Enmos,
I think I must have misunderstood. Did you mean it like Saquist showed with the modern translations ?
I don't know. What is the post number?
I am refering to pro-creation
It isn't for me. Taking what they wrote literally doesn't make much sense to me.
Why not?
It's quite simple.
No.. he first 'made' the light just by saying, "Let there be light," only then he separated it from the darkness.
He said "Let there be light".
Darkness is only understood in the context of light, but he didn't say "Let there be darkness". So what made you think he made light?
"And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters."
This doesn't sit well with biology. Humans and animals are the same.
Only biologists really believe that. Most people can understand that there is a wealth of difference between the human and the other animals. Granted we may be made of the same stuff, but humans have a unique capability which makes them distinct.
Yes, God as spirit could be another metaphor, if God is really the forces of nature.
You're right, He could be, but any scripture wouldn't make any sense.
I don't have any examples handy, but isn't it the consensus that early man worshiped aspects of nature rather than Gods ?
Why limit it to early man?
Don't you mean "gods" as there can be only one God?
It is not too far-fetched to assume that these aspects of nature got anthropomorphized later on, as this lies within the nature of man.
You can assume anything, but what lies those assumptions.
I don't get your analogy.
The commander in chief give the nod, and war is inevitable.
In the same way, God gives the nod, and nature acts.
You agree that clay is made up of molecules different from those found in living things, right ?
At some point the 'clay-molecules' must have been converted to 'living-thing-molecules'. Agree ?
The only way to do that is by taking apart the 'clay-molecules' and reassemble them into the 'living-thing-molecules'. I think this should be evident.
We know that nature build bodies. Right?
Boy meets girl, boy and girl have sex, bring new life/body into the world.
The actual process is very simple. And at no time does the man have to assemble molecules, it all happens by nature. All that is needed is the process.
God has his process. With Adam he breathed air into his nostril, with the other animals and humans, he commanded nature to bring forth life, each after its own kind.
I dare say there is more detail to this, but it is not in the bible (at least the one we are privy to).
I don't know of what relevance this part is ?
By saying "thou shalt not worship any gods before me", we can assume that gods exist (from scriptoral perpective).
god
supernatural being: one of a group of supernatural male beings in some religions, each of which is worshiped as the personification or controller of some aspect of the universe
These gods must also be part and parcel of Gods creation, they are like Gods limbs so to speak. So if God wills something to be done, it gets done.
If breaking down molecules has to be done to create life, then it gets done by Gods will.
Bear in mind that I use the word nature is follows:
na⋅ture
–noun
6. the sum total of the forces at work throughout the universe.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/nature
If you strip God of any personality, this definition of nature is what remains.
If I percieve your father striped of his personality then to me, you and your mother is all that remains. But the truth is different.
It's not about what I prefer, it's about what seems the most sensible to me
And the difference is....
Hmm I don't know. Of course I am entertaining the possibility of Gods existence for the purpose of this thread.
And believe me, that is apreciated.
But there are plenty of religious people that accept evolution, and find a way to incorporate it into their beliefs.
Again, we are basically no different from other animals.
And evolution is fact.
To say we are no different from the other animals smack of burial of head in the sand. We are clearly different.
But you would agree that Jupiter is part of nature, right ? And all the galaxies in existence are part of nature in the same way.
Your definition commits to one special aspect of nature; life.
It is because you and I are alive that we can percieve these things,
But becoming old and to eventually die IS part of our nature. It's, however, also in peoples nature to try and survive no matter what, but we certainly do embrace growing old and dying as a reality, a fact of life.
To do anything else would just be fooling yourself.
Why is
survival in our nature? Especially if we have produced off-spring.
We should be glad to die naturally, and want to become part of the dirt, our natural progression.
Instead we do not embrace old age and death with any joy (generally).
Why is this?
jan.