Re: [asa] anti-evolutionism and deism

From: George Murphy <gmurphy@raex.com>
Date: Fri Apr 20 2007 - 11:08:25 EDT

----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Wallace" <wdwllace@sympatico.ca>
Cc: "'ASA Discussion Group'" <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Friday, April 20, 2007 7:47 AM
Subject: Re: [asa] anti-evolutionism and deism

> To follow up on all the excellent notes but especially Jon Tandys and
> Michaels. I have never figured out if:
>
> 1)God established and maintains the laws that we observe
> or
> 2)The laws that we observe are simply the normal (ie usual) way that God
> interacts with the universe. Implies that God continually makes decisions
> as to how matter-energy and space-time will behave. This would imply a
> view of providence that in some matters at least is extremely particular.
>
> I tend to lean towards #1 but don't have any real solid reasons for that
> choice. The Bible does not seem to say anything that applies or at least
> I have not found it. Doubt any experiment could tell the difference and
> am not sure it matters in any case as I am not a deist.

2) suggests that matter is just inert pieces of "stuff" that God moves
around according to arbitrary rules, like those of chess. The game does
have fixed rules but they could be quite different: There is nothing
intrinsic to the pieces shaped like horses that requires that they move in
the way that the rules of chess specify for the knight. But everything that
we know about, e.g., electrons & electromagnetic fields indicates that the
motion of an electron in such a field is closely related to what an electron
& an EM field _are_.

1) is more consistent with the belief that God actually cooperates with
created entities - i.e., that creatures actually do things in the world,
though they do not do them independently of God.

Shalom
George
http://web.raex.com/~gmurphy/
 

To unsubscribe, send a message to majordomo@calvin.edu with
"unsubscribe asa" (no quotes) as the body of the message.
Received on Fri Apr 20 10:09:34 2007

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Fri Apr 20 2007 - 10:09:34 EDT