shunyadragon
everything is in pencil
Really? And yet Aristotle's commentaries on the nature and structure of language hold today, and are still a rich source of investigation. Some of the comments of the Greek philosophers continue to be studied, plays written thousands of years ago provide telling insights into the human condition, the Greek myths are a fantastic compendium of psychological insights. There is music and there is art and there is poetry that is still sublime. A Greek philosopher worked out the world was round and its diameter by sticking two sticks in the ground and measuring their shadows ... I stand in awe of that, I couldn't do it, let alone conceive it ... so I have no problem in believing the fact that the ancient world did not possess our tech nor our accumulated empirical knowledge, but that does not render them incapable of offering an insightful commentary on human nature, or the nature of God if God exists.
So what!?!?!? This does not remotely address the problems I presented concerning the problems of basing doctrines and dogmas of a religion on ancient myths. I fully acknowledge the ancient world did possess wisdom and empirical knowledge, and again that is not the issue you are side stepping and ignoring.
Dare I say it, but had the settlers in America had paid a bit more attention to Native American insight and wisdom, the world would perhaps not be in the mess it is today ... they had none of our science, but they had a world view that is superior and more fitted to the world than ours. We took a wrong turn at the Enlightenment, and we've been incapable of correcting that scientific error ever since, even though the problem is staring us in the face!
The Baha'i Faith acknowledges that the wisdom and spiritual beliefs are founded in Revelation as the wisdom and spiritual knowledge of the Native Americans, but again I would not base doctrines and dogmas of religion today on ancient myths of the Aztecs that practiced human sacrifice based on these myths and ancient beliefs. Unfortunately Judaism, Christianity and Islam do not acknowledge the wisdom and spiritual teachings of all cultures and religions of the world a Revelation as the Baha'i Faith does.
But perhaps none of that, I'm sure, is a problem for you? It's the facts that matter, and science tells us what is and what isn't a fact, and if science says no, it's not a fact ...
Clear exaggerated what ever!?!? . . . as this does not reflect anything I ever posted concerning science. Science has never told anyone what is factual beyond the observed objective facts of our physical existence that the theories and hypothesis are based on, anyone may observe these 'facts' if they wish to.
Not quite the case, I think, but I can see what you mean. Modern theology, for example, takes into account the latest scientific developments. I could cite the world-famous theologians of the last century, but I don't think that answers your question.
The problem is modern advances in science has divided Christianity on serious theological grounds and assumptions. The foundation doctrines and dogmas are based on an the assumption that the events of Genesis are literally true, and it is perfectly logical for the fundamentalists to believe the authors of the NT and the church fathers that what they believed is indeed true.
As evidenced by the posts on this forum, whilst the debate is acknowledged as not one of science v religion, it is the a priori acceptance of what constitutes a 'fact' or how we judge the veracity of an 'event' is according to scientific principle. Even if the event is declared to be a miracle and will therefore lie outside the scope of scientific explanation. Do realise the authors of Scripture knew what a miracle was, even if they did not know the biological details of procreation, for example. The Virgin Birth was as problematic for them then as for us now.
Beliefs like Virgin Birth, the Fall, Original Sin, and the world flood may be considered problematic, but I consider it extremely severely problematic that these beliefs are indeed considered based on some degree of literal events as 'facts' by many if not most Christians.