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Creationism/Evolution
See other Creationism/Evolution Articles

Title: Most Evangelical Christians Say Science and Religion Can Coexist
Source: Yahoo!
URL Source: http://news.yahoo.com/most-evangeli ... eligion-coexist-124417864.html
Published: Mar 18, 2015
Author: Megan Gannon
Post Date: 2015-03-18 10:26:58 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 3162
Comments: 19

Never mind the outspoken Christian leaders who reject the Big Bang and human evolution; nearly 70 percent of rank-and-file evangelicals in the United States say they don't see religion and science as being totally at odds, a new survey found.

"Although many politicians and the media at large portray evangelicals as distrustful of science, we found that this is more myth than reality," Elaine Howard Ecklund, a sociologist at Rice University who orchestrated the survey, said in a statement.

Among evangelical Christians, about 48 percent said they see science and religion as complementary to one another, while 21 percent think science and religion refer to different aspects of reality and see them as entirely independent of one another, the survey found. [Creationism vs. Evolution: 6 Big Battles]

Still, the share of evangelical Christians who think religion and science are in conflict (and see themselves on the side of religion) is 29 percent — more than double the figure in the general population (14 percent), the study found. Overall, 38 percent of adults in the United States view religion and science as complementary, while 35 percent view science and religion as separate.

Though a majority of evangelicals don't see science and religion in conflict, many of them still believe in ideas that science doesn't support. For example, about 43 percent of evangelical Christians (compared with about 22 percent of the general population) believe that God created the universe and all life inside it within the last 10,000 years, according to the survey. (By studying the oldest light in the cosmos, scientists, meanwhile, have determined that the universe is about 13.8 billion years old.) And 42 percent of evangelical Americans support teaching creationism in schools instead of evolution, compared with about 18 percent of the general population who said the same.

Ecklund and her colleagues think the perception that evangelical Christians are unfriendly to science might hinge on just a few of these hot-button issues, like creationism. The evangelicals who saw science and religion as incompatible often fixated on human origins, the study found. One survey participant who was part of a largely white evangelical congregation in Houston, Texas, explained this point of view to the interviewers:

"As a Christian, creation — really it's all or nothing. Either the entire Bible's right or it's all wrong. Either everything inside of it is 100 percent accurate, or none of it is. So if creation could be disproven … So just completely take that away, that just devastates my entire way of life, my entire being. … Nobody wants to change. Christians don't want to change, and atheists don't want to change."

Focusing on evolution/creation has also narrowed the conversation about the relationship that religious people have with science, according to Ecklund and colleagues. The perception that evangelical Christians are hostile toward science might only be propagated with events like last year's televised debate between science popularizer Bill Nye and creationist Ken Ham, who believes the Bible's Book of Genesis is a literal description of the creation of Earth, the researchers said. But these heated debates don't necessarily reflect the way average evangelicals think.

Ecklund and colleagues surveyed more than 10,000 adults from across the country about their views on religion and science. They also conducted 315 in-depth interviews with Americans of different faiths. Ecklund presented the findings last week in Washington, D.C., during an American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) conference on religion and science.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

#9. To: Willie Green (#0) (Edited)

"Either the entire Bible's right or it's all wrong. Either everything inside of it is 100 percent accurate, or none of it is."

This is an emotional position, not a logical one.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-03-18   14:18:58 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Vicomte13, ALL (#9)

This is an emotional position, not a logical one.

Jesus consistently treats Old Testament historical narratives as straightforward records of fact. He refers to Abel (Luke 11:51), Noah (Matt. 24:37-39; Luke 17:26, 27), Abraham (John 8:56), the institution of circumcision (John 7:22; cf. Gen. 17:10-12; Lev. 12:3), Sodom and Gomorrah (Matt. 10:15; 11:23, 24; Luke 10:12), Lot (Luke 17:28-32), Isaac and Jacob (Matt. 8:11; Luke 13:28), manna (John 6:31, 49, 58), the snake in the desert (John 3: 14), David eating the consecrated bread (Matt. 12:3, 4; Mark 2:25, 26; Luke 6:3, 4), David as a psalm writer (Matt. 22:43; Mark 12:36; Luke 20:42), Solomon (Matt. 6:29; 12:42; Luke 11:31; 12:27), Elijah (Luke 4:25, 26), Elisha (Luke 4:27), Jonah (Matt. 12:39-41; Luke 11:29, 30, 32), and Zechariah (Luke 11:51). The last passage brings out Jesus' sense of the unity of history and His grasp of its wide sweep. His eye surveys the whole course of history from "the creation of the world" to "this generation." He repeatedly refers to Moses as the giver of the Law (Matt. 8:4; 19:8; Mark 1:44; 7:10; 10:5; 12:26; Luke 5:14; 20:37; John 5:46; 7:19). He frequently mentions the sufferings of the true prophets (Matt. 5:12; 13:57; 21:34-36; 23:29-37; Mark 6:4 [cf. Luke 4:24; John 4:44]; 12:2-5; Luke 6:23; 11:47-51; 13:34; 20:10-12) and comments on the popularity of the false prophets (Luke 6:26). He sets the stamp of His approval on such significant passages as Genesis 1 and 2 (Matt. 19:4, 5; Mark 10:6-8).

GarySpFC  posted on  2015-03-20   2:23:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: GarySpFC (#12)

Yes, Jesus does. And so do I. What does not work, however, is the position that every single word of Scripture that we have is exactly right or its all wrong.

No two manuscripts of Scripture are identical. If we take the emotional position that Scripture is letter perfect, then we invalidate it, because Scripture is entirely letter imperfect. God did not protect and preserve for us letter-perfect texts. Rather he got his message across, the essential, in texts that vary between every one.

It is no help to say that there is no doctrinal difference in the variants if one's very doctrine is that it's all letter perfect. Because it isn't letter perfect. The correct doctrine is that God didn't give letter-perfect inspiration, he painted more broadly, in themes, analog, not digital.

If one takes the "every word is exactly right or it's all 100% wrong, then one has embraced an emotional, exaggerated false doctrine that destroys Christian belief, because God did not in fact let us have 100% perfect, uncorrupted texts. He protected the essence of his message, and that is what we have to accept: the essence. If we go farther and insist that it is all perfect, we are not telling the truth, and we are indulging in bibliolatry.

Further, there are parts of the text that are clearly historical, and there are other parts that are clearly poetic. And there are parts that are figures of speech and not literally true, but that are figuratively true.

Example: Jesus says that the smallest seed is the mustard seed. No it isn't. There are much smaller seeds. So, does that vitiate the Bible? If one takes the position that everything in the Bible is 100% true then yes, Jesus' botanical inaccuracy destroys the whole Bible. God is wrong on a detail, and therefore the whole Bible is crap. That's the emotional and ridiculous position that the pastor took and that I am forcibly rejecting as foolish, because it IS foolish.

Jesus was not "incorrect". The smallest seed that a Palestinian Jewish farmer was likely to deal with was a mustard seed. People planted mustard, and mustard was the smallest seed in the agricultural arsenal. Within that bounded world - whose bounds Jesus did not spell out because perfect accuracy of speech is an obsession of 20th Century lawyers, not people listening to a religious parable, and not God either, apparently,

Further, our translations are themselves not perfectly accurate. We've been over the ground of olam meaning "to the unknown" or "to the horizon", and not "forever". It makes major doctrinal differences in understanding if one mistranslates or misinterprets words like that.

Is "light" photon emissions, is it energy, or is it order? The word is "or", and it is the root of "order". For someone to assert that "or" in Hebrew means photonic visible light is just that, an assertion, an assertion based on emotional preference. It is not "true" in the sense of provable. God may be speaking of periods of order and disorder, because or and Hhosekh have those meanings. Just because English people traditionally translated concepts as visible light and visible darkness and built doctrines on it that are very old means nothing.

Genesis 1 is accurate, as far as God gave it, but what it precisely says is hard, not easy. And the accuracy of all of it is "good enough for God" accuracy, but not good enough accuracy for a modern computer, which must have precise, delineated ones and zeroes in order to be able to compute. The limits of binary modern logic let machines run, but do not embrace the nuances of Scripture.

And at any rate, the emotional "It's all 100% right or it's 100% wrong" position of the pastor means that HE has forced the answer: then it's 100% wrong, because the mustard seed is not even close to being the smallest seed. It's a bad doctrine that is destined to fail, and rather than try to support it, I'm going to torpedo it and return to reality: God did not speak in binary code. He spoke in broad, colorful analog. Reduce the Bible to binary, and you end up with false gibberish.

Vicomte13  posted on  2015-03-20   6:49:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 13.

#14. To: Vicomte13 (#13)

Example: Jesus says that the smallest seed is the mustard seed. No it isn't. There are much smaller seeds. So, does that vitiate the Bible? If one takes the position that everything in the Bible is 100% true then yes, Jesus' botanical inaccuracy destroys the whole Bible. God is wrong on a detail, and therefore the whole Bible is crap. That's the emotional and ridiculous position that the pastor took and that I am forcibly rejecting as foolish, because it IS foolish.

Jesus was not "incorrect". The smallest seed that a Palestinian Jewish farmer was likely to deal with was a mustard seed. People planted mustard, and mustard was the smallest seed in the agricultural arsenal. Within that bounded world - whose bounds Jesus did not spell out because perfect accuracy of speech is an obsession of 20th Century lawyers, not people listening to a religious parable, and not God either, apparently,

31 He told them another parable: “The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. 32 Though it is the smallest of all your seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and perch in its branches.”

The Holy Bible: New International Version (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1984), Mt 13:31–32.

If we read critically we see it was the smallest agricultural seed that farmer sowed.

GarySpFC  posted on  2015-03-21 20:48:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Vicomte13 (#13)

It is no help to say that there is no doctrinal difference in the variants if one's very doctrine is that it's all letter perfect. Because it isn't letter perfect. The correct doctrine is that God didn't give letter-perfect inspiration, he painted more broadly, in themes, analog, not digital.

If one takes the "every word is exactly right or it's all 100% wrong, then one has embraced an emotional, exaggerated false doctrine that destroys Christian belief, because God did not in fact let us have 100% perfect, uncorrupted texts. He protected the essence of his message, and that is what we have to accept: the essence. If we go farther and insist that it is all perfect, we are not telling the truth, and we are indulging in bibliolatry. ,p> Further, there are parts of the text that are clearly historical, and there are other parts that are clearly poetic. And there are parts that are figures of speech and not literally true, but that are figuratively true.

 

TYPES OF VARIANTS

1. The greatest number of variants are differences or errors in spelling. For example, the author of Codex Vaticanus spells “John” with only one “n” instead of the more common two (¼™É¬½½·Â [IManns]). This type of variant makes no difference in the meaning of the text.
2. The second largest group of variants arises from differences between Greek and English. For example, in Greek a person’s name may or may not be preceded by an article (the); or the phrase “the good man” could also be written in Greek as “the man, the good one,” whereas in English both phrases are translated as “the good man.” This type of variant also makes no difference in the meaning of the text.
3. Sometimes a scribe accidentally made nonsense out of a word or phrase when copying. One scribe accidentally wrote the Greek letter À (pi) instead of Æ (phi) in Luke 6:41, rendering the text, “Let me take the fruit (º¬ÁÀ¿Â [karpos]) out of your eye” instead of “Let me take the speck (º¬ÀÆ¿Â [karphos]) out of your eye.” These types of errors are rare and easy to spot.

Paul D. Wegner, A Student’s Guide to Textual Criticism of the Bible: Its History, Methods & Results (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2006), 231.

If we only had a single manuscript of the New Testament, how many variants would we have? Well, none, of course! That sounds more like it. Or does it? If we only had one manuscript, we would have very little confidence that it accurately represents the original. A single manuscript could have been changed, and how would we know? We would have nothing with which to compare it. While the idea of having no variants may sound great, variants actually are a natural byproduct of having lots and lots of handwritten manuscripts. And the more manuscripts you have, the better, as far as making sure what you have today accurately reflects what was originally written.
Next, let’s put that huge “four hundred thousand” number in a meaningful context. If we have more than fifty-seven hundred Greek manuscripts, and these average two hundred pages each, we have nearly 1.2 million pages of text—a very substantial amount of handwritten material. The four hundred thousand number includes every single possible variation over the course of fifteen hundred years prior to the printing press.
Next, we must emphasize that 99 percent of the four hundred thousand variations are irrelevant to the proper translation and understanding of the Greek text. Even the most liberal textual critic agrees here. Unlike in the English language, differences in word order, especially in Greek, often are completely irrelevant. If fact, in Greek, one can say the same thing in more than a dozen different ways, using differences in word order, cases, etc. Combine this with differences in spelling and other minor variations, and the number of meaningful New Testament variants drops to a more realistic number of four thousand. This represents about 2.9 percent of the text, or one meaningful variant every three pages or so of the New Testament.

James R. White, The King James Only Controversy: Can You Trust Modern Translations? (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House, 2009), 64.

GarySpFC  posted on  2015-03-21 21:09:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Vicomte13 (#13) (Edited)

modern computer, which must have precise, delineated ones and zeroes in order to be able to compute.

Depends what the definition of compute is.

These days Information Services are festooned with bullshyte artists wobbling their way up the ladder ala the Peter principle.

Sometimes their workproduct even compiles - but that's far short of producing a functional solution.

Nature, meanwhile - Is what it is and has always been. Seems to me that's a self-evident observation which led America's founders into their Deism, and away from the technocratic religious farces that historically propped up kings and sun-princes over the subjugated.

VxH  posted on  2015-03-21 21:28:30 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 13.

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