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brooksieb wrote:About evolutionism and creationism they're just the same thing, 6 days of work in creationism, 6 billion years on evolution, god creating light, endless flows of lava and fire for evolutionism, then huge amounts of rain on both accounts, then came the simple animals (on both accounts), then came us last (again on both accounts), it's silly how someone can argue over almost the same thing on how the world was created.
Evolution is a harder issue but i may be wrong but i never call on a time where god created animals and that's it, there is a purpose for everything in both sides and whether or not they die out is up to god and the elements of nature.
Btw Dawkins is a idiot. Don't get me started on that one.














CrazyAnglican wrote:I like it though, God said let there be light (and then....there was a really big bang...).











got tonkaed wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:I like it though, God said let there be light (and then....there was a really big bang...).
i suppose i should clarify...it certainly is possible for people to try to argue toward more theistic driven views of an evolutionary history. People do it all the time i would assume. But to claim the theories and the story are more or less the same is a bit of a stretch.

brooksieb wrote:got tonkaed wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:I like it though, God said let there be light (and then....there was a really big bang...).
i suppose i should clarify...it certainly is possible for people to try to argue toward more theistic driven views of an evolutionary history. People do it all the time i would assume. But to claim the theories and the story are more or less the same is a bit of a stretch.
If god was not in it it would still be the same plot...












got tonkaed wrote:brooksieb wrote:got tonkaed wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:I like it though, God said let there be light (and then....there was a really big bang...).
i suppose i should clarify...it certainly is possible for people to try to argue toward more theistic driven views of an evolutionary history. People do it all the time i would assume. But to claim the theories and the story are more or less the same is a bit of a stretch.
If god was not in it it would still be the same plot...
its pretty hard to argue essentially that God created the earth in six days if there was no God to begin with.

brooksieb wrote:got tonkaed wrote:brooksieb wrote:got tonkaed wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:I like it though, God said let there be light (and then....there was a really big bang...).
i suppose i should clarify...it certainly is possible for people to try to argue toward more theistic driven views of an evolutionary history. People do it all the time i would assume. But to claim the theories and the story are more or less the same is a bit of a stretch.
If god was not in it it would still be the same plot...
its pretty hard to argue essentially that God created the earth in six days if there was no God to begin with.

black elk speaks wrote:i tend to agree with CA, i think. I do not believe in god as a Cristian entity that has a will and a plan, but a force that creates. he created live, and let it go, let it be free to change, adapt and evolve.



brooksieb wrote: ok, assuming it was both 6 billion years and there was no god in either, it would be roughly the same, perhaps to god 6 billion years is 6 days? maybe he uses a different calendar?



CrazyAnglican wrote:brooksieb wrote: ok, assuming it was both 6 billion years and there was no god in either, it would be roughly the same, perhaps to god 6 billion years is 6 days? maybe he uses a different calendar?
There is that, if you're talking about the creation of the Universe, the Terran 24 hour day is pretty meaningless. God being an infinite being may have a different time clock. Not to mention that he's explaining this to a bunch of Bronze Age nomads. It seems like the story has plenty of elements that are echoed by current scientific theories. Which should speak well for said Bronze Age nomads.

CrazyAnglican wrote: Most people I've spoken to are of the opinion "So what, at worst it's a process that God uses to move things along".



















jonesthecurl wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote: Most people I've spoken to are of the opinion "So what, at worst it's a process that God uses to move things along".
Then you should get out more

CrazyAnglican wrote:black elk speaks wrote:i tend to agree with CA, i think. I do not believe in god as a Cristian entity that has a will and a plan, but a force that creates. he created live, and let it go, let it be free to change, adapt and evolve.
To an extent I guess. I certainly believe in the Christian view of God as a father helping his kids to grow and learn. I can see your point as well though, I think. God creates and then gives room for evolution. Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?



















jonesthecurl wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:black elk speaks wrote:i tend to agree with CA, i think. I do not believe in god as a Cristian entity that has a will and a plan, but a force that creates. he created live, and let it go, let it be free to change, adapt and evolve.
To an extent I guess. I certainly believe in the Christian view of God as a father helping his kids to grow and learn. I can see your point as well though, I think. God creates and then gives room for evolution. Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?
Well, when you've not evolved thinking beings yet, there IS no "spiritual"...



jonesthecurl wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:black elk speaks wrote:i tend to agree with CA, i think. I do not believe in god as a Cristian entity that has a will and a plan, but a force that creates. he created live, and let it go, let it be free to change, adapt and evolve.
To an extent I guess. I certainly believe in the Christian view of God as a father helping his kids to grow and learn. I can see your point as well though, I think. God creates and then gives room for evolution. Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?
Well, when you've not evolved thinking beings yet, there IS no "spiritual"...

CrazyAnglican wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote:black elk speaks wrote:i tend to agree with CA, i think. I do not believe in god as a Cristian entity that has a will and a plan, but a force that creates. he created live, and let it go, let it be free to change, adapt and evolve.
To an extent I guess. I certainly believe in the Christian view of God as a father helping his kids to grow and learn. I can see your point as well though, I think. God creates and then gives room for evolution. Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?
Well, when you've not evolved thinking beings yet, there IS no "spiritual"...
Perhaps, if the existence of spiritual realms depends on sentience in the physical. But what you seem to be saying is about like arguing that there would be no light without the evolution of optical organs.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
































CrazyAnglican wrote:Nice verbal slip, but spirituality and the spirtual are not the same thing.
(and this is certainly way off the original topic that when taking the other creation myths into account the Christian story seems to have a lot in common with the current theories).
but to continue what I said stands. The spiritual (that is spiritual realms and beings) are no more dependent on human sentience for existence than an tiger or Ottawa. They either exist or they dont. Human sentience has no part in determining their actual existence.
Spirituality, on the other hand, is a function of thought and does rely on sentience. What you have said is true, but irrelevant, since we were speaking of spiritual beings and not spirituality.

jonesthecurl wrote:So the appearance of human beings, through evolution, is irrelevant to the spiritual realms?



CrazyAnglican wrote: Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?



















saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.










MeDeFe wrote:Well, actually Ottawa (and China, too) is dependent on humans in order to exist, the geography you find there might not be, but in order for the geography to be Ottawa you need humans (or at least some sentient beings) that define it as such, but that's just by the by.
MeDeFe wrote:I think you might be talking about different things. I think jones first meant spiritual as in describing a kind of processes of thought, while you, CA, are actually talking about a different plane of existence or something with ghosts and non-corporeal beings?
MeDeFe wrote:If that is truly the case I can only say: Well, show me one of those beings that do not consist of anything physical.
jonesthecurl wrote:CrazyAnglican wrote: Either way evolution is a physical process that has no real bearing on the spiritual?
Again:if evolution has no bearing on the spiritual, then the evolution of human beings is unimportant?



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