I'm going to do my best not to generalize.Why is it that so many people feel that the two can't mix?
6/28/2007 12:27:58 AM
6/28/2007 12:30:48 AM
IBTL
6/28/2007 12:31:12 AM
What I'm saying is that I'm really tired of people thinking that just because you are a Christian that you can't accept modern science. I mean, not even Christians will make you feel bad because of this, many non christians who feel that they are "enlightened" feel that Christians are too ignorant to accept science.
6/28/2007 12:33:46 AM
6/28/2007 12:34:21 AM
whats wrong with islam yo
6/28/2007 12:34:35 AM
What I'm saying is that I'm really tired of people thinking that just because you are aren't a Christian that you can't accept the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I mean, not even non-Christians will make you feel bad because of this, many Christians who feel that they are "saved" feel that non-Christians are too ignorant to accept the Word of God.
6/28/2007 12:45:14 AM
I'm not going to make anyone feel bad about being a Christian or not. I mean it's a choice you can make on your own. Yes many Christians are raised to look down on those who aren't Christians.But to me it almost feels like Religion and Science are turning into the same thing that political parties are turning into.Each side picks a platform on what they are "supposed" to follow but neither side really takes a step back to maybe realize that there is a lot more in common than what was originally thought.
6/28/2007 1:00:42 AM
well if you interpret both the bible and science books literally, there are certainly plenty of inconsistencies]
6/28/2007 1:04:53 AM
^^ A question for you.Do you believe that God created the Earth in 7 days, or do you believe that the big bang started the Universe?If you believe in the big bang theory, then do you think the Bible is lying? If so, does this mean that the entire Bible, what you base your "faith" around, is a lie?If you believe that God created the Earth in 7 days, then how can you believe in the foundations of modern science and evolutionary theory?[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 1:05 AM. Reason : ]
6/28/2007 1:05:48 AM
i don't get involved in SB threads too often anymore, but i'll just sayi was a physics/math major before i switched to csc and still consider myself a science nerdi also believe there's a God, i believe Jesus died for my sins and i believe the bible is the best source of wisdom availablethere's people who take from both, it's just the 2 extremes are the ones yelling all the time and are seen most
6/28/2007 1:08:35 AM
I think that every person who reads the bible should be able to be their own interpreter. I mean yes, getting advice from people who have studied the topics is a great idea, however believing something is true only because it's what your religion or denomination is supposed to believe is stupid.Just like people who vote for parties and not people.^^I feel that God is so great that he can do whatever he wants. If he wanted to start the universe with a big bang he would, and frankly I'm pretty sure God would.I think that reading the creation story in the bible literally isn't the smartest move, because you must also read more of just the first few chapters to get the whole story.I really enjoy biology and zoology, I also enjoy my faith. I also feel that there are no major contraditions between the bible and science.My faith tells me who, science tells me how.[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 1:13 AM. Reason : ]
6/28/2007 1:08:48 AM
The problem isn't so much Christianity it is the leadership who fear a loss of power. Fundamentalists want their audience to believe that the Earth was created in 6 earth days. Any detraction from that would mean that the bible isn't to be taken literally so what else might the sheep question? And that questioning would undermine the authority of the church. Now once they get over their own insecurities and find a way to appeal to both faith and reason their message will be more convincing to the general populous. The control also stems from a healthy dose of Puritanical fear from hellfire and damnation. My beef with the Christian followers around me was the general hypocrisy and disregard for the environment.
6/28/2007 1:30:02 AM
i grew up in the Southern Baptist religion. my mom was a sunday school teacher. i did church camps, vacation bible school, youth groups, church softball, etc, etc. i went to church three times a week, until i learned to hate it, and exercised enough force of will to quit going around 10th grade.but long before i learned to ridicule my religion, when i was a little kid and still believed in the basics (6 to 8 years old), i resolved this science-religion issue very easily:i figured at that time, in my little 7- or 8-year-old ways, that the Bible "must be" essentially true on the important things ... but was written by/for people 2000 years ago, so much of it metaphorical and framed in language/ideas so they could understand it at that time. Yes, the bible had errors but they were essentially minor, and not fundamental to the larger message about God and Jesus and the Holy Spook.I figured most reasonable adults understood this as well, and when i came into contact with the loony fundamentalists who made outrageous claims about science being flawed and the bible correct on some petty issue .... i knew there was something "wrong" with that person, and found it just best to avoid them.then once i got older, i found there are a lot more loony fundamentalists than i ever realized[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 1:41 AM. Reason : ]
6/28/2007 1:31:53 AM
6/28/2007 1:37:33 AM
^ don't you laugh, damn you. you'll go to hell if you think that's funny
6/28/2007 1:46:38 AM
Good thing I am not Christian anymore then, eh?
6/28/2007 1:57:27 AM
i'll see you in hell, my friend
6/28/2007 2:04:34 AM
6/28/2007 12:23:49 PM
6/28/2007 12:37:50 PM
when was the bible written?what do you think, was the average intellectual ability of people at that time?do you think a caveman could comprehend a cell phone or it's function?
6/28/2007 1:45:23 PM
^ I'm not sure what you're driving at, but I'm assuming that you're defending the Bible based on the fact that it still holds relevance despite its age. But I wasn't arguing that it was too old, I was arguing that it was inconsistent within itself and that religions based upon it being the unchangable Word of God will necessarialy come into conflict with a scientific method which questions constantly.The Bible wasn't "written" as one tract anyway, it was compiled about 400 AD at the Synod of Hippo.
6/28/2007 1:58:26 PM
Considering there are parts of the New Testament where Jesus tells the Apostles something, they say huh we don't understand, and then Jesus explains reiterates and explains it, and different denominations still argue about what it means, I'm not surprised that there are disagreements about how literally some things should be taken.
6/28/2007 2:14:27 PM
^^I agree with you on the lost in translation stuff. That is one of the big things that bug me about people who are obsessed with saying the KJV is the only Bible that is right. First off, it didn't have the dead sea scrolls which is the oldest known copy of the new testament. The KJV is a very beautiful and poetic version of the Bible, but it is no longer american english.However, although we are getting farther and farther away from the actual time in which both the testaments were written, we are getting more and more information to help translate. Anyway, as far as taking things in the Bible literally...Jesus taught in parables, he was very rarely ever just straight up with anyone. When God would talk to anyone, it would be hard for them to understand what was going on. God is too complex for us to understand, and we probably will never understand even if we do get to Heaven.
6/28/2007 2:22:55 PM
Here is a question for the intellectually honest, both believers and non-believers: If you knew nothing about Jesus, or God, if you hadn't spent every Sunday for the first 15 years of your life having it drummed into you, and the Bible came out today, would you believe it?I mean knowing what we now know, and given the inconsistencies, rather barbaric behavior in the OT, perceived schizophrenia of God, and questionable creation story, would you think, "Man this is really good, I should spend my life living this way" or would it be relegated to the discount table at Barnes & Noble?No reason for anyone to answer, just something to think about.
6/28/2007 2:25:28 PM
If the Bible was brand new there would be no way I would believe it.I believe these things because of faith, which has to grow and can't be just aquired in one day.
6/28/2007 2:48:19 PM
6/28/2007 2:52:12 PM
joe i think you're showing way too much knowledge about religion to be taken seriously by your atheist liberal friends
6/28/2007 2:53:50 PM
nah, i dont think when they where being written / created (oral tradition before that?) that they could comprend the idea of billions of years, stars, other planets, location of the earth, previous earth history, evolution, physics, biology, etc. thus we get 7 days... why, convenient way to chop up a year in to segments, (plus the number 7 has importance)
6/28/2007 2:55:19 PM
But if you believe on faith, couldn't God have revealed evolution and expected men to believe on "faith"? The Bible isn't based on evidence it's based on trusting that it is God's word. Besides, the world was hardly composed of "cavemen" by the time the Bible was compiled.
6/28/2007 2:59:58 PM
what is easier for someone in 400 BC to understand and resulting have faith in. the world was created in 6 days? (7th rest) or that a long complicated process known later to us as evolution involving the complex interactions of genes and environment to eventually result in the plethora of species we see to day, and this mechanism is also responsible for depositing many bones of long long long dead plants and animals under the earth, some of which also got "turned into" coal and oil?[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 3:06 PM. Reason : u]
6/28/2007 3:06:21 PM
I think jesus was a real person and i support the lifestyle that he tried to promote. I think the morals the bible instills on people is a positive on society. I do not think however that jesus was some deity. I also have a loathing for fundamentalist christians who try to preach hell and brimstone to people who do not follow same orthodox "christian" lifestyle. If you want to refrain from drinking, premarital sex, drugs, gambling, and other vices then by all means go ahead. Just do not tell me i am going to hell bc i want to partake in those activities. I also do not like how they blindly reject a lot of scientific research just b.c the bible does not explicitly state something. For example evolution, people take at face value information written in the book of genesis 2000 years ago instead of information that has been researched through modern scientific analysis. Using the same logic why do we do not use the same medical techniques that Jesus used 2000 years ago since he cured the blind and the disabled. Even a lot of the top clergy in the Catholic church acknowledge that a lot of material in the bible is metaphorical and not meant to be taken literally.
6/28/2007 3:13:07 PM
^^First off, 400 AD, not 400 BC if you're going by when the Bible was assembled. Either way, even around 400 BC, some of the great Greek philosophers had begun pondering the world in far greater depth than Genesis. But that’s irrelevant if you go by the genesis of Genesis which is generally accepted to be in the range of 1000 BC. (I'm not going for exact dates here). Either way, how is "God created everything out of nothing in 7 days" any more believable than a tale about how God created each animal from another animal? I mean if you can make the mental leap that involves God breathing into clay and creating life, why didn't he just start small and go bigger?^Few doubt the existence of Jesus, myself included, but it isn't that hard to imagine a cult of personality developing and growing around the man disproportionate to his actual deeds. It happened with Buddha, Confucius, and Mohammed.[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 3:23 PM. Reason : ..]
6/28/2007 3:20:27 PM
I have come to terms with the fact that I am going to hell by the standards of most religions. Nothing I can do about it. The end.
6/28/2007 3:25:54 PM
6/28/2007 3:26:29 PM
Hooray!I'd say the two can't mix for one easy reason: Christianity necessitates believing in things that negate scientific fact. - People don't die and resurrect.- People aren't born from virgins.- The earth wasn't created in 7 days.- There is no firmament over the earth.- There was never a global flood.- Man wasn't made from the soil.Need I continue?
6/28/2007 3:30:15 PM
6/28/2007 3:31:04 PM
6/28/2007 3:46:39 PM
[quote]I think jesus was a real person and i support the lifestyle that he tried to promote. I think the morals the bible instills on people is a positive on society. I do not think however that jesus was some deity.[quote]When comes down to Jesus, you can't say "he was a good guy, but not fully God/fully human." If he wasn't who he said he was/is, then Jesus is a hypocrite and a liar. You either believe or you don't. That is like saying I don't believe in gravity, but I respect the idea of gravity. The whole genesis debate, even within the Christian church there is debate about whether it is 7 earth days, a prophets view (aka God showed the author the story of creation one day at a time), or if 7 days means something different for God (aka this currently the 7th day). Genesis is a poetic account of creation. [Edited on June 28, 2007 at 3:55 PM. Reason : ..]
6/28/2007 3:48:30 PM
^^^ You are correct. I wasn't using them as examples of divinity, but of a cult developing around them. I don't mean cult in the perjorative way either, but thats the best word to describe their early following.^^ Thanks. This is all stuff whose larger concepts I recall, but time has fogged the details. Either way, these weren't completely primative societies.[Edited on June 28, 2007 at 3:54 PM. Reason : .]
6/28/2007 3:52:17 PM
i'm atheist and i don't believe any religion can mix with sciencehowever, that doesn't mean i think science rules out the existence of a godin fact if there is a god, as has been said many times before i'm sure on here, he very well could have created the rules of existence we call science
6/28/2007 4:48:57 PM
Something I've come to accept with Christians. The ones that will call you out the fastest on your sins and tell you you're going to hell are the ones that will commit the sins the fastest.I really feel awful for people who have been scared away from Christianity because the people they met that were so called Christians, were not. The easiest thing in the world is to become a Christian, the hardest thing in the world is to live like one.
6/28/2007 5:00:34 PM
Something I've come to accept with Christian girls. The ones that talk about their faith the most turn out to be the biggest sluts.
6/28/2007 5:10:22 PM
6/28/2007 5:11:59 PM
localized flooding yeah, not global. certainly not at any time in human existance.every culture has a flood narrative.
6/28/2007 5:14:16 PM
well i dont mean kevin costner waterworld flooding, but every time the earth has come out of an ice age theres been sea level rises which are essentially global floodingwe might think of "global flooding" as all land being covered...but when sea levels were a lot lower, people still lived near the ocean...it just mightve been a couple hundred feet lower elevation-wise than the current coastlines...same concept though]
6/28/2007 5:22:04 PM
seriously bitchI want my rib back
6/28/2007 6:16:32 PM
^^ no, it's not the "same concept"the concept in Genesis is that a large enough flood came upon the earth (in only 40 days, no less) that all land animals has to be paired and put on a fucking boat to survive, the implication being that all earth was covered in water, hence a "global flood", which would require at least 30,000ft of water (of which the volume required would grow exponentially as the waters rose). Furthermore, the notion that all this water originated in a crystal layer in the atmosphere or came from underground or whatever is equally ridiculous. that's not even in the same ballpark as an ice-age flood of a few hundred feet.
6/28/2007 6:30:11 PM
I will say this, people are fooling themselves if they think a world without religion would be any better than a world with. Religion became a tool of human nature just as science is. Religion gave us the inquisition, science gave us the atomic bomb. In the end, really, we're all guilty of the original sin of being born human, be that a religious or a natural sin.
6/28/2007 6:44:24 PM
6/28/2007 6:53:04 PM