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Creationism + speed of light

LordsLily

Member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
5
Hi,
I have a question that has been asked of me that I do not know how to answer! I am still learning a lot about the Bible, being brought up in a Catholic school I was still taught about evolution and that the world is millions of years old. However, I am questioning Catholicism and you guys all seem to really know what you are talking about! The newer churches appeal much more, such as Lutheran, Presbyterian.
I have been challenged by someone, if creationism is real and the world and universe is only 6000 years old, then how come the light we are seeing from distant stars is many many years older (well, that is what they claim). Have people been challenged by this before? What have you answered? I know not all Christians believe this as well. Excuse my ignorance, I am hoping to learn much from your extensive knowledge!
 
Wow. Two opposite claims both with no reasoning or support.

LordsLily perhaps you could clarify your question?
 
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Oh Sorry, ok, so some Christian denominations claim that the world and universe is approximately 6000 years old. However, the light we see from stars is millions of years old, because it has taken millions of years to reach us. Which means that the universe cannot be 6000 years old, or so is the evolutionary argument. What is the creationist answer to this?
 
Well Im not a creationist however one response you may like is that the bible says God created the heavens(the universe) first(don't ask me for exact quotes) and then waited before making the earth. Thereby giving the light the time to reach here. However you will get other creationists arguing that the days were 24 hours. Yep that's my 20cents.
 
Hi Lordslily,

There are several things that need to be dug out. The age of the universe is a seperate issue to evolution. It is entirely possible to believe the earth is older than 6000 years old, and not in evolution.

Secondly is that this isn't a specifically Catholic perspective. I am not a Catholic, and I do not hold to Ussher's dating of the universe.

The question of physics is an important one. Because either God created the universe or he didn't. If he did, then he created the physical laws that it obeys.

In this kind of question, light is the key to exploring the issue. Human beings are blessed with the amazing ability to see, and this involves seeing light bouncing off of objects. If light does not shine on something, we cannot see it. It is that simple. Now, light travels in a vacuum at a speed of 300 000 km s-1. This is the figure used to calculate Light Years. A Light Year is not a measurement of time. It is a measurement of distance. Specifically, the distance light travels in one year. Given the speed of light, a light year is 9.46 x 1012 km. That is 9.46 million million km.

So when I say that Andromeda (the closest spiral galaxy to our own) is 2.4million light years away, it means the light has been traveling from Andromeda for at least 2.4million years. If it hadn't been, we would not be able to see it. And that is one of our closest neighbours!

What issue this raises is simply this. Either
1. God created a universe that looks older than it is
or
2. Ussher's dating of the universe is wrong.

For me, I cannot reconcile the idea of a God of Truth, blatantly making a universe that is unimaginably younger than it appears to be.

I have never heard a creationist response that actually addresses that issue, and I'm not sure there even is actually one.
 
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More information.

" In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
The earth was a formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters.
Then God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light.
God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness.
God called the light day, and the darkness He called night And there was evening and there was morning, one day." Genesis 1:1-5, (NASB)

Mr Iceman, I read your reply but I have to disagree with your conclusion.

Creation Science is a vast school of thought in its own right.
It provides answers or should I say alternative answers from the creation viewpoint.
I will not defend Creation Science, as I am not a Creation scientist.
I will attempt to provide some additional material on which you may wish to contemplate.

When God said "Let there be light" does that imply that God fired up the fusion reactors (stars) and then light travels the vast distances to earth.
Or does "Let there be light" mean light itself is created both at the star and arriving on Earth. A point to consider.

The second version ensures Adam is not looking up at a blackened night sky, of course.

The speed of light is assumed to be a constant in physics.
This once again may or not be true. There may be reasons to believe that light may not travel at a constant speed at all times in an expanding Universe.
This is an assumption until all data is available.

Creationists assume that before light was created the Heavens and Earth were created instantly. Hence the seven days of creation.
I have difficulty with the preceeding two lines. How long was the Earth formless and void, before the creation of light? I do not know.

You said creation was perfect. God said "it was good". God can create perfect, but did He create perfect?

Was the Earth created "new" or was the Earth created "older", in the way we view things.

Bishop Ussher's dating was purely on the generations listed in the Bible.
Do we have the entire genealogical record in the Bible? Let's hope there is nothing missing. Do we have the complete original manuscripts?

Were Adam and Eve created perfect? The Bible does not say. God only said it was "good".

For me, God is beyond the natural, supernatural, all things are possible with Jesus.
We as members of a fractured human race, groping in areas we don't really comprehend. Nor do we understand the supernatural God, all we have is a useless defintion of God.

I suppose that's where faith arrives, both for scientists and Christians.
One relies on the rational mind (?), the other on revelation (!).

Hope this is of some use, there is much, much more than these points I supplied.
 
Mr Iceman, I read your reply but I have to disagree with your conclusion.
Ok.

When God said "Let there be light" does that imply that God fired up the fusion reactors (stars) and then light travels the vast distances to earth.
Or does "Let there be light" mean light itself is created both at the star and arriving on Earth. A point to consider.
When taking it from a physics point of view, yes it definately does imply the former. All though more appropriately it probably implies Monsignor Georges Lemaitre's Hypothesis of the Primeval Atom.

The second version ensures Adam is not looking up at a blackened night sky, of course
Not sure where you're going with this. Sorry.

The speed of light is assumed to be a constant in physics.
This once again may or not be true. There may be reasons to believe that light may not travel at a constant speed at all times in an expanding Universe.
This is an assumption until all data is available.
Well I can honestly say I've never heard anyone actually debate that we assume the speed of light.

But we know the speed of light in vacuum. We know light behaves as both a partical and a wave. And we know that for something to be actually strong enough to influence light enough to actually bend it, such as a black hole, then we can't see what it is that is bending light, other then by say seeing an absence instead of where we know something should be. Nor can we see the bent light anymore. In terms of seeing a star, we have a direct line of sight. There is nothing significant enough between us an it in order to obscure that light, and it is travelling at the speed of light.


Creationists assume that before light was created the Heavens and Earth were created instantly. Hence the seven days of creation.
I have difficulty with the preceeding two lines. How long was the Earth formless and void, before the creation of light? I do not know.
That's not relevant when dating from light. So I'm afraid I'm not sure what your point is.

You said creation was perfect. God said "it was good". God can create perfect, but did He create perfect?
Well I don't see where I've said it is perfect. Unless you're talking about another thread, and then I was probably talking eschatologically. I fail to see how creation in it's current state can be perfect. But God created this reality as an extension of his own. It has never been part of the faith that this reality is seperate from God. I'm not getting into pantheism with that, but God acts in and relates to this universe. Which is a key point in asking, Why does the universe look older than it is? (if you presume creationism.) I'll come back to this.

Was the Earth created "new" or was the Earth created "older", in the way we view things.
Bishop Ussher's dating was purely on the generations listed in the Bible
Do we have the entire genealogical record in the Bible? Let's hope there is nothing missing. Do we have the complete original manuscripts?
Certainly there are generations missing from Genesis. What makes you think there aren't when people suddenly appear in the text with no lineage provided?

If you going to go down that road (and I didn't because the thread was on light) then you need to start asking anthropological questions. What about mesopotamia? What about the time required for technological advancement? What about time required for familial groups to breed enough to turn into villages, and then town, and then cities? That's an entirely different list of arguments and problems associated with specifically Ussher's dating. Of course today there are young earth creationists that don't hold to Ussher. I'm not sure how they come to their conclusion, but a question of physics stumps them just as much as Ussher.

Were Adam and Eve created perfect? The Bible does not say. God only said it was "good".
Does that even matter? We're talking about creation. The universe and reality as a whole. Not when humanity arrived on the scene or even how humanity arrived on the scene.
For me, God is beyond the natural, supernatural, all things are possible with Jesus.
and Amen to that.
We as members of a fractured human race, groping in areas we don't really comprehend. Nor do we understand the supernatural God, all we have is a useless defintion of God.

But this doesn't address the main crux of what my post was.
Iceman said:
For me, I cannot reconcile the idea of a God of Truth, blatantly making a universe that is unimaginably younger than it appears to be.

Here's the theological issue. Even if you are working from the axiom that the speed of light is not constant it still cannot be too great a variance. The reason for that is that if it was, the nature of light would be drastically different from what it is. So much so, that we may not even be able to use it to see. The same as the speed of sound. If that varied to extremes, sound would dramatically change in nature. A quick turn of the head could break the sound barrier and that would be unpleasent for everyone.

So even if you presume a reasonable minimum speed of light, you've still got visible celestial bodies vast distances away. Creation tells us that it is over 6000 years old. This reality is God's good creation. It is a place where God dwells, acts, and functions. Without God, from a Christian perspective, this reality would fall apart. Be unable to exist. If God is good, and if God is the staple of reality, why would what we observe about the universe be false?

A God of Truth, creating a reality of Lies is basically the foundation of Young Earth Creationism.

If you have more points relevant to that statement I'd be interested in hearing them. However I don't think anything you've posted thus far actually addresses this primary point.

I suppose that's where faith arrives, both for scientists and Christians. One relies on the rational mind (?), the other on revelation (!).
Hope this is of some use, there is much, much more than these points I supplied.

No I disagree here as well (aren't I difficult?)
By Rational I think you're presuming along the lines of the intellectual traditions of Voltaire, who, influenced by empiricists, rages against any kind of mystery. Everything must be empirical data.

Of course that is not the only philosophy of rational thought. Otherwise faith would be irrational. It would never make sense. But Christianity does make sense. Not only that, it has a long tradition of appealing to creation in which to ground it's theological truths with observable ones. It is true that noone can achieve faith for themselves, but doesn't Paul say that should someone look into creation, they will see God?

If you seperate rational thought from revelation what do you get? Extremism. Breaks with orthodox theological thought in favour of heresy.
 
Food for thought:
The sun, moon, stars, etc., were not created till Day #4. The 'Light' in Day #1, #2, and #3 was not the sun, as it wasn't even created yet. No one knows what 'the Light' was. I've heard some suggest that it was the Shekinah glory of our God. Another stated it might be electro magnetic waves. We can only guess out of our imagination what the source of the 'light' was during the first 3 days. Also, the first 3 days was devoid of any notion of 'TIME'. The measurement of 'Time' was created and set in motion by God on Day 4 when the earth made its first revolution in relationship to the sun:
1 revolution of the earth in the light of the sun= 24 hrs
1 orbit of the earth around the sun = 1 year
The tilt of the earth while orbiting the sun = seasons

As far as 'lightyear' goes, well, I rely totally on God's word as the foundation of truth and fact first, and then consider Man's interpretation of the elements of science & Laws of Physics of what God created, established, and set in motion. (I can't put too much faith in Man's interpretation when he can't even get tomorrows weather forcast right; let alone figuring out the origins of life & matter).

The wisdom of Man is but foolishness to God.
Job 38 & 39
Then the Lord said "Who is this that darkens my counsel with words without knowledge? Brace yourself like a man; I will question you, and you will answer me!
Where were you when I laid the earth's foundation? Tell me if you understand! Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who stretched out a measuring line across it? On what were its footings set, or who laid its cornerstone..."
 
lets start again

This is what you originally said Mr Iceman,

"The question of physics is an important one. Because either God created the universe or he didn't. If he did, then he created the physical laws that it obeys.

In this kind of question, light is the key to exploring the issue. Human beings are blessed with the amazing ability to see, and this involves seeing light bouncing off of objects. If light does not shine on something, we cannot see it. It is that simple. Now, light travels in a vacuum at a speed of 300 000 km s-1. This is the figure used to calculate Light Years. A Light Year is not a measurement of time. It is a measurement of distance. Specifically, the distance light travels in one year. Given the speed of light, a light year is 9.46 x 1012 km. That is 9.46 million million km.

So when I say that Andromeda (the closest spiral galaxy to our own) is 2.4million light years away, it means the light has been traveling from Andromeda for at least 2.4million years. If it hadn't been, we would not be able to see it. And that is one of our closest neighbours!"



Firstly, "the physical laws" from your quote, are the invention of man's mind. The laws of motion attributable to Newton are Newtons rational, empirical, systematic approach to understanding motion. They were not God's laws that God gave to Newton. We see an order in life and the universe if we are trained or conditioned to see this order. But, can it be understood from a systematic, empirical thought process.

To date, no it has not been understood. Otherwise, we would have not generated so many deeper questions. Does the universe obey your so called physical laws, or are your laws only relevant to what you can observe. They are certainly not applicable in the realm of sub-atomic physics.

I know that astrophysics now believes only about 7% of the universe is visible. Dark matter and dark energy account for the rest. Since we cannot detect or measure this dark matter, does it obey the puny physical laws of motion. Do black holes, where LIGHT DOES NOT ESCAPE, obey the laws of Newtonian physics? What laws? I think it may be a greater mystery than it was in Newton's day. You must agree.

In the second part of your statement, you said "light is the key to exploring the issue". How do you know that light is the key? Where did you get this notion from? I am lost at this point of the statement. Light is electromagnetic radiation, visible light an incredibly small part of this massive spectrum. An almost neglible part. We understand light as a flow of photons. What exactly is a photon, a wave-particle duality. Science experiences difficulty in understanding this of course. It has two behaviours at once.

Or how a photon behaves in the proximity of dark matter, say. Does light enable man to understand the universe? Billions of galaxies, each galaxy contains a billion stars and an unknown number of other celestial bodies (comets, meteorites, etc). Newton would have been deeply stunned at these statistics. In fact, the better the telescope the more we find. Do you think this will at some point stop. We have been discovering galaxies non-stop for decades. How I ask does light figure as a key to this.

Thirdly, you say that the light from the Andromeda Galaxy takes X amount of time to arrive here. How do we know this? I thought that this was an assumption. I am not aware that science has been able to prove this. What lies between us and the Andromeda Galaxy, remember light is electromagnetic radiation, we cannot see what may lie between us and the Andromeda Galaxy. Be careful the textbook you read this from may end up where every other textbook ends up in time, in the rubbish bin.

You may well be aware that physics also hypothesises that we may live in but one dimension of multi-dimensional universes. If this is true, how does this affect Quantum Mechanics. How does it affect the so called constant of light.?

There is currently an experiment in your country where a particle collider is being used in an attempt to discover the magical "gravitron". One of the holy grails of science. The hyporthetical gravitron will give man the reason for gravity.

The only problem is, the leading scientist theorises is that the gravitron, the moment it is created, slips into another dimension. Please explain how light is the key? I truly don't understand what you mean by that.
How's that so far? I think we both misunderstand each others arguments!
 
Fideism, trust or do not trust? Gods word says 6123 approx.(do the math, if you have lots of time) Science that refutes Gods explicit statements is a lie right from Satan himself. And if all they have to do is make you question Gods word then Satan has suceeded.<TABLE id=table_bible cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR id=Gen_3_1_3001><TD class=vRefa></TD><TD class=vDispa>Gen 3:1Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE id=table_bible cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR id=Mat_4_4_933004><TD class=vRefa></TD><TD class=vDispa>Mat 4:4But he answered and said, It is written, Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Take it or leave it
 
Firstly, "the physical laws" from your quote, are the invention of man's mind. The laws of motion attributable to Newton are Newtons rational, empirical, systematic approach to understanding motion. They were not God's laws that God gave to Newton. We see an order in life and the universe if we are trained or conditioned to see this order. But, can it be understood from a systematic, empirical thought process.
Now see. I really hate that argument. Because it's not true, is it? Humanity hasn't created the laws of physics. We've observed them. Science didn't get together one day and say "You know what would be fantastic...Gravity!!!" No, it is a natural force that we have named Gravity. And if it is a natural force, and God created nature, then indeed Gravity is all thanks to God. Not humanity. Physical Laws are not part of our imagination. They are observed facts.
To date, no it has not been understood. Otherwise, we would have not generated so many deeper questions. Does the universe obey your so called physical laws, or are your laws only relevant to what you can observe. They are certainly not applicable in the realm of sub-atomic physics.
We're not talking about the behaviour of particles. We're talking about light. But yes, what we can observe about the universe can be understood by a logical mind. More than that, Christian tradition and even the Bible says so. It is indeed this Christian understanding of an understandable and ordered universe that gave birth to modern science. Let's keep that in mind. Christianity isn't turning to science to explain deeper meanings, on the contrary. Many Christians are turning away from science so as to not have to struggle with it's implications.

I know that astrophysics now believes only about 7% of the universe is visible. Dark matter and dark energy account for the rest. Since we cannot detect or measure this dark matter, does it obey the puny physical laws of motion. Do black holes, where LIGHT DOES NOT ESCAPE, obey the laws of Newtonian physics? What laws? I think it may be a greater mystery than it was in Newton's day. You must agree.
Of course I don't agree. It's a fallicious argument. "Because Dark Matter at the moment is inexplicable, all other physics is inexplicable." That's just silly.

Additionally, Black Holes are a favourite of mine. I've been studying them for a while. You're saying that because they don't obey Newtons laws, that this proves you right. But again you've used an incredibly fallicious line of reasoning. Physics is observable facts about the universe. Obviously as our ability to observe the universe improves, so does our understanding of physics. This does NOT mean that physics then is rubbish. It does not mean that because something believed in the past needs to be amended, that it no longer matters. The new understanding does not throw out or do away with the old one. It builds on it.

That's where so many people who do not understand science or scientific process fall down. They argue that because something new arises, nothing can be true, much as you have just done.

But our ability to understand is increasing. Black holes are the perfect example. Science predicted them. We took our understanding of the Laws of Physics, applied them to a model of reality, loe and behold..this strange phenomenon occured. We got black holes. It took years to then actually see one. Does this mean science is baloney, and simply creates its own reality around itself as you are implying? No it's the opposite isn't it? Science seeks to understand the universe, and is doing quite a good job at it.

In the second part of your statement, you said "light is the key to exploring the issue". How do you know that light is the key? Where did you get this notion from? I am lost at this point of the statement. Light is electromagnetic radiation, visible light an incredibly small part of this massive spectrum. An almost neglible part. We understand light as a flow of photons. What exactly is a photon, a wave-particle duality. Science experiences difficulty in understanding this of course. It has two behaviours at once.

Let's not resort to sophistry. Remember the origional post.
LordsLily said:
have been challenged by someone, if creationism is real and the world and universe is only 6000 years old, then how come the light we are seeing from distant stars is many many years older.

In the debate of young earth creationism. Light is most certainly the key. It brings me back to the crux of my position which again, you have left unchallenged.

Or how a photon behaves in the proximity of dark matter, say. Does light enable man to understand the universe? Billions of galaxies, each galaxy contains a billion stars and an unknown number of other celestial bodies (comets, meteorites, etc). Newton would have been deeply stunned at these statistics. In fact, the better the telescope the more we find. Do you think this will at some point stop. We have been discovering galaxies non-stop for decades. How I ask does light figure as a key to this.
You seem to really like Newton. Maybe you would be interested in studying a more modern, and certainly more relevant physicist? you know, bring your argument up to date?

I fail to see your point though. Indeed I feel the more galaxies we discover, the stronger my position becomes. As we see items further and further away, the longer they must have existed.

Thirdly, you say that the light from the Andromeda Galaxy takes X amount of time to arrive here. How do we know this? I thought that this was an assumption. I am not aware that science has been able to prove this. What lies between us and the Andromeda Galaxy, remember light is electromagnetic radiation, we cannot see what may lie between us and the Andromeda Galaxy. Be careful the textbook you read this from may end up where every other textbook ends up in time, in the rubbish bin.
Just because you don't know that science has big machines that can measure light and lasers ect ect doesn't mean we don't have them. Did you also know we've been able to teleport particles? Of course Newton would have said impossible, but that doesn't mean it hasn't been accomplished. And again, appealing to the fact that science gets better at understanding physics, is no argument for abandoning physics all together.

You may well be aware that physics also hypothesises that we may live in but one dimension of multi-dimensional universes. If this is true, how does this affect Quantum Mechanics. How does it affect the so called constant of light.?
Well I would say the first mistake here is that you've taken hypothetical physics and put it in the same basket as proven physics. Who knows what effect string theory, or quantum loop theory, or ribbon theory may all do to dimensional understanding. Of course you may as well ask what effect time travel has on light.

There is currently an experiment in your country where a particle collider is being used in an attempt to discover the magical "gravitron". One of the holy grails of science. The hyporthetical gravitron will give man the reason for gravity.
We're from the same country.

The only problem is, the leading scientist theorises is that the gravitron, the moment it is created, slips into another dimension. Please explain how light is the key? I truly don't understand what you mean by that
Simple...I'm not talking about, nor ever have been talking about how the universe functions. I've been talking about time. Specifically, how much time has past since God created everything. Now I appreciate you've gotten emotional over this, but let's not drudge up nonsense to avoid the issue raised. Put away all the terminology that you've thrown about. All you've done is convolute your position beneath a shallow pool a words.

The issue we're discussing is Young Earth Creationism. Your primary defence of it so far has been, we can't possibly know the speed of light, therefore everything in creation is perfectly capable of having existed for 6000 years.

Well I'm afraid not, sorry. We have the speed of light, and I even allowed for your need for it not to be concrete. I have said that even presuming reasonable variances you're still going to be over the 6000 year mark. You're saying that numbers in the billions need to be reduced to 6000. There's simply no reason for that. Your dislike of science doesn't reduce it to an inept level where it has nothing of value to say.
 
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Dear Zendra

"The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters.

Then God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light.
God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness. God called the light day, and the darkness He called night And there was evening and there was morning, one day. " Genesis 1:2-5

The earth according to Genesis 1 was in fact created before light.
If the chronology of Genesis 1 is correct. Notice God refers to the "one day" this is where the creationists derive the days in creationism. They place emphasis on the use of day br God.

Also, the earth was created before the sun and moon. They were created in verse 14. Once again, there is a specific use of the term "day".

I actually believe God created the heavens and the earth. Probably in the number of days specified. The only problem I have is with the chronology of creation. A small point.

Does science conflict with creationism. No I do not believe that.
In fact, I am not aware of any conflict.

Science has to make assumptions in order to theorise.
Let's say light from a given galaxy takes 5 million light years to reach earth. When God created the earth what happens if the light is created from that galaxy already visible from earth. It would then not take 5 million years to arrive. See the point. What would be the point of creating a galaxy no human could ever see.

Let's look at dating methods to date the earth using whatever method you like. Science will immediately assume that the isotope your measuring has a given distribution back in time. They measure and gain a result based on the inital assumption.

They do not know the initial combination, they are forced to make an assumption. This is the important point. Initial estimates are necessary in order to measure the depletion of a given isotope over time.

Are they reliable? Only as reliable as there initial estimates are.

As far as I am concerned, strontium dating is not a reliable way of dating the origin of the earth. Nor is any other method.

Science as far as I know has nothing to do with creationism. They are and never can be in conflict.
 
The earth according to Genesis 1 was in fact created before light.
If the chronology of Genesis 1 is correct. Notice God refers to the "one day" this is where the creationists derive the days in creationism. They place emphasis on the use of day br God.

Also, the earth was created before the sun and moon. They were created in verse 14. Once again, there is a specific use of the term "day".

Of course that's only appealing to the first creation of account in Genesis.

Does science conflict with creationism. No I do not believe that.
In fact, I am not aware of any conflict.
If you're not a young earth creationist anyway.

Science has to make assumptions in order to theorise.
Let's say light from a given galaxy takes 5 million light years to reach earth. When God created the earth what happens if the light is created from that galaxy already visible from earth. It would then not take 5 million years to arrive. See the point. What would be the point of creating a galaxy no human could ever see.
At last you've come to the crux of my point. You, if you are a young earth creationist, must rationalise a Good God, that creates a universe of lies. That is, God intentionally created the universe to look older than it is. I find that completely absurd myself.

It's theologically abberant from the theology of the greater Bible. Not only that, it is also an insignificant argument Gospel-centrically.

It creates an imagio dei that not only differs from the one of Christ, but also differs from what Christianity holds God to be. Instead it creates a deist and manipulative God. Not one of love. Of course the greater effect of the salvific nature of the Gospel regards the timeframe of creation as inconsequential. So that when people begin to hold up belief in young earth creationism as a sign of being one of the faithful, immediately the true nature of what it means to be under Christ is lost. Which in my mind, is the true problem with young earth creationism.
 
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In reply Icy

"Now see. I really hate that argument. Because it's not true, is it? Humanity hasn't created the laws of physics. We've observed them. Science didn't get together one day and say "You know what would be fantastic...Gravity!!!" No, it is a natural force that we have named Gravity. And if it is a natural force, and God created nature, then indeed Gravity is all thanks to God. Not humanity. Physical Laws are not part of our imagination. They are observed facts."

I think there exists a problem here with what I wrote and what you think I wrote!

The term "gravity" is the term man thought of to explain the physical attraction between two bodies. The term "gravity" does not explain why this force of attraction is. Only to describe the observable fact of attraction. Just what gravity is God knows, science does not.

Science can measure it's effect, with imperical observation. Predict orbits, etc. But, does science know what gravity really is? Yes, it is a force God created, but we don't understand it. Where does it originate in matter itself. It cannot be seen, only its effect can be observed.

You hate the "physical laws are the invention of man's mind." But they are exactly that. Man's attempts to explain what he observes. I never said that the forces of nature don't exist. Only that we do not understand them. Name them, measure them, predict them, yes.

Understanding the why they exist is another area altogether. I believe God created them, but science does not understand how they exist. That's why he studies them. I think it is interesting that many scientists are athiests.

Where exactly if you don't mind does it say "can be understood by a logical mind. More than that, Christian tradition and even the Bible says so." I do not remember reading that.


You said I used "fallicious argument : incorrect reasoning in argumentation resulting in a misconception." I said, does the universe dance to the physical laws, or only the visble universe. You balked at that point. Why? Because you and I know that the universe means everthing, seen and unseen. Macro and micro. If your physical laws do not apply in sub-atomic physics. If your physical laws do not apply to an even more complex universe of dark matter and energy. If they are only attributal to observable phenomen are they still valid laws?

If God meant us to "understand" what we observe he sure has set an almost impossible task for science to understand it. I have even read that we may need a new language and mathematical system for science to progress.

You said "It is indeed this Christian understanding of an understandable and ordered universe that gave birth to modern science. Let's keep that in mind" For this I need the relevant biblical passages.

I do not understand how you pulled this rabbit out of the hat. You see an ordered universe, I see a universe of immense scale, almost limitless. A staggering, complex continuous array of God's hand at work.

An ordered universe I do not see, every blade of grass is different, no two snow flakes are the same. A universe of immense variety and diversity. A work of a truly awesome God.
Christianity never gave birth to science. Where did you get that one from.

What exactly are the implications of science that many Christians are turning away from?
To me science will always be the one I blame for putting nuclear missiles into the hands of Darwinian monkeys. No wonder Einstein spent the next thirty years advocating peace. He knew the mistake he made.

Now there is an interesting theory, evilution (what I misspelt that again). I hope they have not made a monkey out of you.

You said "Dark matter is inexplicable at the moment" At the "moment"
You said "it was silly" that because dark matter is "inexplicable" that the observable universe is less that 10% of the actual universe.
This may be theoretical physics at the moment, but you and I know that at some point it will be appearing in textbooks.

Your scientific laws I hope will remain laws.
Why did I chose Newton, because his laws were a monumental step for science. Einstein said he stood on the shouders of scientific giants. Who was he referring to? You guessed it, Newton.
They are simple laws, easy to manage.
 
Dear Iceman

Please relax, this is only a conversation, no need to get upset.

If God decides to light the night sky with stars, then he does that. It is not a lie by God to do this. This is simply the account in Genesis. How he chooses to do this is His concern not mine or yours.

Theology: The study of the nature of God, and rational inquiry into religous questions.

What is the theology of the Bible. As far as God is concerned, or should I say Jesus Christ. The study of the nature of Jesus results in an understanding of just how loving and caring He is. He died to give us life. He gave His life to free us from bondage to sin.

As for religous questions, perhaps questions of law and grace. Eschatology, "when are you coming back, Jesus".

Therefore the theology of the bible will be the study of Jesus Christ.

Believing in a young earth, and believing in creation are not necessarily linked of course. I believe in creation absolutely, but I am unsure just how old the earth is. I definitely do not rely on science for an age of the earth. But that is my personal opinion.

I still do not understand why anyone would trade Jesus for the implications of science. What implications, they are essentially theories, supported by assumptions.

Thankyou for the conversation Mr Iceman, have a great day/night.
Do not take it personaly. That was not my intention!
 
Hi David,

I wasn't upset...I simply was doing something else. Believe it or not I don't live and breath on the internet. And I assure you I haven't lost any sleep over it.

However it is curious that you're demanding evidence from me, when you have been trying to sway me! It's not a very convincing argument. If you didn't like my origional post, and you didn't as you decided to add some "food for thought" then the onus is on you to actually provide a reasonable argument. I simply don't think you've done that.

You've very slackly used a range of high-end physics theories in very menial ways as if that was some kind of proof. I feel though that doing so is more a method of trying to establish yourself as someone who knows more than they do. Much as your out-dated view of gravity demonstrates.

You've done the same with theological terms. For example the return of Jesus is Parousia...Eschatology is the discussion of what occurs at the end, and from a Christian perspective focuses on the Eschaton, which is of course Jesus. It's far more convincing to argue from within your area of understanding than to over extend yourself.

If you wish to continue the discussion I would of course be happy to. But I'm not trying to convince you of anything. I certainly believe the speed of light is constant, and if you say that is replacing Jesus, and thus the Gospel, then that is your opinion and you are entitled to it. But if you want to try and change mine it would be better to provide an honest and logical argument, rather than throwing around terms and expecting me to take you at face value.
 
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