Is it possible for religion and evolution to coexist?

Creationism, Evolution, and other science issues

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Grumpy
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Is it possible for religion and evolution to coexist?

Post #1

Post by Grumpy »

Below is an open letter which has been signed by over 7500 clergy and pastors attesting to the compatibility of scientific discoveries with the tenets of religious thought.
An Open Letter Concerning Religion and Science
Within the community of Christian believers there are areas of dispute and disagreement, including the proper way to interpret Holy Scripture. While virtually all Christians take the Bible seriously and hold it to be authoritative in matters of faith and practice, the overwhelming majority do not read the Bible literally, as they would a science textbook. Many of the beloved stories found in the Bible – the Creation, Adam and Eve, Noah and the ark – convey timeless truths about God, human beings, and the proper relationship between Creator and creation expressed in the only form capable of transmitting these truths from generation to generation. Religious truth is of a different order from scientific truth. Its purpose is not to convey scientific information but to transform hearts.
We the undersigned, Christian clergy from many different traditions, believe that the timeless truths of the Bible and the discoveries of modern science may comfortably coexist. We believe that the theory of evolution is a foundational scientific truth, one that has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human knowledge and achievement rests. To reject this truth or to treat it as “one theory among others” is to deliberately embrace scientific ignorance and transmit such ignorance to our children. We believe that among God’s good gifts are human minds capable of critical thought and that the failure to fully employ this gift is a rejection of the will of our Creator. To argue that God’s loving plan of salvation for humanity precludes the full employment of the God-given faculty of reason is to attempt to limit God, an act of hubris. We urge school board members to preserve the integrity of the science curriculum by affirming the teaching of the theory of evolution as a core component of human knowledge. We ask that science remain science and that religion remain religion, two very different, but complementary, forms of truth.
Wisdom indeed!!!

Your thoughts???

Grumpy 8)

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hannahjoy
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Post #21

Post by hannahjoy »

I think that I will agree with Grumpy, Hannahjoy. There is just far too much evidence for evolution to conclude that it didn't happen. So, we're stuck with the following question: What is God's role in the evolution that we know has occurred?
So why wasn't that the question in the first place?
The first post was all about this group of professing Christians who believe evolution. I may be misunderstanding Grumpy, but the impression I got was that it was yet another thread saying "See, these Christians accept evolution - you can too!" It gets really old. The bandwagon does work, but it doesn't reflect credit on the intelligence of those who are persuaded by it.
I get very tired of people attacking things I didn't say.

As for the rest of my post, I was only pointing out a logical fallacy. "The Bible isn't a science or history textbook, therefore we can't trust what the Bible says about science or history."
Non sequitur, as I illustrated.

Hannah Joy
"Bearing shame and scoffing rude,
In my place condemned He stood;
Sealed my pardon with His blood;
Hallelujah! What a Saviour!"
- Philip P. Bliss, 1838-1876

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Grumpy
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Post #22

Post by Grumpy »

hannahjoy
So why wasn't that the question in the first place?
The first post was all about this group of professing Christians who believe evolution. I may be misunderstanding Grumpy, but the impression I got was that it was yet another thread saying "See, these Christians accept evolution - you can too!" It gets really old. The bandwagon does work, but it doesn't reflect credit on the intelligence of those who are persuaded by it.
My point was not that you or anyone should get on a bandwagon. My point was the logical reasoning contained in the letter itself, hence my "wisdom indeed" comment after the letter. That wisdom is there even if noone signed the letter.

Evolution on Earth is a fact, it occurred. That cannot be denied by anyone who has studied the fossil record. In order for evolutionary science and religious beliefs to peacefully coexist the fact that evolution occurred must be accepted by and integrated into the reality of that religion, if it is not , that religion is in conflict with reality(not just evolutionary science) and history shows us the evils that can occur in those circumstances(Galleleo, the Inquisition)

A science book is not a religious text, there is no religious information in it. Science has no method to prove or disprove any religious tenet, to try to do so would be a misuse of that knowledge.

The Bible is not a science book, there is no scientific information in it. The Genesis story teaches that God created the universe(in two very different versions), It is allegory, not cosmology, astronomy,geology or biology, if it is used in that manner it is quickly proven to be innaccurate and in error. That is why it is a misuse of scripture. If used to teach moral lessons it may very well be totally true, thus this is the proper use of scripture. The same is true of the story of Noah, if advanced as scientific truth it is very quickly shown to be in conflict with reality, if viewed as a moral lesson veracity is not compromised.

Science and religion address two seperate but complementary types of truth. Neither can be nor should be used to teach lessons in the other's realm because, used that way they are both innaccurate and in error as has been shown throughout the history of their interaction. Used properly within their own boundaries there are no conflicts between them.

This is my answer to the question posed by the title of this forum. I believe it to be correct and logical and I can support that answer with the evidence.

Grumpy :|

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Post #23

Post by jcrawford »

Grumpy wrote:Evolution on Earth is a fact, it occurred.
That's a lie. Evolution is only a religious hypothesis.
That cannot be denied by anyone who has studied the fossil record.
I've studied the human fossil record and see no evidence of evolution.
In order for evolutionary science and religious beliefs to peacefully coexist the fact that evolution occurred must be accepted by and integrated into the reality of that religion, if it is not , that religion is in conflict with reality(not just evolutionary science) and history shows us the evils that can occur in those circumstances(Galleleo, the Inquisition)
When a hypothesis is blindly accepted and integrated with other religious beliefs, the hypothesis itself is religious.
Science has no method to prove or disprove any religious tenet, to try to do so would be a misuse of that knowledge.
Therefore science has no method to either prove nor dispute the claim that evolution is a religious hypothesis.

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Grumpy
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Post #24

Post by Grumpy »

JC

The sum total of your last post is"Is not, is not, la la la la la la, I'm not listening, la,la,la" and "Because I say so!!!" That is sure to convince others of the merits of your argument.

How do we know when you are in error???

You post something!!!

Grumpy 8)

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Post #25

Post by micatala »

My answer to the question in the title of the thread is a resounding yes. My personal opinion is that the fact of evolution increases my sense of wonder and awe about God as a creator.



steen wrote:
Rob wrote:
That is why personally, I feel it is so important for both religious and non-religious people who see clearly the difference between science and religion to stand up and to remain proactive in keeping creationism out of our class rooms.
Agreed. I am a Christian, but I see the creationists and ID crowd as liars who spit God in the eye, liars who deliberately are bearing false witness.

Steen,

I, too, am a Christian and I don't understand your accusation, I see the creationists and ID crowd as liars who spit God in the eye, liars who deliberately are bearing false witness

Can you explain why you feel this way about your fellow Christians?

jcrawford:
Calling Christians liars amounts to nothing less than religious bigotry on the part of neo-Darwinist liars even if they also call themselves Christians. I think steen and other neo-Darwinist religionists like him want to provoke religious civil strife in the U.S. much as the Sunni Muslims wish to do promote civil war in Iraq. I'm surprised that this website allows Christian neo-Darwinist race theorist supporters to call Christian creationists and their adherents liars because once they do that it would be a form of religious discrimination to censor or prohibit creationists from calling neo-Darwinist race theorists liars and the debate would simply degenerate into accusations by each side of the other side being liars and nothing but liars.
Well, I certainly can understand people getting their ire up at having those they identify with being called liars.

If we take a fairly strict definition and say a person is a liar or is lying if they intentionally say or write something they know is not true than we can try to objectively determine if someone is lying.

Under this definition, I think we can find examples of creationists and ID proponents who are liars. This does not, in my view, mean all are liars of course.

Ron Wyatt seems to be one example. Another example is Jonathan Wells, who claimed in his book Icons of Evolution to have come to his anti-evolutionary views during the course of his graduate work in biology, while elsewhere he is quoted as saying he went to graduate school in order to better be able to work against evolution, I think at the institgation of Rev. Moon (see "The Wedge of Intelligent Design" for documentation). Here is but one example regarding Duane Gish who is fairly famous for his untruthfulness, quoting out of context, etc. There are certainly other examples one could find.

More than out and out lying, I think the problem with many creationists, is that they are so committed to their pre-determined viewpoint that they can't or won't look at the evidence objectively or allow to change their viewpoint except in a 'tactical way.' By the latter, I mean they will change their viewpoint or the arguments used to support it if they find their existing tactics are becoming less effective or less credible. The admittance that evolution actually does occur, and then labeling it micro-evolution is one example of this.


With respect to jcrawford's quote, I can only say that in my view, a good deal of what you have written on this site I consider to be untruthful, and in fact, has been in my view shown to be untruthful (e.g. your claims that neo-Darwinism is racist), and yet no one has stopped you from repeating the same statements over and over. If something can be demonstrated to be untrue, than it seems to me the correct approach is to show or explain why it is, not simply cry 'not true, not true!' over and over.

No, we should not cavalierly call or group or a person a liar, but it is fair to criticize someone's truthfulness if a reasonable case can be made that the person is being untruthful on a habitual basis. Ad hominem attacks of any site member is, of course, against the rules, but logically showing how a person's statements are not true does not constitute an Ad hom attack.[/url]

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Post #26

Post by Cathar1950 »

micatala wrote:
My answer to the question in the title of the thread is a resounding yes. My personal opinion is that the fact of evolution increases my sense of wonder and awe about God as a creator.
It is my personal opinion also. I might question the Creator part or even the nature of God but the Awe is there. I sometimes wonder about some of the accepted views of God and God's atrubutes. In that some of it seems like bragging and sometimes it jus seems like it is trying to understand the unknowable.
I have read where the Pharoah was considered the "judge of all the Earth" or all wise and knowing. Often when gods were replaced their attributes were given to the new gods.
At one time God lived on a mountain or in the sea or the air. Our expanding view of the universe just made God grow as our ideas grew and changed. I don't know if it really takes anything away. Maybe it only adds to our metaphores and anaologies.

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Post #27

Post by QED »

jcrawford wrote:That's a lie. Evolution is only a religious hypothesis.
jcrawford wrote:Therefore science has no method to either prove nor dispute the claim that evolution is a religious hypothesis.
Those are pretty bold assertions JC. How can I possibly accept what you say when I know that Evolution, as a general principle of self-organization, is a scientifically proven process -- one that I have even made use of myself. What you must mean is that it takes a certain amount of faith to translate this working principle from proven engineering into biology.

Now I would say that it requires very little faith indeed when we can readily identify the very same mechanisms that we use in our own engineering in the biological features common to all living things. I've been hoping to see some sort of response from you about this particular subject before. Perhaps you'll be brave enough to bite the bullet this time and not simply declare it to be off-topic. For you to maintain that evolution is a religion you must be more specific about what you mean by evolution and in doing so support any claims that it might be subject to limitation in scope or application.

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Post #28

Post by jcrawford »

Grumpy wrote:JC

The sum total of your last post is"Is not, is not, la la la la la la, I'm not listening, la,la,la" and "Because I say so!!!" That is sure to convince others of the merits of your argument.

How do we know when you are in error???

You post something!!!

Grumpy 8)
Is "la la la" the best you can do in reponse to my previous intelligently designed post, Grumpy? I was expecting something a little more erudite.

Maybe you have a few latent Neanderthal genes in your genome than neo-Darwinst race theorists care to admit.

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Post #29

Post by hannahjoy »

My point was not that you or anyone should get on a bandwagon. My point was the logical reasoning contained in the letter itself, hence my "wisdom indeed" comment after the letter. That wisdom is there even if noone signed the letter.

And that "wisdom" is a logical fallacy.
A science book is not a religious text, there is no religious information in it. . . . The Bible is not a science book, there is no scientific information in it.

Nonsense. If you've never read a science book that had anything religious in it, you need to expand your reading list.
The Bible contains stories that purport to be historical, and infer scientific claims. The people who have believed in Creation and the Flood for thousands of years didn't have all the scientific evidence we have today, but they weren't stupid - they recognized claims to historical truth when they saw them.
Whether the claims are accurate or not is a separate question.

I agree that science and religion can coexist. It's current scientific opinion and the Bible is it was written that are in conflict.

I haven't studied the fossil record. Whichever position I take would have to rest on another authority. I'm sorry you don't approve of the authority I've chosen.

Hannah Joy
"Bearing shame and scoffing rude,
In my place condemned He stood;
Sealed my pardon with His blood;
Hallelujah! What a Saviour!"
- Philip P. Bliss, 1838-1876

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Post #30

Post by jcrawford »

micatala wrote:No, we should not cavalierly call or group or a person a liar, but it is fair to criticize someone's truthfulness if a reasonable case can be made that the person is being untruthful on a habitual basis. Ad hominem attacks of any site member is, of course, against the rules, but logically showing how a person's statements are not true does not constitute an Ad hom attack.[/url]
Fair enough, but how can neo-Darwinist Christians distinguish between truth and falsehood when they have no scientific definition or evolutionist understanding of either concept?

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