I didn't realize that
is it necessary to believe in the six day creation?
It is not a salvific issue, but it is the biblical, correct view. A compromise with Genesis can lead to compromises elsewhere.
I didn't realize that
is it necessary to believe in the six day creation?
It is not a salvific issue, but it is the biblical, correct view. A compromise with Genesis can lead to compromises elsewhere.
so you can tell what is important
and
what is not?
Yes, I don't even need the Pope or Catholic Church. Wisdom and knowledge comes from the Bible, our authority for truth and practice. I have opinions and am not dogmatic about everything. We can make a case that faith in the true Christ is essential for eternal life. I cannot make a case that affirming YEC, theistic evolution, gap theory, etc. is a heaven/hell issue. Those who reject God are atheists. Those who reject His role as Creator are compromising truth to try to embrace secular science.
do you need to go to church?
We are saved by a person, not an organization (Jn. 1:12; Jn. 3:16; Rom. 10:9-10; I Jn. 5:11-13).
Having said that, a Christ/Bible-centered church is vital for spiritual growth, serving, fellowship, corporate worship, instruction, mission, giving/receiving spiritual gifts, etc.
I Jn. tells us in principle that if we are vertically in relationship with God, then we should be in horizontal relationship with His people.
We do not need RC Church for sacraments, traditions, popes, etc. One can be saved apart from the RC Church, but one cannot be saved by trusting the Church, but not Christ Himself.
Relationship, not religion/ritual.
is going to church salvific?
How did you find TOL?
You will find various "cliques" here. Like one that I like of intolerant, YEC, Bible thumping, atheist mocking, happy to share the gospel with anybody that will listen group.
The theory of evilution thrives on the 'gain of genetic information' from one generation to the next while the truth of Creation thrives on the 'loss of genetic information' from one generation to the next. The great variety we see in Creation today is due to a loss of information from the original felines and canines and primates and so on.I'm searching for the adaptive evolutionary processes responsible for taking the limited number of living things on the Ark, into the world of their descendants in all their vast array.
When you have some time you should read Does God Exist?I'm new to Colorado Springs and into Creationism, I was looking for Creationist events and networks in the area. I found the Rocky Mountain Creation Fellowship with podcasts of Bob Enyart Real Science Fridays. It said if you wanted to comment to come here and I did.
I'm searching for the adaptive evolutionary processes responsible for taking the limited number of living things on the Ark, into the world of their descendants in all their vast array.
The theory of evilution thrives on the 'gain of genetic information' from one generation to the next while the truth of Creation thrives on the 'loss of genetic information' from one generation to the next. The great variety we see in Creation today is due to a loss of information from the original felines and canines and primates and so on.
You know much about ERVs?
I know that evolutionists, particularly the Talk Origins crowd have a deeply flawed homology argument based on them:
With more than 100 members, CERV 1/PTERV1 is one of the most abundant families of endogenous retroviruses in the chimpanzee genome. (Genome Biol. 2006). They can be found in African great apes but not in humans. What is more the ERV virus is nearly extinct in the human genome with only a couple that actually work. The only thing that ERVs are proof of is the lengths evolutionists will go to to conflate and confuse the evidence. (Do Chimpanzees and Humans Share a Common Ancestor)
Now I don't know if you are arguing that ERVs have something to do with adaptations but ERVs make a terrible argument for common descent.
Grace and peace,
Mark
OK, cool. Feel free to jump into that thread. I don't have much of a clue on biology.
I'm trying to argue that maybe ERVs have a useful purpose which might explain some of the similarity that Alate_One insists on. But if she is wrong about the degree of similarity then perhaps there is no need.![]()
It's unfortunate that YECs don't take more of an interest in the life sciences since genetics was born of this foundational phenomenon:
“Gärtner, by the results of these transformation experiments, was led to oppose the opinion of those naturalists who dispute the stability of plant species and believe in a continuous evolution of vegetation. He perceives in the complete transformation of one species into another an indubitable proof that species are fixed with limits beyond which they cannot change.” (G. Mendel)
Christians who believe the Bible and take Genesis literally strongly affirm limits beyond which one species cannot transform into another. Actually it's not at the species level, it's usually at the genus level. Notice the kingdom level is beyond imagination, there is a reason for that:
O rite, and what mechanism has been identified that fixes the limit of change thus far and no further?
The S phase of the eukaryotic cell cycle:
In the living cell, DNA undergoes frequent chemical change, especially when it is being replicated (in S phase of the eukaryotic cell cycle). Most of these changes are quickly repaired. Those that are not result in a mutation. Thus, mutation is a failure of DNA repair. Mutations
...but not all. Germline mutations can (and do) get fixed in populations. If DNA had 100% fidelity in replication, you might have a point.