Hi Walter. I've only read the the first few words of your post. But you're
now my best e-mail friend!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! -Jim
-----Original Message-----
From: Walter Hicks [mailto:wallyshoes@mindspring.com]
Sent: Saturday, February 16, 2002 4:55 PM
To: Jim Eisele
Cc: phseely@aol.com; asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: Genesis One and Concordism (was a lot of other things
previously)
Hi Jim,
So that you will not feel 100% alone, I have always thought of Genesis
One as amazingly close to what current science has to say. I don't
consider it to be a science textbook, but the general structure is
something that strikes me as something quite unexpected from a culture
thousands of years old. I may be wrong but I think that other cultures
were far removed from anything like this and had rather bizarre outlooks
by modern standards. In fact, as recently as the fifties (when I was in
college), The big bang was ridiculed as something that was adopted only
by non atheists who believed in "a beginning" to the universe. When the
background radiation was discovered, Jastro(?) noted that when
astronomers climbed to the top of mountain of discovery, they found it
inhabited by philosophers who had been there for thousands of years. (or
something like that).
I have always taken Genesis One to indicate some degree of "insider
knowledge". They often jump my bones for that attitude.
I may not be correct, but at least I am company.
Walt
Jim Eisele wrote:
>
> Hi Paul. In Gen 1:1 and concordism (was Apology) you wrote
>
> >Preach God as a Father caring enough to speak to his little children in
> terms of their pre-understanding.
>
> Thanks for that remark. It fits beautifully.
>
> I wanted to at least respond to that much. We may disagree about Genesis
> One, but I have no argument with that.
>
> As far as your comments about Genesis One, I haven't had time to fully
> review them yet.
> One quick thought, though.
>
> You wrote
>
> >Gen 1:1 "God created the heavens and the earth." is taken by most
scholars
> >today as either an introductory title or summary covering the entire
> creation
> >story down to 2:4
>
> Most, perhaps, but not all. And have scholars ever been wrong before? I
> haven't studied all the work of all the scholars. But could "God created
> the heavens and the earth" simply mean that God created the heavens and
the
> earth? I don't want to disrespect scholarship, I just want to debate that
> notion.
>
> Thanks for taking the time to respond. I'm starting to realize that we
have
> more in common than I thought. -Jim
-- =================================== Walt Hicks <wallyshoes@mindspring.com>In any consistent theory, there must exist true but not provable statements. (Godel's Theorem)
You can only find the truth with logic If you have already found the truth without it. (G.K. Chesterton) ===================================
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