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Don't come crying to me if an old man shows up at your door toting a huge pushbroom.....



lb13
Bring it on, broom boy!Bored Sweeper wrote:Personally, I believe in anti-creationism. As in, I'm sweeping this huge mess you guys created into the cosmic dustbin!
And if I see another post in this thread, my broom will be glad to teach you about the Big Bang Theory...
Nothing like a dead horse to bring out the floggers.mrkelley23 wrote:Oh, we're GOING to get 100 posts in this thread.
I'm sure, in fact, we might be able to set a record for this Bored, if we only keep repeating the same cherished beliefs often enough.....
I will put him to work! And Erin loves him...littlebeast13 wrote:minimetoo26 wrote:![]()
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Don't come crying to me if an old man shows up at your door toting a huge pushbroom.....![]()
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lb13
"mythic tales"?earendel wrote:I also believe in a God who inspires writers to tell stories like those in Genesis not as scientific treatises but as mythic tales to point to the glory of the Creator.
Mythic doesn't equate with fable nor with fairy tale. A myth is a story designed to explain the origin of something. Often it may contain a kernal of truth amid the poetic language used to convey it. You should read Genesis 1 in Hebrew - it is marvelous poetry, and, as with every poem, its truth is enveloped by the language.BackInTex wrote:"mythic tales"?earendel wrote:I also believe in a God who inspires writers to tell stories like those in Genesis not as scientific treatises but as mythic tales to point to the glory of the Creator.
I completely stunned. So you don't hold any belief in the Bible? Other than perhaps the morals, similar to Aesops stories? I guess you and Travis are pretty close in your religious views.
I'm not meaning that as an insult, I just thought you more conventional.
I've been trying to stay mostly out of this thread, Bit, so as not to appear insulting, but I've been tempted past my limit.BackInTex wrote:"mythic tales"?
I completely stunned.
Exactly. The Father is no different that your father, my father, or our kids' fathers in that the most authoritative support for an issue is "Because I said so."MarleysGh0st wrote:
But this is the centerpoint of the argument here.
You and Cal are holding to a book that you say holds literal truth. Science builds up a careful case that contradicts that story, but you dismiss it, not by a scientific rebuttal, but simply by pointing to that book again.
Tribe had a problem with this, too. Let me re-analogize it. When you're at the Animal Kingdom at WDW it appears you are in Africa with some well worn looking buildings, old beat up trucks, etc. But Disney is not trying to decieve you. They know you understand that it is not as it seems. God does not want to decieve us so he gave us Genesis in the Bible, dictated to Moses. Earth wouldn't be a very nice place if it were all new. Small sapplings unable to bear fruit, bird eggs with no mothers to sit on them to keep them warm so they could hatch, rocks still too hot to touch, dry riverbeds and lakes because the the rains from the source have not had time to flow down the watersheds completely, not to mention the smell from the new carpet and paint. So he created it already aged. And so we would understand it is not really as old as it seems, he told us.MarleysGh0st wrote:
Cal raised the explanation of "appearances" to answer these arguments, and the rebuttal was that all these false and misleading appearances would be a terrible deception and why would a deity do that? Now you answer that it's not deception? Why? You're pointing to that book, again.
No, I have 66 Books, written/inspired by Someone all knowing who won't be superceded and corrected by 'new and improved' technological understandings.MarleysGh0st wrote: Way back in the beginning of this thread, you linked to an article about astrophysics. You have no scientific criticisms of the data or conclusions of any of the points in that article.
You just have a book.
It would certainly make sense for God to create the world "old" because of the things you describe. But that doesn't explain why scientific evidence abounds regarding an age of the earth that is much greater than that necessary to avoid "small sapplings [sic]...dry riverbeds" and so forth. Rather than focusing on the "how", the focus should be on the "who" and the "why". The Bible is not a scientific textbook. It was never intended to be. Its purpose is to point to the One greater than ourselves, show us the way to that One and how to live with one another.BackInTex wrote:Tribe had a problem with this, too. Let me re-analogize it. When you're at the Animal Kingdom at WDW it appears you are in Africa with some well worn looking buildings, old beat up trucks, etc. But Disney is not trying to decieve you. They know you understand that it is not as it seems. God does not want to decieve us so he gave us Genesis in the Bible, dictated to Moses. Earth wouldn't be a very nice place if it were all new. Small sapplings unable to bear fruit, bird eggs with no mothers to sit on them to keep them warm so they could hatch, rocks still too hot to touch, dry riverbeds and lakes because the the rains from the source have not had time to flow down the watersheds completely, not to mention the smell from the new carpet and paint. So he created it already aged. And so we would understand it is not really as old as it seems, he told us.
"Inspired", yes. "Written" - not so much. But that's a separate issue.BackInTex wrote:No, I have 66 Books, written/inspired by Someone all knowing who won't be superceded and corrected by 'new and improved' technological understandings.
There's a huge difference between "we don't really know" and "just as likely to be wrong as they are to be right".BackInTex wrote:But there should always be the caveat, clearly stated, that these are theories and are just as likely to be wrong as they are to be right because we really don't know.
I'm glad you put a smiley on that, because you know there comes a point in every child's maturity when that argument no longer works.BackInTex wrote: Exactly. The Father is no different that your father, my father, or our kids' fathers in that the most authoritative support for an issue is "Because I said so."![]()
The proof of which (and similar disproofs for all the other books by/for the thousands of different deities that you would dismiss as fictitious in an instant) would require another thread as long as this one.BackInTex wrote:Tribe had a problem with this, too. Let me re-analogize it. When you're at the Animal Kingdom at WDW it appears you are in Africa with some well worn looking buildings, old beat up trucks, etc. But Disney is not trying to decieve you.
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No, I have 66 Books, written/inspired by Someone all knowing who won't be superceded and corrected by 'new and improved' technological understandings.
Didn't that party finally end in the last book? --Bobmrkelley23 wrote:Yeah -- notice how the posting rate in this thread jumped significantly within the last 5 minutes?
I thinking we should make this thread like the Alabama Tiger's floating house party in the Travis McGee novels.
I hope this group is still in touch in 20 or 30 years, so you can come back and let us know how that's working out for you.Appa23 wrote:Thank you.silvercamaro wrote:HD deleted a post before I could quote it, but I wish him good luck in his delusions for the future.
Of course, one man's delusion is another man's reality.
Heck, the results will be back in 10 years or so.silvercamaro wrote:I hope this group is still in touch in 20 or 30 years, so you can come back and let us know how that's working out for you.Appa23 wrote:Thank you.silvercamaro wrote:HD deleted a post before I could quote it, but I wish him good luck in his delusions for the future.
Of course, one man's delusion is another man's reality.
Well, since ShinyCar and I have conversed on it, I imagine that it only would be polite to note what I said.MarleysGh0st wrote:Now I'm wishing I saw what Appa deleted.silvercamaro wrote:HD deleted a post before I could quote it, but I wish him good luck in his delusions for the future.