To Wes I confess. Always observing, though not necessarily commenting. Dr. …

Comment on Christians and the Sabbath by george.

To Wes I confess.

Always observing, though not necessarily commenting.

Dr. Pitman’s exegesis on matters a sundry on this site are manna for the secular palate as well. What is appalling is the internecine venom with which he is attacked. But he handles it like a trooper and continues to espouse the Royal Law of Love. Admirable.

Regarding faith and the interpretation of scriptures it is very telling when individuals want to be absolutely right. To do so would be to understand the mystery of the ‘mind’ of a creator, force, First Cause, whatever dude. Humans use faith to give meaning to their existence as they cannot bear to be inconsequential. Legalism begets authoritarianism to control the collection plate. Then charismatics, most often men, EGW being a rare exception, schism off in a new direction and set themselves up as the new authority. Wes, who is indeed right when it comes to interpreting matters of faith? Something to ponder every seven days 🙂

george Also Commented

Christians and the Sabbath
Hello Pard

More like 8 years or so and I’ve enjoyed the ride. You paint elliptical prose on this cyber board like Dali on canvas, which renderings this ole cowpoke surely does enjoy. Others of a legalistic mind set don’t see the art in that but I’m sure your Creator does and smiles….

And every time I see the noble Dr. Pitman espouse the Royal Law of Love I know he is ridin’ down the right moral trail, even though I think that trail is a tad older than 8000 years (:

Now trail mates don’t have to agree on much at all to enjoy each other’s company and discourse. Maybe that’s what the Creator had in mind after all as opposed to a lot of hair splitin’ and folks thinkin’ they know the divine mind .


Christians and the Sabbath
To Wes

” I, like him, am a third generation Seventh-day Adventist of over 50 years (more like over 80 years) of sabbath keeping, and after reviewing the Bible, not the internet, and my own inner self, in communion with Jesus who Himself gave us the Sabbath, having rested on it at Creation and during it for our redemption, I am convinced that Seventh-day Adventism is a more pivotal message than ever. ”

Well said Pard. I hadn’t realized you and yours had been in the corral for that long. A child’s upbringing is likely to factor into his Big Tent moment at a tender age.

No offence Pard. Just sittin’ on the fence pondering why folks “inner selves” believe the things they do and what they are prepared to do to corroborate it. Guess that might be what those scientific city slickers call confirmation bias, or the devoted call faith. Doggone it Pard, which tail should be waggin’ that ole Canine Truth: faith or scientific method?


Christians and the Sabbath
To Ken and Sean

In your view why would blogging be permitted on the Sabbath?


Recent Comments by george

The Creator of Time
Hello Sean

In fairness to you and your readers I feel like we are being redundant on many points and issues. I need to be respectful that this is an Adventist forum that believes and supports YEC not a platform for my agnosticism.

I do appreciate and thank you for the opportunity to lively debate issues.

Respectfully


The Creator of Time
To Sean

“ A hypothesis about the supernatural world cannot be tested, so it is not scientific. The concept of God, Allah, or other supernatural designer(s), capable of designing the whole Universe, can neither be proved nor disproved. Hence, any claims that any supernatural being or force cause some event is not able to be scientifically validated (however, whether that event really occurred can be scientifically investigated).”

And back to you


The Creator of Time
To Sean

“Remember also that the assumption that future discoveries will one day be able to explain everything via mindless naturalistic mechanisms is not science, but a philosophy of naturalism that is very similar to a blind faith religion.”

How does this compare to the assumption that the Bible will be able to predict the end of the world? Scientific in your estimation or perhaps I really don’t understand how science versus religion works


The Creator of Time
Hello Sean

“I began my investigation with genetic evolution since that is my own personal field of expertise. ”

So have you published papers in scientific peer reviewed journals in this regard? Have you done experiments in this regard? Have you published statistical analysis to demonstrate your theory that macro evolution is mathematically possible?

You are always stating that others have to proof you wrong? Really? If you we’re trying to prove Newton or Einstein wrong would you not have to do so before your scientific peers?

Come on now, as you like to say, do you really scientically think all the biodiversity we witness today cane off a floating Ark some 4000 years ago! Is that really a scientific proposition that is provable or just some just so story?

You see I get the design argument but miracles, prophets, Santa Claus, fairies, ghosts, goblins, arks and the like are not proper subjects for science in my opinion. This is why you are seeing religions, including the progressive side of Adventistism moving more towards acceptance of science as reality, because they understand the modern educated mind will reject them if the stories are too fanciful or don’t make sense.

You see I don’t mind you calling ideas of the meta verse just so stories or not currently scientific as being non falsifiable. You have a point there. I don’t mind you advancing design arguments, especially as it relates to the fine tuned mechanisms of physics and organic life. You have good points there. But please, try to objectively use use that same scientific circumspection to the fantastic claims of the Bible and EGW prophecies or even the age of life on earth. Then perhaps I’ll see a bit of rational sense to your overall position.

Cheers


The Creator of Time
Hi Sean

Your real problem of credibility is your double standard of proof. Put your biblical stories of reality to the same degree of circumspection as you put evolution. To really conclude that all the bio diversity that we see in the world today- apart from that that survived in the water- came off an Ark is probably the most unscientific fantastic claim that even all children see as allegory. There is a reason this is not taught as the source of biodiversity in schools Sean. Yet you as a scientist believe it and think it has an evidentiary basis.

Your arguments on design make much more sense because it is certainly arguable that there is a design to the universe based on the anthropiic principle. It is certainly arguable that a designer like God could have designed a universe like ours but also a designerlike God could have designed a cause and effect evolving universe as well. Like Deism I think ID is worthwhile exploring. But I also think science continues to demonstrate mindless cause and effect mechanisms that don’t require design.

You and Behe are focused on irreducible complexity as an underpinning for design – which for you then becomes the stepping stone to biblical creation. Your methodology is apparent to get ‘educated’ minds to buy into a biblically designer God.

You see I don’t mind admitting that there is still much to do when it comes to understanding how physics and biology work. The best minds in the world continue to work, theorize and experiment in these areas. But you dismiss these efforts with a wave of your hand because they fall outside the biblical narrative so they can’t be true. And it is THAT factor Sean that utterly shatters the rational credibilty of
of creation science as an objective endeavour. The boys at the Discovery Institute understood this and have tried to broaden their approach. Deists understood this as well to get away from cultural myth and move towards a more observational basis for understanding the universe. But sadly Sean l, I think you are so entrenched in your biblical paradigm that you cannot see how your double standard of scientific inquiry harms your credibilty as an objective scientist. If I was to cross examine you in a Court of Law I would have a field day on pointing this discrepancy. And believe me, having cross examined many medical experts in forensic matters I do speak from professional experience.

Yes I know I am stating the obvious as many of your fellow ‘progressive’ Adventist colleagues have stayed before, no doubt to no avail. But, without being smug, just as you have encouraged me to look for God, I encourage you to look very deeply within yourself and look for humbly for rational contradiction. Objective humility is the real start to seeking truth.

Cheers