Angelo
Active Member
I think Young Earth Creationism is nonsensical from a strictly theological point of view. Young Earth Creationism holds that the creation of the world as described in the Book of Genesis is literal, historical truth, and that all of history has been recorded in one fashion or another, maintaining that pre-Biblical times did not exist.
This is in contrast to almost all observable evidence. In order for a literal interpretation of Genesis to be correct, at least one of the following must be true:
Humanity's understanding of science, particularly of biology and physics, are hopelessly incorrect on almost every level. Despite this, humanity's flawed understanding of science still produces reliable, reproduceable data.
God intentionally engineered the whole of creation to be utterly misleading when confronted with rational investigation. All of this was done as an implicit test of faith. It is implicit because the Bible never mentions any scientific topic as flawed, meaning that this grand charade was created without a specific directive from God on how humanity should interpret it.
The Devil has altered the whole of reality to reflect the above. This interpretation makes the Devil vastly more powerful than any interpretation I have seen.
The alternative is to reconcile science and theology by simply acknowledging that God gave a figurative account of creation because He was speaking to humans who lacked even rudimentary understanding of science, for whom complex topics like evolution and celestial mechanics would require thousands of years of discovery to even begin to comprehend.
How do the early chapters of Genesis relate to the claims of modern science? Mainstream science claims that the earth is about 4.5 billion years old and that the universe as a whole is about 14 billion years old. Genesis 1 describes the creation of the world in six days. Is there a contradiction?
People interested in the relationship between science and Genesis have been considering these questions for more than a century. They have come up with not merely one but a whole host of possible explanations. It helps us to be familiar with the possibilities so that we do not too quickly adopt one explanation without considering alternatives.
This is in contrast to almost all observable evidence. In order for a literal interpretation of Genesis to be correct, at least one of the following must be true:
Humanity's understanding of science, particularly of biology and physics, are hopelessly incorrect on almost every level. Despite this, humanity's flawed understanding of science still produces reliable, reproduceable data.
God intentionally engineered the whole of creation to be utterly misleading when confronted with rational investigation. All of this was done as an implicit test of faith. It is implicit because the Bible never mentions any scientific topic as flawed, meaning that this grand charade was created without a specific directive from God on how humanity should interpret it.
The Devil has altered the whole of reality to reflect the above. This interpretation makes the Devil vastly more powerful than any interpretation I have seen.
The alternative is to reconcile science and theology by simply acknowledging that God gave a figurative account of creation because He was speaking to humans who lacked even rudimentary understanding of science, for whom complex topics like evolution and celestial mechanics would require thousands of years of discovery to even begin to comprehend.
How do the early chapters of Genesis relate to the claims of modern science? Mainstream science claims that the earth is about 4.5 billion years old and that the universe as a whole is about 14 billion years old. Genesis 1 describes the creation of the world in six days. Is there a contradiction?
People interested in the relationship between science and Genesis have been considering these questions for more than a century. They have come up with not merely one but a whole host of possible explanations. It helps us to be familiar with the possibilities so that we do not too quickly adopt one explanation without considering alternatives.