Not at all.
Yes, a total dick or a total douche. Take your pick.[/quote]
Neither one is applicable.
Not at all.
Everybody Wang Chung wrote:If one believes in a literal interpretayion of the Bible, then one also has to believe that God is a total dick.
Hoops wrote:I understand your position. However, a fair and literal reading points to Noah's flood. After all, "its" refers to the earth. And when would "its" waters roar and foam? Certainly one can reasonably conclude during the flood.The first quotation is about mountains falling, as an illustration of the things we shall not be alarmed by if we have God to support us, and the second simply says that God has been there from well before anything was made. I know the first Psalm pretty well by heart in the Prayer Book version "God is our hope and strength'
See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWDPXuHnPKUI see that as well. But this can also be read as the mountains and earth were created at different times. One could argue, forcefully I believe, that as Noah's flood, if true, was the single most significant geological event, then the reasonable explanation for when the mountains were created would be at this time.... and the second is a childhood memory in its metrical version: "Before the hills in order stood/Or earth received her frame/From everlasting, Thou art God/To endless years the same."
Hoops wrote:Everybody Wang Chung wrote:If one believes in a literal interpretayion of the Bible, then one also has to believe that God is a total dick.
Not at all.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
I hope my substantive post above shows that I am not one of those.
.Hoops wrote: they do not
Indeed, on the face of our posts I think I have demonstrated that I know the parts of the Bible we are discussing at least as well as you do
I disagree.
- and in one case better, in that you thought mistakenly that the killing of animals began after the Flood, not after the Fall.
I made a mistake, yes. Thank you for pointing that out to me
I also knew what Psalm you were referring to on the matter of mountains 'rising up', when you had forgotten.
I missed that. Do you have a post #?
I note that you make no response to my substantive, well documented and I think eirenic post, but respond instead to posts that you feel you can answer in one-liners of a dismissive nature.
Of course. I have little interest in giving you a platform for your snarkiness. I'm happy to discuss it with you, if that's what you wish. But you are more concerned with making rhetorical points, not a give and take. You and Buffalo are cut from the same cloth.
Are you really in this for serious discussion of the Bible, or just to sneer at unbelievers? If the latter, I think you should ask yourself whether you may not be placing stumbling-blocks by giving the impression that being an EV Christian implies being intolerant of dissent, uninterested in real discussion of relevant evidence, and uncharitable towards unbelievers. Just saying.
Your feigned indignation is laughable. And I am, indeed, lauging. When you bother to take the time to actually engage what I write then that might be some indication that you wish to discuss the matter. Until then, you're just another atheist/humanist/agnostic blowhard. I have litte patience for those.
giving the impression that being an EV Christian implies being intolerant of dissent, uninterested in real discussion of relevant evidence, and uncharitable towards unbelievers.
Quasimodo wrote:I hadn't thought about coconuts.
I'm guessing that if the Bible was true, all the plants in my garden would be variations of coconut palms. Of course, this would be a testament to the validity of evolution. Roses from coconuts.
The Nehor wrote:Quasimodo wrote:I hadn't thought about coconuts.
I'm guessing that if the Bible was true, all the plants in my garden would be variations of coconut palms. Of course, this would be a testament to the validity of evolution. Roses from coconuts.
But then surely you could have African and/or European swallows carrying the (smaller-then-coconuts) seeds needed to re-seed the earth.
Of course. I can't help that though.I have to say, in all honesty, that even when I was a religious believer I would have shaken my head at arguments of the kind you put forward here.
I specifically stated that Ps 104 had relevance. And you wonder why I don't think you're reading?Unlike Psalm 104, there does not seem to be even the slightest pretext for making these Psalms refer to Noah's flood specifically, apart from the fact that you need a proof text, and you have already rejected Psalm 104, which is the one most widely used for this purpose.
How in the world is anything "clearly hypothetical"? I come from the perspective, firstly, that when the text speaks of raging waters and such, I think it's refering to raging waters. I'm not sure why that is not reasonable to take the text for what it is.The first psalm is clearly hypothetical 'even if awful things were to happen, like waters raging' we shall not be scared, even if it gets so bad that mountains collapse' - and why do you think Noah's flood was the only possible event in the Psalmist's mind in which waters might 'rage and swell'?
I'm not sure of your disagreement here. I'll grant you that I was using the term "geological event" loosely, let's call it a weather event then of such proportions as to potentially impact the earth in a significant and permanent way.Your argument on the second psalm you quote uses a modern understanding of 'geological event' that seems quite anachronistic. God creating stuff is not a 'geological event'.
keithb wrote:
Actually, yes, good for you. Science should be arrogant. It has an amazing track record of getting things right and improving the lives of people.
Also, I don't really agree with the whole Jesus idea that humility is necessarily a good thing. Many of the people who have advanced the world have been pretty damn sure of themselves. From an atheist perspective, I don't see a good argument for humility, at least in all cases.
Keep teaching your 8 year old to be arrogant! :)