mrdct, on Nov 19 2007, 01:11 AM, said:
Hannie, on Nov 19 2007, 12:49 AM, said:
mrdct, on Nov 19 2007, 12:46 AM, said:
Evolution is not a water-tight theory and like 'Intelligent Design' it can't be definitively proven.
There is not a single scientific theory that can be proven. That doesn't make it any less science. And it doesn't make creationism any more science.
But it also doesn't make evolution any more plausible than 'Intelligent Design' so why shouldn't both theories be taught in school?
The problem with creationism in most of its political forms today is that it is spiritual fraud. For example, stating that evolution is an "unproved theory" is skirting the edge of false witness unless you also point out that it is an observed fact. The body of theories attempting to explain that fact will always be subject to revision. Darwin didn't invent evolution. It was already well-known to exist in his grandfather's day. What Darwin did was propose a natural explanation for it.
The historic churches both of east and west have far less trouble with this science than do some of the more vitriolic Protestant communions.
I think that's because our authority derives from a continuous living tradition stretching directly back to the apostles and not from some reading of scripture. We don't reject scripture, but
we are the tradition that preserved and wrote it and
we reserve the interpretation of it (at least for our own communions) to our own councils, to which it is also subject for content.
We do not subscribe to sola scriptura because it is not taught
in scripture and was rejected early in our tradition. As a doctrine it fails its own test of authenticity. That doesn't mean we reject scripture, just that we reject the superstitious notion that, if reality (God's creation) disagrees with scripture (as interpreted) then it must be reality that is wrong. At
no point does scripture actually claim that Genesis 1 or 2 were intended as a literal, scientific history, so those claiming that they must be taken that way, despite contradictions between them and between them and physical reality are proposing a private interpretation. They certainly have a right to do so in their churches, homes and even private schools. But I reject their claim to having the right to sneak their heresy (by my lights) into the back door of
my church by falsely calling it science and by indulging in no small amount of untruth about science and politically forcing school teachers to spout their canned
lies for them at government expense.
And, as a priest of God (not Roman Catholic--my branch of the tradition objects to the idea of any single man other than Jesus Chist being infallible under any circumstance), it is my sad duty to warn some of the purveyors of the lies that they are literally risking hellfire in so doing.
And for the record, there is no scientific theory of intelligent design. The proponents even admit this themselves. What they are peddling in the echoes I read is warmed-over Morrisite anti-evolution propaganda, much of it dating back to the 1960's. Don't get me wrong. My own creed states that God the Father Amighty is creator of all things, seen or unseen. My problem with anti-evolution propagandists is that I see evolution all around me and therefore conclude that God created it. I don't subscribe to the theological idea that God's sovreignty is magically repelled by words like
random. Faith in God is best demonstrated by learning to pray effectively, discerning God's actual will and then praying for His help in doing it, not by tilting at windmills.
Sorry if this is getting to be long. I do sometimes preach. But this is a mesage that needs to be preached. Genesis provides us, in allegorical form, with some very important insights into our relationship with God. But as a source of literal natural history, it's a complete bust.