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Archive for July, 2010

Evolution supporters need to define ‘faith’

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

Along with ‘faith’ evolutionist need to also define ‘Evolution’. I can’t stand being in the middle of a debate on the topic and some snot nose brat chimes in with “We don’t have to explain where LIFE came from, that’s a job for ‘abiogenesis’ not ‘Evolution’ “. What? Give me a break. Just because you divide up your ‘religion’ into tiny, equally as disillusioned, subsets doesn’t mean that you can just ignore the serious question(s) that easily. So, when I talk about Evolution I’m talking about the WHOLE THING… big bang to present day. It’s all part of one big process, so I treat it as such. (But that’s another post for another day)

When I try to take the devil’s position (by that I mean ‘devil’s advocate’ of course – wink, wink), I would assume that Christians take the creation standpoint out of pure faith in God. So to take that a step further, Christians often look at the scientific data found in biology, astronomy, geology, etc and plug that in to their already existing religious view and call it ‘support for creationism’. I agree. That’s what happens. Any honest person would answer that way.

The problem is that evolutionists follow the exact same process and yet they underhandedly and shamefully deny it at every turn. An evolutionist does the same thing. He/she assumes his/her own beliefs in evolution first – and any data they find is then plugged in (when possible) to support their predetermined belief system. That’s a religious system just like Christianity. Consequently, and ironically, any data that doesn’t support their religion is simply discarded and ignored.

Think about this. Is there anything we could find in science that would make an evolutionist change his/her mind about evolution? At first I thought “No, they are just too blinded by their bias”. But really the answer is “yes and no”. Actually scientists are recanting evolution all the time, the ones who can look at evidence and make logical conclusions anyway. Unfortunately there are also those whose entire careers are based on the religion of evolution. They will never change regardless of what they find. If they did change they would lose their funding, prestige, and perceived credibility.

If something is TRUE, it is TRUE in every case. You can’t say something is ‘mostly true’ and then go ahead with it as if it were complete and proven fact. Really, there are thousands of ‘anomalies’ throughout nature that simply cannot be explained by the evolutionary process. So the logical person is forced to say “Hmmm… if that’s the case, if what I’m seeing can’t happen under the evolution system of belief, evolution can’t actually be the answer – can’t be true”.

Take the moon. Where did it come from? I know there are many ‘theories’, but none of them are actually physically POSSIBLE through natural science. So if evolution can’t explain it, and yet it does exist (it’s obviously observable), then evolution has FAILED. Period. There is no evolutionary process that can account for the moon.

Oh, and a side note, the moon is just the tip of the iceberg. Check out Saturn’s rings (some are braided together – how is that possible?), Why does mercury have a magnetic field when it shouldn’t? Why doesn’t Venus have a magnetic field when it should? Why is the moon a different chemical makeup than the earth? Why are every single one of the planets made up of different element combinations when they should all be the same? I could go on and on (and that’s just talking about space).

The point is, evolution in the broad sense is a faith, even though it is marketed as ‘science’. A true scientists would say “nobody knows how life began, we can’t seem to duplicate it in the lab” – period. No emotional production, no philosophical caveats. It is what it is – a scientific fact. A religious scientist (who’s honest about it) with a ‘faith’ framework would say “I believe life began through abiogenesis. Although we have no actual evidence for that, that is my theory of choice.” Along the same lines, a Christian scientist might say “Science can’t produce life from non-living matter, and we simply don’t know how it happened. Therefore any theories on how that came about are on a ‘faith’ only basis, and I personally believe what is claimed in traditional creation.”

Here’s the bottom line. There’s a long list of things that simply can not exist under the assumption of a purely ‘natural’ evolutionary process. They are mathematically, chemically, and biologically impossible. Therefore we can only come to the logical conclusion that evolution is bust, dis-proven, illogical, irrational, old, dead, so “yesterday”, and just plain dumb. To continue to believe in it is purely a matter of the heart – a “FAITH tradition”.

(Side note: I have yet to hear of any solid scientific evidence AGAINST the creationist perspective. If you have any, please comment below and I’ll check it out.)

Tis So Sweet

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

(a more personal note – a more intimate nature)

Well, I haven’t posted since January of this year.  I guess I just got bogged down in other things and also maybe didn’t feel like posting rebuttals to the usual garbage that goes on here in the metro area I live in. But my silence is broken today. I just felt the need to express a little bit after watching some YouTube clips.

You know how when you hear something over and over again you start to take it in and make it personal. Well… for some reason the last several months the song ‘Tis So Sweet To Trust In Jesus’ has been rolling through my head. I don’t know why, but I just can’t seem to shake it (not that it’s a bad thing really).  Every time I sit down at the piano that’s the first thing I think of and so I start playing it immediately.  When I’m driving down the road in silence the lyrics seem to float into my brain like clouds and push out my other ‘more pressing’ thoughts.

So today I spent some time listening to YouTube clips of people singing the song.  I must have listened to the song sung 30 different times by just as many people, each one putting their own spin on the melody. Along with the usual thoughts “Wow these people can really sing!”, and the subsequent insecurities of  “What am I thinking even trying to pursue music after listening to these guys?”, something happened as I listened.   I shut my browser window and just sat there a minute to let the words and music just sink in.

Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus. Just to take Him at his Word. Just to rest upon His promise. Just to know “Thus saith the Lord”. Jesus, Jesus, how I trust You. How I’ve proved you over and over. Jesus, Jesus, precious Jesus… Oh for grace to trust You more.

How many times have I said (usually privately) “God,  I KNOW you didn’t bring me this far in life just to let me go. I know you will come through for me this time.”  When I look back on my life I see so many times that I should have been completely sunk. Broken, paralyzed, bankrupt, overwhelmed, cast down, crushed, defeated, jobless, homeless, friendless, etc. But something always happened just at the right time. Something unexpected, something miraculous. Some series of events came together to save the day. That’s what trust is… looking back and seeing the consistency of the hand of God then looking forward and knowing the same will be true for the future.

They say that trust is earned. And I think that’s exactly the point of this song. “How I’ve proved You over and over”.

I have now been overwhelmed with the sense of His bigness compared to my smallness. (I guess that’s the core definition of humility, isn’t it?)  Somehow the world doesn’t seem like such a meaningless place.  Somehow the future doesn’t seem so scary.  Somehow I think things are going to turn out OK (even if the country does collapse in economic ruin). To be in the hand of God is the only safe place to be. “Oh for grace to trust You more.”

Blessings to you all.
Thanks for letting me write what is stylistically and topically somewhat out of characteristic for me.