And if we rewound this email thread and played it again, would it transpire again the same way?
These are deep questions.
John
________________________________
From: Steve Martin <steven.dale.martin@gmail.com>
To: Murray Hogg <muzhogg@netspace.net.au>
Cc: ASA <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Mon, October 26, 2009 10:24:32 PM
Subject: Re: [asa] Historical trends in acceptance of evolution by orthodox Christians WAS Re: [asa] Denomenational Change
Hi Murray,
Well, I'd call this conversation a mutation rather than a morph - and an (ahem) intelligently designed mutation at that. I was following up on one of Ted's comments re: orthodox scientists ... to me, the historical trends re: holding both orthodox theology & accepting evolution is very interesting. So, Polkinghorne's comment that:
The Nicene Creed provides us with the outline of a rationally defensible theology which can be embraced with integrity as much today as when it was first formulated in the fourth century. (Science & Trinity, page 29)
>
would have been supported by very few scientists 60-80 years ago (or at least, North American scientists - see: Michael's comment re: the different situation across the pond). Today there is quite a bit of support for this position. And it appears to me that this support is growing rapidly .. and beyond just scientific specialties. Who knows, a generation from now, this acceptance might not even be a minority position anymore.
thanks,
On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 2:46 PM, Murray Hogg <muzhogg@netspace.net.au> wrote:
Hi guys,
>
>I think the definition of "orthodox" has morphed.
>
>Didn't we start by discussing Eastern Orthodox views of evolution - now we seem to have swung to a rather more generic definition of "orthodox" - as in "theologically orthodox"?
>
>-Murray
>
>
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--
Steve Martin (CSCA)
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Received on Tue Oct 27 10:06:11 2009
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