cwpayton
AH fanatic
OH ok, I did pay attention , now if you will red my very lates post , and that is that.Sigh. I have no idea what you think you are trying to say.
First of all, I have questioned no one's sincerity of belief - however divergent they may be from reality. I also have been very clear in my statements that I believe in a creator and a creation event that our best evidence suggests began at least 14 billion years ago - at least for this universe and this time around. What I have questioned is the absolute nonsense that the earth was created 6 thousand years ago.
I also have no idea what you think you are proving by your creation cites. I AGREE. As I said. I believe there was a creation event by a creator. But no one you have quoted or the hundreds who have attempted to translate those cultural foundation stories had a clue of the time required or the incredible vastness of that creation. We know far more now, and none of that knowledge should conflict with a belief that intelligent design created this vast universe over those billions of years. In fact it should reinforce that belief.
And no, fossils in a riverbed are not evidence of a catastrophic event. Spend an hour on google and look into this yourself. On my property, those fossils are from an ancient seabed that existed where Texas does now during the Cretaceous period 100 million years ago. They are freed from the limestone in which they are imbedded by erosion. I should note, this is not a theory or my opinion.
Moreover, if you had paid an iota of attention to what I have written, you would know that I do believe that there is actual significant evidence of a catastrophic, planet-wide event that occurred approximately 12-14 thousand years ago - geologic and cultural. It even has a name - the Younger Dryas. What a number of scientists believe, and I think it is a reasonable belief, is the cataclysmic results were so severe that they remained in the cultural memory of numerous developing peoples to be eventually recorded in works like Sumerian epic of Ziusudra, the Mesopotamian epic of Gilgamish, the Hindu legends of Manu, and of course Genesis. All of these legends are referring to something terrible that happened in the dim past.
What I admittedly have little patience with is a self-delusional acceptance in the 21st century of an Elmer Gantry like assertion that the earth was created 6000 years ago. Interestingly, we can point to the individual who came up with this silliness and the point in history when he did it. His name was Archbishop James Usher (an Anglican no less and perish the thought for my fundamentalist friends), who died in 1656. It was he who "calculated" the date by summing genealogical timelines, or "begats," in the Book of Genesis. His pseudo analytical conclusion was that the creation was completed on the night preceding October 23, 4004 BC! If we chooses to think about it, I guess we are left with a question of whether God or the good Bishop Usher promulgated that 6000 years old assertion. My money is on the latter.
Thanks to geologic analysis beginning in the late 18th century, spurred by the burgeoning interest in science of the Enlightenment, it was quickly determined that the earth was far older. Almost as quickly most organized Christian denominations quietly dropped the clearly wrong 6,000 year claim.
I frankly could care less what an individual believes as long as it does not affect my life. Spend 20 minutes on X and you will realize people are capable of believing almost anything.

