Not intended to be perceived that way, but unfortunately it is.Why is because I haven't seen such a high degree of arrogance and vanity for a very long time. (Thought I wrote that somewhere.)
You did say that.
I think anyone can post a heart anywhere anytime. It means very little. In the eye of the beholder.
If you truly loved people you wouldn't talk down to them like they were ignorant little sheep that needed to be taught your particular way of thinking.
Well then, I regret to tell you that your attempt at reconciling evolution and your view of Christianity is sunk. If you insist on that degree of biblical literalism, no resolution is possible. One of them has to be wrong.I only accept the Adam & Eve thing, I can't alter that.. or anything else in the Bible for that matter.
Some Christians won't, but most of them do. Creationism doesn't mean god created us all. Well, it does in a sense, but it means a great deal more than just that, most of which has to be thrown out the window if you want to understand evolution. Creationism in its usual meaning is rooted in a pretty literalist interpretation of the Bible that even the most basic knowledge of science would tell you cannot possibly be correct. As I've said in other threads, there's nothing in evolutionary theory that precludes a creator. Starting from the position of belief in a creator, you can make a perfectly legitimate philosophical argument that the creator set up evolution to work as it does and installed natural selection as its major mechanism. What you can't do, however, is reconcile a literal reading of the biblical creation story with the findings of modern science, you have to find an allegorical or metaphorical meaning in the scriptures.Well, Christians aren't going to throw Creationism out the window. Thats one of the founding bricks on the belief. That God created us all.
It doesn't mingle. You either believe in creationism or you believe in evolution. Personally, I think they both have flaws and it is difficult to believe anything when being played by higher powers.
My mom and dad had guilt issuses and passed them on to me.....
Well... not really. Evolution is a fact established well beyond any reasonable doubt, it's about as secure a claim as the one that the earth orbits the sun. There are quibbles at the fringes, about the precise way natural selection operates in particular cases and the role of sexual selection and things like that, but the fact of evolution is such that only an ignorant fool would withhold assent. Evolution is a proven fact, it has been directly observed to happen, even to the point of the creation of new species. It's visible in action everywhere if you know where to look. One of the more obvious examples is the increase in antibiotic-resistent bacteria we keep hearing about.If you focus on who we are in relation to Him, than there is nothing to be gained by proving either case. For neither can be proved.
The first man Eve? When was that? I thought Eve was female. There have been recognizably genus Homo creatures on the planet for millions of years,. and recognizably species Sapiens for at least hundreds of thousands of years. At what point in the evolutionary process do you think god stepped in and inserted a soul into these creatures?God did create the first man Adam and the first man Eve.
They were Catholics...it's an inherent trait.
Well... not really. Evolution is a fact established well beyond any reasonable doubt, it's about as secure a claim as the one that the earth orbits the sun. There are quibbles at the fringes, about the precise way natural selection operates in particular cases and the role of sexual selection and things like that, but the fact of evolution is such that only an ignorant fool would withhold assent. Evolution is a proven fact, it has been directly observed to happen, even to the point of the creation of new species. It's visible in action everywhere if you know where to look. One of the more obvious examples is the increase in antibiotic-resistent bacteria we keep hearing about.
I can agree with your statement.
You're quite right that mankind is older than creationists believe. The more extreme of them will grant an age for the planet of only 6,000 to 10,000 years, which is such obvious nonsense to anyone with any knowledge of the evidence it's hard to credit that anyone with a more than 2-digit IQ could believe it.
The first man Eve? When was that? I thought Eve was female.
Mankind is flesh whether male or female. Called: Adam.
Gen 5:2 Male and female created he them; and blessed them, and called their name Adam, in the day when they were created.
There have been recognizably genus Homo creatures on the planet for millions of years,. and recognizably species Sapiens for at least hundreds of thousands of years. At what point in the evolutionary process do you think god stepped in and inserted a soul into these creatures?
Not true. Evolution provides no explanation for how life came to be, only how it has come to be organized the way it is now. Abiogenesis and creationism are at odds.
7. Evolution cannot explain how life first appeared on earth.
The origin of life remains very much a mystery, but biochemists have learned about how primitive nucleic acids, amino acids and other building blocks of life could have formed and organized themselves into self-replicating, self-sustaining units, laying the foundation for cellular biochemistry. Astrochemical analyses hint that quantities of these compounds might have originated in space and fallen to earth in comets, a scenario that may solve the problem of how those constituents arose under the conditions that prevailed when our planet was young.
Creationists sometimes try to invalidate all of evolution by pointing to science's current inability to explain the origin of life. But even if life on earth turned out to have a nonevolutionary origin (for instance, if aliens introduced the first cells billions of years ago), evolution since then would be robustly confirmed by countless microevolutionary and macroevolutionary studies.
8. Mathematically, it is inconceivable that anything as complex as a protein, let alone a living cell or a human, could spring up by chance. Chance plays a part in evolution (for example, in the random mutations that can give rise to new traits), but evolution does not depend on chance to create organisms, proteins or other entities. Quite the opposite: natural selection, the principal known mechanism of evolution, harnesses nonrandom change by preserving "desirable" (adaptive) features and eliminating "undesirable" (nonadaptive) ones. As long as the forces of selection stay constant, natural selection can push evolution in one direction and produce sophisticated structures in surprisingly short times.
As an analogy, consider the 13-letter sequence "TOBEORNOTTOBE." Those hypothetical million monkeys, each pecking out one phrase a second, could take as long as 78,800 years to find it among the 2613 sequences of that length. But in the 1980s Richard Hardison of Glendale College wrote a computer program that generated phrases randomly while preserving the positions of individual letters that happened to be correctly placed (in effect, selecting for phrases more like Hamlet's). On average, the program re-created the phrase in just 336 iterations, less than 90 seconds. Even more amazing, it could reconstruct Shakespeare's entire play in just four and a half days.
Good question.Edit: What flaws do you see with evolution?