is scary. If something is not accepted now. Scientists don’t fret. It will just take a little time until they can “educate” people into seeing things their way. What is seen as downright taboo today could very well become morally acceptable in 20, 10, 5 or even 1 year. Who knows? So in the end, nothing is really wrong. Why wait then until all the people or the majority of the people come to support your views. These morally handicapped people are simply holding back the advance of science. **************************************************quote: TJ:It is worth it for the sake of science. Science becomes the authority. JOHN:This reflects your perception of non-christians. You contrast faith-inspired behavior with a straw man version of non-faith-inspired behavior. TJ REPLIES: Again I don’t mean to characterize all non-christians like that, but you have to admit that there are plenty of people around who would feel like that. And why not? If there is no source of revealed truth, then science becomes our best bet, does it not? Science almost becomes god. Just the fact that you too are worried about controls on scientists, the fact that we have scientists who want to go ahead with human cloning even though it will mean lots of mistakes and the destruction of those lives proves my point. Please tell me what is the real version of non-faith-inspired behavior. I’m sure this will be your own particular opinion and not all will agree with you. My statement is not a straw man. There are some of these straw men who actually are real which your following admission reflects. ******************************************************** TJ: However, don't tell me that you are willing to trust scientists to make good moral choices in their research. There needs to be some kind of check on them or SOME will go astray. JOHN:You are right. Some checks need to be in place, depending on the research. **********************************************************quote: TJ: Oh, so if you could come up with some way to make scientific sense of a particular action, it would be OK? JOHN:What you are asking me is "If it made sense, would it be OK?" TJ REPLIES: Yes, that seems to be what you are saying. If so, I have to ask “To whom must it make sense?” If it makes sense to you, is that good enough? What if it doesn’t make sense to your neighbor? What if it doesn’t make sense to your fellow scientist or to our allies? Making sense is very subjective and anyone who is good with words, can present a case in such a way as to make is sound like it really makes sense. People would actually be tempted to lie in order to make their version “make sense”. Of course, lying isn’t a sin in your view so I guess that would be OK. I mean, a lie would “make sense” if it enables you to convince people that some other particular thing either makes sense or doesn’t make sense - like say for instance, cloning. ************************************************************* quote: TJ: Everything is relative then. JOHN:It always has been. Denying this doesn't change anything and tagging the sanction of God onto an opinion only makes the relative more dangerous. TJ REPLIES: Well, we have to agree to disagree here. I will never be able to accept that rape is wrong only if the culture thinks it is wrong. Or whatever else you want to use as an example. If there is no God, then you are right. In fact, then it really isn’t morally wrong in any culture. Only legally wrong. I would then be guilty of just tagging His name on to my opinion to try and give it more weight or authority. But, if there is no God, why would that be wrong(no absolute morality)? However, our disagreement goes back one more step to the existence of God. You cannot prove your point – that God does not exist. Neither can I prove my worldview. We both take it by faith. ************************************************************ quote: TJ: Someday someone will come us with just such an idea and then what. Or technology will improve to the point where we will be able to do that and then what? JOHN:Remember, the discussion is about faith-based morality vs. non-faith-based morality. It is not about finding the extremes of behavior. TJ REPLIES: No, the discussion is not about that. You are saying there is no absolute morality. I disagree and am trying to show the dangers of such a belief. And there are plenty of people who will see through the hollowness of non-faith-based moral theory and realize that nothing is really ultimately immoral. Enough have done it in the past and so there is certainly a danger of it happening again.When people come to us with an idea that is wrong, but try and say the end justifies the means, then we are in trouble and we can justify any kind of wrong that we want to. ***************************************************************quote: TJ: Even now, we know that certain traits are harmful so why not try and get rid of them. (Down's Syndrome, retardation, etc.) JOHN:You missed my point. What is not beneficial now, may be beneficial in the future. We simply don't know. Even Down's Syndrome, or some further mutation of the genes involved could be beneficial, or some genes associated with it but not responsible for the disabling conditions associated with it. The best example of what I thinking about is sickle cell anemia. It is crippling and eventually lethal, but provides a survival advantage in areas infested with sleeping sickness. TJ replies: Right, a tendency towards cancer in the genes could someday be beneficial! And Down’s Syndrome as well. That is what kind of faith evolutionists have – a blind faith. You’re illustration of sickle cell anemia is right on. The organism although weaker and less viable than others who are normal, will in this one specific instance gain a survival advantage. But the key here is that it is crippling and lethal itself. This kind of change will get you nowhere in evolution. What a great example of evolution or should we say devolution? Do you want this kind of benefit(one that eventually kills you) even if you live in areas infested with sleeping sickness? *************************************************************** quote: TJ: How about we leave abortion out of it and make the issue purposeful inflcting of pain on babies? JOHN:Actually, ours condones the purposeful infliction of pain on babies. It is called circumcision. TJ REPLIES: Very Funny! This kind of logic won’t get you a passing grade in logic class. Inflicting pain for the fun of it is called torture and it is world’s apart from the medical practice of circumcision. If we take your logic, then doctors ought to be imprisoned. They are inflicting pain on people all the time. Parents ought to be imprisoned whenever they inflict pain on their children through discipline. Don’t we live in a terrible world.By the way, have you ever wondered why God commanded the Israelites to circumcise their children on the 8th day? Medical science has given us the answer. I guess a lot of people are against circumcision because of the pain and because sometimes(actually very rarely) complications develop as a result of the process. One of those complications is excessive bleeding. So nowadays, doctors must first give the boy an injection of vitamin K which helps produce prothrombin.(promotes coagulation of the blood.) But the OT Jews of course did not know that nor did they have prothrombin available to give to the children. But it is interesting that during the first 7 days of a baby’s life, the body’s supply of prothrombin gradually increases until on the 8th day a baby’s natural supply of prothrombin skyrockets to 110% of normal. This is the highest it will ever be in his whole life. There is no safer day to circumcise a baby than the 8th day medically speaking. Either God’s wisdom is again attested to by medical science or here again, we have a lucky coincidence. If you need documentation for what the medical benefits of circumcision are, check out this site. http://www-personal.usyd.edu.au/~bmorris/circumcision.shtml To name of few off hand, circumcision helps avoid penile cancer, urinary tract infections, sexual diseases, cervical cancer in your partner, prostate cancer, etc. The author is definitely not a Christian. Anyway, the medical benefits of circumcision are well documented. Obviously, even though pain is experienced, this is not torture! But you already knew that didn’t you? *************************************************************quote: TJ: Do you know of any cultures where this is thought to be a moral act? JOHN:The Isrealites, who got it from the Egyptians, and passed it along to us. TJ REPLIES: John now wait a minute. Are you saying that you actually believe that the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt? I thought you said the Bible was a bunch of mythology. Anyway, I think you will have a hard time proving that the Israelites got circumcision from the Egyptians. The Bible says God instructed them to circumcise their males. So the Egyptians practiced circumcision too? So what. God’s command to circumcise males was first given to Abraham in Genesis 17, long before the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt. According to the Bible which you don't believe, Abraham did travel to Egypt once before then, but that doesn’t prove anything. Besides, from your point of view, maybe he never even went. An atheist obviously cannot accept that the idea of circumcision came from God so some other feasible explanation must be found. Here is a good example of how both of us look at the same fact and interpret it in different ways. Neither of us can prove our interpretation. I believe what the Bible says and you don’t. You are looking at the fact of Israelite circumcision and using your worldview to understand it. This same thing happens in science as well as I have mentioned. Scientists eliminate God from the start and look for answers apart from Him. If there is a God, then all their theorizing and research will never yield the right answer. But the point here is that circumcision is world’s apart from torture. Even if there were no medical benefits to it, it still could not be construed to be torture in any sense of the word because it wasn’t done with the intent to produce pain. There was a different purpose and pain was simply a side-effect. That is not torture. Nice try though. If you give it some more thought you might be able to find a culture that actually endorses the torture of babies. Keep the faith!! ********************************************** quote: TJ: And just because some cultures practiced infanticide doesn't mean that they really thought it was a moral act. JOHN:Really? I suspect some term re-definition goin on here. quote: TJ replies: Don't know anything about the Yanomamo. Indians? JOHN:Yes. South American indians. It is the largest group of S.A. Indians and probably the most studied tribe on the planet. They show up frequently in movies and even a PS2 commercial. quote: TJ: And as I said above, I would doubt that these Indians really thought that this act was a moral act. JOHN:Strange as it seems.... ************************************************************** quote: TJ: It may have been practiced and tolerated, but I doubt the women thought it was a moral act. JOHN:One study I read quoted a Yanamamo woman as saying "I am afraid my husband does not love me because he does not beat me enough" or something to that effect. I am going from memory. TJ REPLIES: Interesting. And hard to understand. Still doesn’t persuade me that rape is not a moral absolute, but it really might be an example of a culture which really doesn’t view it as immoral. I’m surprised. ************************************************************* quote: TJ: I'd like to read more about the Yanomamo. JOHN:Interesting bunch. They are known as the Fierce People. TJ REPLIES: I did find out some stuff about them on the internet, but not detailed enough. *************************************************** quote: TJ: However, rape in the Bible was never condoned or left unpunished. Marrying the victim in the aftermath was actually a punishment for the man. It made him take responsibility for his sin. JOHN:Do you realy believe this? Ask a rape victim how fair this punishment is? TJ REPLIES: I understand what you are saying here. The point is here that if he doesn’t marry her, no one ever will marry her and she’ll be left single all her life. Marriage wasn’t based on love back then. So it sounds more repulsive to us nowadays than it was to them back then I’m sure. I gave an example of a woman who was angry at her half-brother because not only did he rape her, but he also then refused to marry her. And this was only in the case of a virgin being raped. If a married woman was raped, it was death for the man. Some of these rules are hard to understand. Did every woman want to marry the guy who raped her? Probably not. Don’t know what happened in those instances. It would have been kind of pitiful is she was then forced to marry the guy who raped her adding insult to injury. However, even in arranged marriages, it had nothing to do with the woman’s desires. That was just the way it happened. *********************************************************** quote: TJ: Don't tell me he wanted to give his daughter to those men to rape. Where's your head at? He only did it to spare the angels who were sent from God from homosexual rape. JOHN:Would the idea even cross your mind? Should I let my daughters be gang-raped.... hmmmmm.....? See what I mean about the idea of God not being the best guide for morality. TJ replies: Now wait a minute. I never said that Christians or Jews never make wrong moral decisions just because they believe in God. The point is I believe that far more often than not it has a positive influence on their decisions. Sure you can find examples of times when people made wrong decisions, even terrible decisions, but those seem to be more the exception rather than the rule.Remember, we all still live in a sinful world and still have sinful desires. No one is perfect nor will they be until heaven. Besides, you are forgetting that Lot was not a model Jewish believer in any sense of the word. He chose to live in this god-forsaken city against better judgment. He was no doubt adversely influenced by his culture. He should have known better than to live there to begin with. And he didn’t go there as a missionary either. You can’t take a “backslidden Jew” and hold his life up as a good example of how faith in God influences a person’s life. Even though it didn’t influence his life as much as it should have, still it did influence his life and he knew what was right and wrong, even though he didn’t do it. *********************************************************** [qutoe] TJ: Give the men the angels sent from God to be gang raped or give them his daughter. JOHN:How about give them neither and take a stand? Godless, faithless, evolutionist that I am, I'd consider myself as having no choice but that one. TJ REPLIES: I agree with you here. He shouldn’t have given them his daughter either. Better be careful though. You almost sound like you are saying that what Lot did is absolutely wrong.You said you would have no choice by that one, but maybe other people would feel differently. Shouldn’t we respect their views and show a little tolerance here? After all, morality is relative, right? ********************************************************** JOHN: TJ, the God of the OT isn't the God you describe. TJ REPLIES: God never changes John. The God of the OT is the same God of the NT. He deals with mankind in a very different way though. In the NT, He rejected the Jews for a time and now is dealing with “spiritual Israel” or all those who believe in Christ. It is not physical lineage that is important, but spiritual lineage. Not physical circumcision that is important, but spiritual circumcision of the heart. Not outward forms but the condition of the heart. However, even in the NT, faith is the means of salvation and justification. But we are now in the Age of Grace. Jesus opened up a more direct approach to God through his sacrificial death on the cross and now we don’t have to go through the priest to pray to God. Jesus is our High Priest and through Him, we have access to God. He will once again judge sin in the end times, but now, He is building His Church. In the OT, He spoke through prophets, but now we have His Word through which He speaks to us. God himself didn’t change, but again, I can understand from your position why you think this. ***********************************************************quote: TJ: Plus it(rape) is not right even with God in the picture so your statement doesn't make sense. JOHN:God and God's agents have ordered exactly the behaviors which God supposedly disaproves of. You can't have it both ways. TJ REPLIES: No, God has never ordered someone to rape another person as far as I can tell. There are punishments listed in Scripture for those who are guilty. God has ordered Israel to destroy neighboring nations at times. Since God does not exist in your eyes, the idea of God is here being used by these people to justify war I suppose. I understand how you feel. If I didn’t believe in God, obviously that would be the only way to look at it. But when you understand who God is, there are other ways to look at that and it is not inconsistent. Rampant murder is never condoned, but God has a right to judge any nation whenever He wants to. In the OT, we’re told that God use neighboring nations to judge the sin of surrounding nations. It is interesting that God also used heathen nations to judge His own people in this same way. So God is being consistent. It isn’t just something that the Jews made up to justify the killing of nearby nations. If it were, you wouldn’t expect the writers of the Bible to say that the Jews also were justly judged by God for their sins through the invasion and subsequent capture of their people by surrounding heathen nations. *********************************************************** quote: TJ: I dealt with this misguided statement above. JOHN:And again you avoid the point. You make the claim that the idea of evolution is dangerous and that the idea of God keeps people in check. I am pointing out that that idea does not keep people in check. *************************************************************** quote: TJ: You can't blame all the blood and nastiness on Christians. JOHN:I'm not blaming it on Christians. I am saying that the idea of God has not kept people in check. TJ REPLIES: OK, again we’ll just have to agree to disagree. I agree that faith in the God of the Bible does not keep people in check 100% of the time. My point is that it does so far more than it doesn’t. And I think the idea of evolution leads to moral problems far more than it doesn’t. My opinion. I’m not going to argue this anymore. ************************************************************* quote: TJ replies: No way. The OT has a lot of value. JOHN:Right. How else would we know from whom we can take slaves? TJ REPLIES: So you say that because the OT gives rules for having slaves that it is of no value. I don’t profess to fully understand all the laws given to the Jews governing slavery, but I do know that their slavery was nothing like we think of today. It was more of an economical arrangement, even employment. It was a way for a person who got himself into financial trouble to pay off his debts and even make some money to get financially stable again. In fact there were laws that required the freeing of slaves every 7th year. Discipline of slaves was permitted, but mistreatment was not. Provision was even made for slaves who didn’t want to go free to commit themselves to their master for the rest of their life. In essence, they forfeited their freedom because they were happy with their current situation. Actually, it provided a way to hold people responsible for their debts and it seemed to work very well. So actually you are right. The OT is valuable in this sense. Perhaps we could learn some principles here that could be applied to modern bankruptcy claims.Were there masters who mistreated their slaves? I’m sure there were. Not all of those laws applied to foreign slaves either. But it was a way to help out fellow Jews who had financial problems. It wasn’t near as bad as people imagine it. Yes, there were probably Christians in modern times who misunderstood it and used it to justify their slavery of blacks. This kind of slavery is not what is not what is referred to here in the Bible and it is one of the big sins of some Christians in the past. We forget that not all Christians were slave-owners. Some were dead set against it. But there were a minority of Christians as well as non-christians of course, who did enslave other people. And of course among them, there were both “good” slave owners and true tyrants who treated the people as things. Also, we must not forget that much of the impetus to get rid of the slave system came from Christian principles. William Wilburforce, the man in Britain who worked so hard for so many years to see slavery abolished there was a dedicated Christian. Finally on his deathbed, after many years of hard work, he experienced the fruit of his labors. The British Congress or whatever you call it declared slavery to be illegal. Then in the States, there was of course Lincoln and many others, both Christian and non-christian who were involved I’m sure. The whole constitution of the US was based on the fact that we were created equal in God’s sight. It was this truth that provided the main argument against slavery in the States. *************************************************************** quote: TJ: The Old Testament gives us a valuable historical record of human history. JOHN:It is a mythological history of a tiny tribe of warlike nomads. It has value in being that I suppose. TJ REPLIES: John, very interesting choice of words, but you are either willfully ignorant or willfully dishonest. It is not mythology. I think you would be surprised just how much of the OT has been validated by archeology. Not all problems have been solved of course, but it is far more than mythology. The Bible is a valuable book to archeologists. By the way, the following is a statement supposedly put out by the Smithsonian Institute about the historicity of the OT. (I'm trying to verify that they actually made this statement.) Obviously, not everything in the Bible is verified and there are some problems, but your above statement is just simply inaccurate. “On the other hand, much of the Bible, in particular the historical books of the old testament, are as accurate historical documents as any that we have from antiquity and are in fact more accurate than many of the Egyptian, Mesopotamian, or Greek histories. These Biblical records can be and are used as are other ancient documents in archeological work. For the most part, historical events described took place and the peoples cited really existed. This is not to say that names of all peoples and places mentioned can be identified today, or that every event as reported in the historical books happened exactly as stated. There are conflicts between present archeological evidence and historical reports that may result from a lack of information on our part or from misunderstandings or mistakes by the ancient writers.” http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acropolis/9156/ssotb.htm ************************************************************ quote: TJ: We learn much about God in the OT. JOHN: He is nothing like God in the NT. quote: TJ:We have a record of prophecies that validate Jesus as the Messiah. JOHN:Actually.... I can't tell that Christ fits the genealogical requirements for being the messiah, as outlined in the OT. TJ REPLIES: What are your problems with this? Just curious. *************************************************************** quote: TJ: John, on the contrary. I am not aware of any general command that God gives to humans to go out and kill their fellow humans. Please go ahead and post them. Thanks. JOHN:God consistently gives the command to conquer any people not like the Isrealites. It doesn't take a big leap to realize that if God, in the past, commanded HIS people to kill those not like them, the same rules apply today. TJ REPLIES: As I said, there was no command like that. Now, perhaps if we didn’t have the NT, someone could try and make that errant conclusion, however, it would of course be false. You have to go back to the reasons for why God commanded what He did. That limits it to the specific context and prevents someone from making that kind of an unwarranted interpretation. And God didn’t command the Jews to kill EVERYONE who was not like them. The reason wasn't because they were different from them either. Your statement is misleading. As I said earlier, it was God’s desire to bless all the nations of the earth through the Israelites. The commands to destroy their neighbors were limited to a rather specific period of time especially Joshua leading the Israelites to take over the Promised Land. King Saul and King David were involved in a lot of wars as well. However, it is Biblical interpretation like you do above that causes so much trouble. We don’t have freedom to make a mockery of God’s Word. Now granted people do it, but the point is, it is wrong. ***************************************************************** quote: TJ: John, you confuse judgement of sin with murder. JOHN:I think you are confusing war and the consequent death, destruction and slavery with judgement-- perfectly illustrating how religion DOES NOT check human behavior. TJ REPLIES: Well, John, the Bible says that God was judging the surrounding nations for their idolatry and so forth. The wages of sin is death and God would be perfectly just in destroying all of us sinners. The only reason He doesn’t is because of His grace and love for us. Now there are times when God chooses to exercise His right to judge. Then we are the first to cry “FOUL!” And of course, many of Israel’s wars were self-defense.John, the difference between you and I is that I believe what the Bible says and you don’t. So there is no satisfactory answer here. Your assumption here seems to be that God, if He exists, certainly would not use the Jews to judge other nations. But if He used other nations to judge the Jews, His own chosen people, why would He not use the Jews to judge others as well? (Granted I am assuming He did use other nations to judge the Jews.) Plus, you are projecting your idea of who God is or should be onto God and He is far higher and greater than that. I simply choose to believe what the Bible says about God. You do not. Again, God, if He really did exist, must in your eyes fit into your own little idea of what He should be and how He should act. This is not the case. People criticize God for sending people to hell. A “loving” God in their eyes would never do such a thing. That is because they do not understand the seriousness of sin and the absolute holiness of God. If we finite humans whose powers of judgment have been warped by sin, could completely understand God, He would cease to be God. ************************************************************** quote: TJ: I'm not sure what you are talking about here, but I think you have twisted it a little to make it look foolish. JOHN:Sorry, it isn't kill. It is 'cut off her hand' Duet. 25:11-12 TJ REPLIES: Here is the text: “If two men fight together, and the wife of one draws near to rescue her husband from the hand of the one attacking him, and puts out her hand and seizes him by the genitals, then you shall cut off her hand; your eye shall not pity her.”I don’t really understand this law. First of all, it isn’t an accidental thing though like you suggested in your last post. It does demonstrate that outside of the marital relationship, that kind of touching is taboo. If the circumstances of the touching were different, ie. adultery, then the punishment was death. We have come so far from God’s standards that judgment according to God’s standards seems extra harsh. We will all be in for a rude awakening when we stand before God and realize that He judges us according to His standards and not according our standards. Again, I don’t fully understand this particular law, but it might have something to do with purity and respect for the opposite sex. Nowadays, if my daughter was being attacked, I would tell her to give a good knee to the groin. Regards,TJ
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
quote: TJ REPLIES: Karl, I beg to challenge you on this point. Just how many of these changes have you actually seen take place? Last time I checked my dictionary, that was the definition of observation.Wearing your evolutionary research glasses you guess that these fossils are missing links. And come on, the numbers of incremental positive changes that need to happen by chance in order to see a simple cell with less than 500,000 letters in the DNA code turned into a human with what - over 3 billion letters in the DNA code - seems absolutely incredible. Not that each letter is indicative of one transitional form, but evolutionary change didn't go in a straight line from the simple cell to the human. There are millions of other species of life that would have had to develop in small incremental postive steps. There you have your billions of transitional forms. OK, maybe billions is an exaggeration, I really don't know. But certainly millions. Imagine the number of absolute miracles scientists are forced to believe in by their denial of God! We could start to throw out some figures on just how utterly ridiculous it is to place faith in chance for the creation of life. Oops. Abiogenesis is not evolution. Somehow that slipped my mind. Sorry. The miracles that are necessary to see information increasing positive genetic mutations take place on a regular basis to enable biological evolution would have to also be extremely large. Creationists too believe in miracles, but we believe they were accomplished by an Almighty All-wise Creator and not by the deity of Chance, whom most evolutionists worship.Regards, Tokyojim
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
John,
It's been a while. Sorry, we were quite busy here with preparations for Christmas services and so forth. Then we went away for a little break and all 4 of us got sick. I'm still trying to kick a cough and runny nose and the two kids still have fevers. Anyway, I'll get back to you, have just been busy. Hopy you had a good holiday season. Being here in Japan I always miss the football games over New Year's. My b-in-law will tape a few of them and send them to me, but it's not quite the same as seeing them as they go down. Anyway, I'll try and get back with you soon. Just checking in. Regards, TJ
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
quote: JOHN: LOL.... glad to see that a world based on God's laws is so appealing.
quote: JOHN: Surely god knew that this was a wrong decision. Why then wasn't Lot punished? God was quick to punish back in the good old days. TJ REPLIES: I am not God and cannot answer for you. The whole thing came about because of Lot’s wrong choice to live in that wicked city. The very loss of his daughter was a sort of punishment in and of itself. Plus, in the end, Lot lost his home and all his possessions. Even his wife. Although that wasn’t necessarily a direct punishment for the rape incident, it is all part of the consequences of his sin. We are not told that God did not punish him for that either. Not everything is written in the Bible.
quote: JOHN: hmm...... give my daughter up to be gang raped? gee.... I wonder what I should do? TJ REPLIES: I agree with you here. Giving one’s daughter to be gang to be gang raped is probably another example of absolute morality. I bet Lot would even agree with you after the fact and admit that he made a mistake.
quote: JOHN:Strangely, you seem to going just that direction, even after arguing the opposite earlier in the post. TJ REPLIES: Sorry, don’t follow you here.
quote: JOHN: God sure threatened it. Isaiah 13:16. And... 2 Samuel 12:11 which threat was carried out in 2 Samuel 16:22 by David's own son Absalom. There are many tales of conquest and kidnapping as well, most of which God lets slide, thereby showing approval. TJ REPLIES: 2 Sam. 12:11 is a prophecy of judgment on David. Is. 13:16 is God’s prophecy of judgment on Babylon. It was a warning of judgment, of what would happen if they continued on in their sinful ways. Now, personally I think it was very fair of God to tell them what would happen if they didn’t repent. He simply tells them what the conquering people would do to their women and children. At least He gave them a chance. He lets them see in the looking glass to see what would happen if they didn’t repent. No, God’s letting sin slide by does not show His approval. First of all, His Word tells us it is wrong. Secondly, if He judged all sin, you and I would not even be alive to talk about it.Not all sin is even partially judged in this world. Some criminals get away scott free with their crime, don’t they? They must deal with their own conscience, but otherwise they are free. That is why there is a need for a judgment in the next world, to right all the wrongs. There is coming a day in which these sins that God “let slide” will be accounted for. The whole world will be made accountable to Him – Romans 3:19,20. quote: John:And whomever convinces the people that he has the ear of God gets to order the massacres. This is precisely what I have been saying. TJ REPLIES: For instance, in the Crusades, yes that happened, and in some of the other wars the Church has been responsible for as well. But these are the exceptions rather than the rule. As I said in the past, the offenses of atheists who feel they are accountable to no one like Stalin, Mao, ad nauseum far surpasses those glaring sins of the Church.
quote: JOHN: Absolutely. I think slaves are quite valuable.
quote: JOHN: Like hell. Maybe you should review the rules governing such things.
quote: JOHN: Applicable only to fellow Isrealites, by the way.
quote: JOHN: Right. TJ replies: What I mean here is that people need to be held responsible for their debts.
quote: JOHN: Niether.
quote: JOHN: Do you think I haven't checked these claims? Precious little has ever been validated. Pull your head out of the sand. TJ REPLIES: John, could it be that you have believed everything the skeptics say and your mind has been poisoned to the point where you aren’t even open to the truth nor do you want it to be true? Just wondering.
quote: JOHN: Anything that might hold clues to the past is valuable to archeologists. That is a long way from saying it is accurate. TJ REPLIES: I think you will find that there are many archeologists who hold the Bible in high regards. Check out this resource for some of the archeological support of the Bible. Archaeology and the Bible - ChristianAnswers.Net
quote: You haven't veriefied it yet? Very sneaky. TJ REPLIES: Sorry, I have not been able to verify it. I shouldn’t have quoted it until I could verify it. I found it on someone’s website and that is all I know right now.
quote: Deuteronomy 7:2, 20:13, 20:16 Please, TJ, its just painful to watch the denial. TJ REPLIES: Cutely worded, John. I already gave you my explanation for those passages. God did use war as judment on people and that is his prerogative.
quote: JOHN:Right. They weren't Isrealites and didn't worship him. Oldest excuse in the book. TJ REPLIES: Yes, they were guilty of the sin of idolatry among many other sins. This was judgment on these cultures after years and years of sinful rebellion against their Creator. God would have been just in destroying them hundreds of years earlier. We as humans do not have that authority, but God does. Now you say it is an excuse to kill because you don’t believe in God, but God is the giver of life and He has the authority to take it away as well. In the OT, it is very interesting to note that God not only used the Jews at times to bring punishment on surrounding nations, but HE ALSO USED SURROUNDING NATIONS TO BRING JUDGMENT ON THE JEWS! If this was simply an excuse the Jews used to kill others, interesting that they would use the same excuse to justify the warfare of their enemies against them. Again, we have to agree to disagree.
quote: JOHN:I guess Allah was judging us on the Sept. 11. Or maybe it was God who wasn't happy with us? TJ REPLIES: I can say for sure that it wasn’t Allah, but no one can say for sure if that was a judgment of God on America. God allowed it to happen, yes. Is He not happy with us? I can think of many reasons why He is not, and it should be a wake-up call to consider how far we have wondered from our Creator. Whether or not it was a direct judgment of God on America, we cannot say for sure, but believers should all certainly take it as a wake up call, repent of our sins, and return to God if we have strayed.
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
On definition of evolution:
Darwin's book does not concern itself with the origin of life. In fact, it merely suggests that God created the first form or forms, and leaves it at that. It is entirely about development of existing life, and does not address abiogenesis at all. Your telling phrase is "at least from the atheistic viewpoint". Your point (however good or bad it may be) is contra atheism, not contra evolution. Actually, I'm a theist but I do strongly suspect God used natural processes for the origins of life. No, "seperation" of chemical and biological evolution is not a new development. They have always been quite seperate. TJ@REPLIES: Always separate and yet well respected evolutionists have included both in the definition of evolution at times. Of course they have always been separate. They are two very different kinds of evolution, and from an atheistic viewpoint, both are necessary and I think should be included together in the general definition of evolution. However, from a theistic evolutionistfs standpoint, I understand why you would separate them. For you the problem of the origin of life is solved and you are only concerned about how we got from the first cell to where we are today.I personally have trouble understanding why God would stoop to using the cruel natural processes of life to create living creatures when He could have done it perfectly the first time and saved a lot of pain and hassle. This view has death, pain, and suffering as part of Godfs original perfect creation rather than the result of human sin. It seems to imply that the animals were carnivorous from the beginning whereas the Bible tells us they were vegetarians until sin entered the world. These are just some of my personal problems with the theistic evolutionary point of view, but Ifm glad to know we both believe in Godfs existence and participation in the process of creation. On reptile/mammal transitionals:Since the transition took of the order of 100 million years or so, from the late Carboniferous through to the early Triassic, why should various forms not radiate, as later mammals have done? Would it make sense for them to say "hey guys, let's hang around here until we've fully evolved into mammals"? Not sensible. Geographical considerations aside, you still have to deal with the sequence, and the remarkable congruence between the transitional state of each specimen and its age. Unless you suggest we consciously fiddled the figures? And I have no idea what Moreover, intercontinental correlations are made even when the fossil genera do not correspond with each other. means. TJ REPLIES: I think that geographical considerations are quite large in this whole idea. If there is no way that these different gtransitionalsh could have been related to each other because of geography, then it is hard to see how you can call them a part of the same tree. As far as the ages go, there is much assuming that goes on in these dating techniques. Plus, often times incongruous dates are freely ignored while ones that fit our idea of what happened are embraced. I think the dates makes the geographic differences more difficult a problem as it would seem to preclude the time to migrate to the next place and then from that place to the next place etc. On TransitionalsMost disputes are not about whether a specimen is transitional, but exactly what the transition is. No-one within mainstream science disputes that Ambulocetus is transitional, but debate rages over what the exact ancestor of it was, and what course evolution took between it and modern cetaceans, or whether Amb. is truly ancestral to modern cetaceans, or merely a cousin. None of it helps creationism in the slightest, because Ambulocetus shouldn't exist at all for you! TJ REPLIES: No that is not true. The existence of ambulocetus is not a problem for creationists at all. Plus you have to remember the great amount of evolutionist assumptions that are put into a drawing of ambulocetus. It is amazing how much the ambulocetus looks like a transitional form the way evolutionists draw it! No bias there Ifm sure, even though no pelvic bone was found for the specimen and it is a very incomplete skeleton. It is a clear stretch of the imagination to declare that Ambulocetus, a creature with powerful forelimbs and hooved hind limbs, unable to dive to any significant depth or to hear directionally under water, was nevertheless, or even an intermediate form. It was more likely a near-shore carnivore whose exact behavior and habitue is as yet a topic only for speculation.I think you will admit that for an earthbound mammal of any size to evolve into a huge body specially shaped to enable it to swim in the depths of a new environment like an ocean would be an amazing feat. Evolutionist Michael Denton described the problem of such a fantastic transition by saying: ". . . we must suppose the existence of innumerable collateral branches leading to many unknown types . . . one is inclined to think in terms of possibly hundreds, even thousands of transitional species on the most direct path between a hypothetical land ancestor and the common ancestor of modern whales . . . we are forced to admit with Darwin that in terms of gradual evolution, considering all the collateral branches that must have existed in the crossing of such gaps, the number of transitional species must have been inconceivably great. M. Denton, Evolution: A Theory in Crisis (Adler & Adler, 1985), p. 174. No matter what land animal you choose as the whalefs ancestor, the morphological differences are huge. For instance, the skeletal features would need to change radically, as well as the physiology (the collective functions of an organism). The animal would have to have evolved a way to go from drinking fresh water to drinking salt water without it killing it. This means an extreme change must have taken place in the physiology of these creatures in a period of about 3 million years at the most. J. Thewissen, et al., "Evolution of Cetacean Osmoregulation," Nature, 381:379-380 (1996).Other necessary physiological mechanisms that would have had to develop would be mechanisms for handling oxygen debt and lactic acid buildup, as well as the development of blubber for fat storage and for temperature regulation. Maintaining a core body temperature while being bathed in an ocean of cold water would be a definite problem for creatures not used to living in water. These are tremendously complicated mechanisms and it takes a lot of faith to believe that chance, mutations, and natural selection can come up enough successive positive beneficial changes to accomplish such a feat, especially when you remember that the process is totally unguided. As a theistic evolutionist, I donft know if you believe that God guided these processes or not, but most evolutionists clearly would rebel against such a preposterous unscientific idea. Whale fins have fascinating biological structures called countercurrent heat exchangers to conserve heat. This kind of system is way beyond the abilities of natural selection and mutations. Plus where are all the fossils showing how the side-to-side movement of the land mammal's tail changed to the down and up movement of Ambulocetus and the whales? For this to happen, the land ancestor of the ambulocetus would have to gradually eliminate its pelvis, replacing it with a very different skeletal structure and associated musculature that would support a massive, flat tail (with flukes). Pure undirected chance would have to simultaneously produce these horizontal tail flukes independently, diminish the pelvis, and allow the deformed land creature to continue to live and even flourish in the sea. Evolution really is amazing isnft it?! I took some of this information from the following website: Acts and Facts Magazine | The Institute for Creation Research Well, Karl, I prefer to believe that God created all the creatures of the sea on day 5 like the Bible says. After all, God knows better than we do since He did it. But I certainly understand the temptation to try and fit evolution into the Bible. I guess that is where we disagree. Regards,TJ
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
quote: TJ REPLIES: Interesting how you put that. Jesus said in Mt. 18:3 "Assuredly, I say to you, unless you are converted and become as little children, you will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven." I guess I'm just a kid at heart and a sucker for fairy tales. Kids are teachable, trusting, and more willing to follow than adults. Christianity does demand that we bow the knee to our Creator and confess Jesus as Lord and I think that is the most repulsive thing about it to us humans because we are so self-centered. We have a will and a mind of our own. We want to run our lives rather than have to humble ourselves before God and depend on Him to save us. Regards, TJ
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Percipient:
[B] tj writes: It is interesting that Scientific American magazine, which by the way started out as a Creationist journal,... You guys have *got* to stop believing everything you read at Creationist websites. Here's a link to an online version of the first issue of Scientific American from 1845 - it was *not* a Creationist journal. The evangelical movement did not even develop Creationism as a scientific response to evolution until more than a century later. Just like today, many of those who produced Scientific American then believed that God created the heaven and the earth, but that does not by any means imply they would have found acceptable any of the claims of Creationism in light of modern scientific evidence and understanding. TJ REPLIES: I'll look into what you said before I respond.
...refused to hire a very well-respected scientist after it became known that he was a creationist. Like John I find this hard to accept. Good science is good science, regardless of the beliefs of those who produced it. But beyond that this is a little hard to accept because Scientific American is a magazine, not a research lab. Scientists write and review many of the articles and sit on the various review committees, and depending on their role some probably receive some form of remuneration, but SciAm probably has extremely few if any practicing scientists on its full-time staff. Unless you can attach a name to this claim, and especially if this information comes from the same source that told you SciAm was originally a Creationist journal, it's probably a good idea to drop this. Percy & John,I apologize for not backing up my statement. I think I misstated it as well. He was being hired as their 'Amateur Scientist' columnist. Anyway, I had read it somewhere, but I couldn't remember where and I didn't have time to go and look for it. Here is a well-documented article about the incident. The man's name was Forrest M. Mims III. Check it out for yourself. Revolutionary Atmospheric Invention by Anti—creationist Victim | Answers in Genesis There are quotes from other evolutionary magazines backing it up so it is not just some sour grapes from a guy who wasn't hired to create controversy. Anyway, I hope that helps. Here is the relevant part of the article:Revolutionary Atmospheric Invention by Victim of Anti-creationist Discrimination According to eThe Amateur Scientistf section of Scientific American, May 1997: Haze is a vital indicator of our atmospherefs health c but little is known about how the amount of haze is changing globally because no-one is coordinating haze observations from widely dispersed areas. That may change with the latest design from Forrest M. Mims III c . He has invented an atmospheric haze sensor that costs less than $20 and is so simple that even the most hardened technophobe can put it together in under an hour. Mimsfs instrument could revolutionize this important area of study by opening the field to all-comers, that is, to amateur scientists.1 The article mentioned that Mims had written some Amateur Scientist columns in Scientific American in 1990. But it failed to mention that Scientific American refused to hire him when they found out that he was a creationist, although they admitted that his work was efabulousf, egreatf and efirst ratef,and eshould be published somewheref.2 Mimsf invention is further confirmation of his ability. But no matter what onefs scientific ability, denying the modern-day religion of evolution is heretical enough to justify discrimination. Even the journal Science, itself known to refuse to publish creationist views,3 wrote: Even today, some members of the scientific establishment have seemed nearly as illiberal toward religion as the church once was to science. In 1990, for instance, Scientific American declined to hire a columnist, Forrest Mims, after learning that he had religious doubts about evolution.4 Small wonder that many creationists write under pseudonyms or otherwise hide their beliefs from the establishment. Percy, I am glad that you feel as you do - that "Good science is good science, regardless of the beliefs of those who produced it." It seems you disagree with some who feel that a belief in creation disqualifies a person from being regarded as a true scientist. However, it also seems you have a little more faith in the unbiasness and objectivity of evolutionists than I do. There are too many examples of scientific journals refusing to even publish articles by creationists simply because of the worldview issue. This doesn't serve anyone in the quest for truth. Many creation scientists have their work belittled and never taken seriously simply because they happen to believe that God is the Creator. If you want some concrete examples, I'll be glad to get some for you. Since I didn't give any examples before, I'll at least give a website address to back up that claim.
Do Creationists Publish in Notable Refereed Journals?
| Answers in Genesis
Anyway, it is important to remember that we are all biased, evolutionists as well as creationists. We can't avoid it because of our worldview. We interpret the scientific observations through different worldviews, so naturally we come up with different conclusions. Regards, TJ
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Tokyojim Inactive Member |
Quetzal,
I don't know if you are still reading this thread, but I opened a new thread under Faith and Belief to try and answer some of your questions that you posed here earlier. Regards, TJ
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