B flat B♭
- By Kathleen30
- Conspiracy Theories
- 2635 Replies
You
No.
The Bible reveals God; it does not give a detailed account of how he created.
What does that mean?
Genesis 2 was in the Bible long before the mid twentieth century.
I said "several", not "seven".
My point was that they believed that different gods were responsible for different parts of creation. Moses wanted people to know that one God created everything.
Because he wasn't.
The immediate group of people that he wrote for were Israelites; former Hebrew slaves who, if they knew any science, certainly didn't know what we know today.
If he had been writing specifically for scientists, he would have given lots of scientific detail, because that's what they would have been interested in.
Of course it is.
But scientists - and most people - are wise enough to know that they don't look in the Bible for scientific information - there isn't any.
Someone studying Zoology/chemistry/Physics would be given textbooks in those subjects to teach them about animals, plants, chemicals, atoms etc etc. They would not be given a copy of the Bible - that information is not in there.
I didn't say it did have anything to do with different creations.
My point was that if people take ALL of the Bible to be literal, they will have to explain the differences between Genesis 1&2.
I know.
I never said any of that; you're missing my point.
I said that if people take ALL of the Bible to be literal, they have to explain the differences between Genesis 1 and Genesis 2. Genesis 1 says that God created trees, animals, water etc. Genesis 2 doesn't say that. It tells of a garden with a river that divides and goes into other countries.
If someone believes that every word of the Bible is literal; which account do they go with?
No idea.
But you only need to worry about that if you believe that every word of the Bible is literal and that Genesis 1 & 2 are literal, scientific accounts of God's creation.
I don't believe they are, and for me, there is no problem or contradiction.
Stonginhim in my post 2549 I asked you whether you were referring to the creation account as one of the parts of the Bible that shouldn’t be taken literally. You said yes . In the bottom part of your post 2560. You write much about contradictions in the creation accous of Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 you kept back and forth pointing out alleged problems if taken literally. My apologies there is a doctrine that promotes 2 seperate creation accounts in Genesis 1 and 2 that’s what I thought you were referring too. But no I still disagree that there any contradictions in those two chapters in taking the chapters literally. I’m not saying the entire Bible should taken literally . Ok . But Genesis 1 and 2 I have no problem taking them as literal accounts . We disagree on issueNo.
The Bible reveals God; it does not give a detailed account of how he created.
What does that mean?
Genesis 2 was in the Bible long before the mid twentieth century.
I said "several", not "seven".
My point was that they believed that different gods were responsible for different parts of creation. Moses wanted people to know that one God created everything.
Because he wasn't.
The immediate group of people that he wrote for were Israelites; former Hebrew slaves who, if they knew any science, certainly didn't know what we know today.
If he had been writing specifically for scientists, he would have given lots of scientific detail, because that's what they would have been interested in.
Of course it is.
But scientists - and most people - are wise enough to know that they don't look in the Bible for scientific information - there isn't any.
Someone studying Zoology/chemistry/Physics would be given textbooks in those subjects to teach them about animals, plants, chemicals, atoms etc etc. They would not be given a copy of the Bible - that information is not in there.
I didn't say it did have anything to do with different creations.
My point was that if people take ALL of the Bible to be literal, they will have to explain the differences between Genesis 1&2.
I know.
I never said any of that; you're missing my point.
I said that if people take ALL of the Bible to be literal, they have to explain the differences between Genesis 1 and Genesis 2. Genesis 1 says that God created trees, animals, water etc. Genesis 2 doesn't say that. It tells of a garden with a river that divides and goes into other countries.
If someone believes that every word of the Bible is literal; which account do they go with?
No idea.
But you only need to worry about that if you believe that every word of the Bible is literal and that Genesis 1 & 2 are literal, scientific accounts of God's creation.
I don't believe they are, and for me, there is no problem or contradiction.
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