Re: [asa] What Does ID Add?

From: Steve Martin <steven.dale.martin@gmail.com>
Date: Sun Sep 09 2007 - 08:55:05 EDT

Hi David,

you asked:

> Two things come to my mind: (1) ID might help support certain concordist
> "day-age" views that require sudden developmental jumps in kinds of animals;
> and (2) ID might serve as a useful apologetic device against folks who think
> evolution gets rid of God. Is there anything else? Particularly for OEC's
> who are open to "framework" and other understandings of Genesis 1 and 2, is
> the potential apologetic value of ID worth the candle of the divide between
> OEC-ID and TE?

In contrast to John below, I really don't think the most important factor is
the interpretation of Genesis. As you noted, many OECs can feel comfortable
with "non-literal" interpretations, and many TEs insist on a more-or-less
"literal" interpretation – so I don't think this is the dividing line. I
believe that the most important factor in OEC attraction to ID (and, even
though these are not mutually exclusive, away from TE) is an understanding
of divine action and the special position of humanity.

1) ID proposes that divine action is scientifically detectable. For
many OECs, TE not only gets rid of an apologetic tool as you stated, but
also can undermine personal faith (if detectable divine action is important
to one's personal faith). It also seems to fly in the face of the bible
stating in certain passages that God's action is detectable (eg. Rom 1:20).

2) TE seems to blur the line between human and non-human – at least the
continuous process makes articulating the difference more difficult.

thanks,

Steve Martin (CSCA)
http://evanevodialogue.blogspot.com

On 9/9/07, Michael Roberts <michael.andrea.r@ukonline.co.uk> wrote:
>
> Peter
>
> Before you pose more questions please consider the accusations of fraud in
> connection with the Peppered Moth I highlighted.
>
> It is clear that you do not wish to consider them and thus you are
> condoning lying. How do you reconcile this with your claim to be a
> Christian?
>
> As for your question it can be easily answered. Who are the Christians
> identified strongly with Darwinism? I can't name any, except those possibly
> in the sea of Faith group - who don't understand Darwin anyway.
>
> Also what do you mean by Darwinism?
>
> Michael
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> *From:* Peter Loose <peterwloose@compuserve.com>
> *To:* 'David Opderbeck' <dopderbeck@gmail.com> ;
> 'AmericanScientificAffiliation' <asa@calvin.edu>
> *Sent:* Sunday, September 09, 2007 9:09 AM
> *Subject:* RE: [asa] What Does ID Add?
>
>
>
>
>
> David:
>
>
>
> May I pose the same form of question as you concluded with?
>
>
>
> "Why is it seemingly important for many Christians to identify strongly
> with Darwinism?"
>
>
>
> This is looking for much more than one-liner quick quips.
>
>
>
> Thank you
>
>
>
> Peter
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
>
> *From:* asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu [mailto:asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu] *On
> Behalf Of *David Opderbeck
> *Sent:* Sunday, September 09, 2007 1:23 AM
> *To:* AmericanScientificAffiliation
> *Subject:* [asa] What Does ID Add?
>
>
>
> I'd particularly like to hear from folks who are sympathetic to ID and OEC
> -- what do you think ID adds with respect to relating science, faith and
> scripture?
>
>
>
> As I read materials from OEC's who are sympathetic to ID and hesitant or
> antagonistic about TE, I often feel a sort of disconnect. When discussing
> the age of the earth, OEC's mention all sorts of things about God revealing
> himself through nature as well as through scripture, doing our best to take
> all of God's revelation together, not interpreting scripture in ways that
> seem to clearly contradict well established scientific findings, and so on.
> And yet, when the same folks talk about evolution and ID, the discussion
> seems to change entirely -- now the discussion on the scientific side is all
> about questioning the assumptions of science, scientism, and so forth.
>
>
>
> I'm trying to understand why so many OEC's find it so important to
> critique "macro"evolution in this fashion. As far as I'm concerned, the
> most vexing problems with a TE position -- death before the fall, theodicy,
> who / what / when was Adam, the fall, original sin, what / when was the
> flood, what is the present "groaning" of creation, how will creation be
> renewed or "restored" in the eschaton -- are equally difficult whether one
> is an OEC or a TE. So why is "macro"evolution such a dividing line for most
> OEC's?
>
>
>
> Two things come to my mind: (1) ID might help support certain concordist
> "day-age" views that require sudden developmental jumps in kinds of animals;
> and (2) ID might serve as a useful apologetic device against folks who think
> evolution gets rid of God. Is there anything else? Particularly for OEC's
> who are open to "framework" and other understandings of Genesis 1 and 2, is
> the potential apologetic value of ID worth the candle of the divide between
> OEC-ID and TE?
>
>
>
> Note -- I'm not asking for critiques of the vaucousness or non-vaucousness
> of ID. I'm more interested in a question of identity -- why is it seemingly
> important for many OEC's to identify strongly with ID?
>
>
>
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> 16:40
>
>

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Received on Sun Sep 9 08:55:44 2007

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