Wrangler
Well-Known Member
No, it doesn’t. That’s exegesis.That sentence describes the state of the universe before God began the act of creation by saying "Let there be light."
See post # 839.
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No, it doesn’t. That’s exegesis.That sentence describes the state of the universe before God began the act of creation by saying "Let there be light."
Okay, I now see that my mistake was in not explicitly citing the second sentence of the Bible
Your claim is that the first paragraph of the Bible "clearly" proves God is not all-powerful, which has NOTHING to do with what I want to believe about Creation.BTW if you want to believe in a creation-from-nothing scenario
The earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the the [sic] face of the waters.(Genesis 1:2, RSV)
That sentence describes the state of the universe before God began the act of creation by saying "Let there be light." That means that the substance of the earth and the waters both existed first, before God began to create the rest of the universe. God therefore fashioned the universe from the preexisting substances of the earth and the waters and did not create it from nothing.
One of the sophisticated concepts used by great Christian theologians is that of "The Ground of Being." This concept indicates not that God is the fact of things existing, but that God is the basis for the existence of all things. God is more fundamental to existing things than anything else. So fundamental to the existence of all things is God, that God can be thought of as the basis upon which things exist, the ground their being. To say that God is The ground of being or being itself, is to say that there is something we can sense that is so special about the nature of being that it hints at this fundamental reality upon which all else is based.Okay, I now see that my mistake was in not explicitly citing the second sentence of the Bible:
The earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the the [sic] face of the waters.(Genesis 1:2, RSV)
That sentence describes the state of the universe before God began the act of creation by saying "Let there be light." That means that the substance of the earth and the waters both existed first, before God began to create the rest of the universe. God therefore fashioned the universe from the preexisting substances of the earth and the waters and did not create it from nothing. So yes, the order of the events is very important. I thought that was pretty obvious, but apparently not.
In many ancient cultures the preexisting material was called the chaos. The preexistence of the chaos was a very widely held belief in the ancient world and would not have been considered weird or odd 2500 years ago. To modern eyes, yes-- the idea that the material substances of the earth and the waters both preexisted seems silly. But that is a modern perspective imposed on writers of the ancient world whose ideas and thoughts were products of their time.
The first three words of the Bible are "In the beginning..." That invites the question "Beginning of... what?" There is a Gnostic tradition that there was a time before the time of Yahweh, and that the chaos was created by other, more ancient spirits before Yahweh even existed. So there is evidence that some ancient writers and thinkers were uncomfortable with the notion of a preexisting chaos. But that was by no means a universal concern.
BTW if you want to believe in a creation-from-nothing scenario then you should go all-in with the scientific theory of the Big Bang, because that is truly based on creation-from-nothing. Or, at least, nothing more than a momentary quantum fluctuation. The book "A Universe From Nothing," by Lawrence M. Krauss," does a wonderful job of describing that model for a lay audience.
The author of the creation fairy tale clearly cared greatly about the sequence of statements in his story as he went to the trouble of enumerating each of the days of the creation. Each day of the story has clear boundary markers. Each begins with "And God said...", and each ends with "And there was evening and there was morning a <nth> day." There are no such boundary markers around the second sentence of the first paragraph. That's because that sentence does not describe any actions taken by God, but instead describes the state of the universe before the first day. Note that the second sentence is written in past tense. That's because it describes how things were before God began the act of creation. The earth was. The waters were. I maintain that the author of the story wrote it that way deliberately because he believed that the material substances of the earth and the waters preexisted. And as I said in earlier posts, that was a very widely held belief in the ancient world.No, it doesn’t. That’s exegesis.
See post # 839.
Hmmm. As said exegesis.There are no such boundary markers around the second sentence of the first paragraph. That's because that sentence does not describe any actions taken by God, but instead describes the state of the universe before the first day.
Is your point based on cosmology or philosophy? A preexisting chaos can't be proven by cosmology which means you have to take a philosophical approach. Be careful with those false philosophies spawned from the Enlighten Era, that "enlightened" mankind with communism and the synthesis of all heresies: Modernism.If you are going to read ancient texts you have to begin by setting aside all of your preconceptions. Christian orthodoxy holds that God created the universe from nothing. The point of my original post was to show that the story of the creation is actually based on the notion of a preexisting chaos.
Your criticisms have been demolished repeatedly in the not-distant-past, by many men and women of great learning. That rules me out. Your criticisms won't hold up to scrutiny because your premise on the nature of God is flawed. Worse, your premise "the Catholic Catechism doesn't explain how the first paragraph of the Bible should be interpreted" is a gross misrepresentation of what the Catechism is for, and a false assumption of what it contains.And that is the exact opposite of what Christian orthodoxy claims. It is interesting to note that the Catholic Catechism doesn't explain how the first paragraph of the Bible should be interpreted. I suspect that's because the Church doesn't want to open itself to the types of criticisms I have raised.
You've just contradicted yourself.Verse 1 explicitly stated that God created everything, aka the heavens and the Earth. Any claim to the contrary using verses in the same paragraph are specious.
I believe that I have already answered all your questions in earlier posts. I have stated my reading of the story as clearly as I can, and others on this thread appear to have understood what I mean. But just to summarize what I already said-- several times-- I'll answer each of your questions below.Hmmm. As said exegesis.
Verse 1 explicitly stated that God created everything, aka the heavens and the Earth. Any claim to the contrary using verses in the same paragraph are specious.
To satisfy you, how would the Genesis account have to be written in the 1st paragraph to assuage your apprehension?
If I claimed to have beaten Mike Tyson in a boxing ring, how could details I provide about how I achieved that be used to justify the opposite; that I did not beat Mike Tyson? Sounds like someone with an agenda.
- “God created the heavens and the earth” the text states.
- You want that to mean he merely molded what already existed.
- And then, since you pre-suppose it means God did not create what already existed, conclude he lacks the ability to create matter.
- Finally, you arrive at your desired conclusion, pre-supposition, on top of pre-supposition, that God is not all powerful.
This lists your position. Yet this leaves the question of where did the matter you pre-suppose existed before Creation come from?
Pope Benedict XVI, gave four homilies on creation in the Liebfrauenkirche, the cathedral church of Munich in Germany. 5 In his first homily, entitled “God the Creator,” he discusses the principles that govern his reading of Genesis. He begins by recalling the opening words of the Sacred Scriptures that highlight the creative action of God “in the beginning.” However, he goes on to ask the question that lies at the heart of the creationist debate: Are these words true? Do they count for anything? In order to answer these questions, he suggests three criteria for interpreting the Genesis text:I believe that I have already answered all your questions in earlier posts. I have stated my reading of the story as clearly as I can, and others on this thread appear to have understood what I mean. But just to summarize what I already said-- several times-- I'll answer each of your questions below.
1. "God created the heavens and the earth" the text says.
Yes, absolutely, that's exactly what the first sentence of the Bible says.
2. You want that to mean he merely molded what already existed.
Uh, NO. What I said was that the SECOND sentence describes the substance of the earth and the waters as already existing BEFORE the first day of creation. You apparently think that sentence is irrelevant, or that it somehow references actions God took later in the sequence of creation. That sentence says "The earth was..." and "...the Spirit of God was moving over the waters." That's extremely explicit. It describes the earth and the waters as already existed before God began the act of creation on Day 1. So if the material substances of the earth and the waters already existed, then God must have fashioned the rest of the universe from those preexisting substances. After all, all living forms of life on planet earth are comprised of raw materials that can be found in the earth and the waters. In fact, listen to how the story describes the creation of life:
And God said, "Let the waters bring forth swarms of living creatures..."(Genesis 1:20, RSV)
Note that this passage doesn't say that God created the living creatures. It says that the waters were to "bring forth" the living creatures. That is, the material substances necessary for the creation of life already existed in the preexisting material substances of the chaos, and God merely called upon the waters to assemble living creatures from the existing substances necessary for life. That, by the way, is very similar to the creation as told in other ancient myths of Egypt and Mesopotamia.
But I'm willing to concede that the same reasoning does not apply to the creation of the sun, the moon, the planets, and the stars. So okay, God must have created the matter for the heavenly objects.
3. And then, since you pre-suppose it means God did not create what already existed, conclude that he lacks the ability to create matter.
I said that God did not create either the substance of the earth or the waters because that's what the second sentence says. If you think it means something different, then tell me exactly what you think it means.
4. Finally, you arrive at your desired conclusion, pre-supposition on top of pre-supposition, that God is not all powerful.
Well if God did not create the preexisting substances of the earth and the waters, that must be because God was not capable of creating them. What other conclusion could there be? Again, this gets back to the interpretation of the second sentence.
5. This leaves the question of where did the matter you pre-suppose existed before Creation come from?
I'm not the one presupposing the existence of the substance of the earth or the waters. It's the author of the fairy tale who began his story with that supposition. I suggest you take that question up with him.
You appear to have completely missed a point I made in my first posting on this issue-- that the first paragraph is an introduction. It's the author telling you, the audience, "I'm going to tell you the story of the creation of the universe, and here's the state of the universe at the time the creation began."
That's about all I have to say about the matter. I won't respond to any more of your posts on this topic unless you tell me exactly how you are interpreting the second sentence. Here it is once again, for reference:
The earth was without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirit of God was moving over the the [sic] face of the waters.(Genesis 1:2, RSV)
I've given you my interpretation-- several times. Now let's hear yours.
Yes, I agree with the statement you cited of Cardinal Ratzinger. The story of the creation is myth, not fact. In my original posting (#834 on this thread) I cited what the Catholic Catechism has to say about the creation:Pope Benedict XVI, gave four homilies on creation in the Liebfrauenkirche, the cathedral church of Munich in Germany. 5 In his first homily, entitled “God the Creator,” he discusses the principles that govern his reading of Genesis. He begins by recalling the opening words of the Sacred Scriptures that highlight the creative action of God “in the beginning.” However, he goes on to ask the question that lies at the heart of the creationist debate: Are these words true? Do they count for anything? In order to answer these questions, he suggests three criteria for interpreting the Genesis text:
First, he proposes that the exegete “must distinguish between the form of portrayal and the content that is portrayed.” 6 He must keep in mind that the Bible is, first and foremost, a religious book and not a natural science textbook. Thus, Cardinal Ratzinger concludes that Genesis does not and cannot provide a scientific explanation of how the world arose. Rather, it is a book that seeks to describe things in such a way that the reader is able to grasp profound religious realities.
- the distinction between form and content in the creation narrative,
- the unity of the Bible,
- and the hermeneutical importance of Christology.
It uses images to communicate religious truth, images that were chosen from what was understandable at the time the text was written, “images which surrounded the people who lived then, which they used in speaking and in thinking, and thanks to which they were able to understand the greater realities.” 7 In other words, the Catholic exegete is called to respect the text as it is. He is called to read Genesis as its human author wished it to be read, not as a scientific treatise, but as a religious narrative that communicates profound truths about the Creator.
Reading Genesis with Cardinal Ratzinger - Homiletic & Pastoral Review
How is a Catholic supposed to read the first chapter of Genesis that details the six days of creation? In a lecture entitled, “Restoration of Traditionalwww.hprweb.com
"Obvious" to you. Let me type this slowly so you understand ... we might use the word "universe" to refer to everything. The ancients used the phrase "heavens and earth" to refer to everything.You've just contradicted yourself.
The heavens and the earth are very obviously not "everything".
And that is false. You are inventing a standard designed to fail the Biblical narrative. The absence of evidence is not evidence in support of an opposing proposition. You got a nasty Appeal to Ignorance going there.Uh, NO. What I said was that the SECOND sentence describes the substance of the earth and the waters as already existing BEFORE the first day of creation.
Cardinal Ratzinger didn't say the creation story is myth. He said there must be a distinction between form and content. Your argument is based on content in the absence of form.Yes, I agree with the statement you cited of Cardinal Ratzinger. The story of the creation is myth, not fact. In my original posting (#834 on this thread) I cited what the Catholic Catechism has to say about the creation:
You make an extraordinary claim that God had drawn the world from pre-existent matter. Does that mean "pre-existent matter" had no beginning? "pre-existent matter" came from infinity? How did "pre-existent matter" get there in the first place? This is where you defy the first three words of Genesis: "In the beginning..." by sticking to a rather rigid literal viewpoint.We believe that God needs no pre-existent thing or any help in order to create, nor is creation any sort of necessary emanation from the divine substance. God creates freely “out of nothing”:If God had drawn the world from pre-existent matter, what would be so extraordinary in that? A human artisan makes from a given material whatever he wants, while God shows his power by starting from nothing to make all he wants.(Catholic Catechism, 296; Part 1, Section 2, Chapter 1, Article 1, Paragraph 4)
No, I am implying thatMy preceding posts were merely intended to show that the Catechism's position is the exact opposite of what the story of the creation actually says. Are you implying that the position of the Church has changed since the publication of the Catechism?
Faith is not based on assumptions. Faith is compatible with reason. Since you lack faith, you have to make assumptions about the nature of God, falling into the trap of materialism and rationalism.If so the Church should update its Catechism to reflect its current understanding. Or do you mean that we should just ignore the entire story of the creation in Genesis and assume that God created the universe from nothing?
All Catholic doctrine is derived from the Bible, explicitly or implicitly. You are at odds with what the Bible says about creation because you uphold content and ignore form. You treat God as if He were another item in the universe, apart from "pre-existent matter". That is simply a form of atom worship.THAT would be an astonishing admission! Here's what the Pope had to say about the Catechism when he approved it for publication:
The Catechism of the Catholic Church, which I approved June 25th last and the publication of which I today order by virtue of my Apostolic Authority, is a statement of the Church’s faith and catholic doctrine, attested to or illumined by Sacred Scripture, the Apostolic Tradition, and the Church’s Magisterium. I declare it to be a sure norm for teaching the faith and thus a valid and legitimate instrument for ecclesial communication.(Catholic Catechism, On the Publication of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, pg. 5-6)Note that the statement says only that Catholic faith and doctrine are "attested to or illumined" by the Bible-- not expressly and exclusively derived from the Bible. But even so I don't see how it can be argued that the creation-out-of-nothing doctrine could have been either "attested to or illumined" by the actual story of the Creation. It's a doctrinal position, yes. But it is absolutely at odds with what the Bible actually says.
Uh, NO. What I said was that the SECOND sentence describes the substance of the earth and the waters as already existing BEFORE the first day of creation.
The Rev.Atheist is force fitting a literal chronological account into a narrative that was never intended to be literal. Judaism doesn't view Genesis in that way. They should know something about it since they wrote it.Having re-read these verses over and over I'm no longer in agreement with you.
Surely the entire first day of creation is covered by ALL the verses 1 thru 5
Thus on that first day god created:
1. The heavens and the earth (which included it's formless existence and the deeps/waters on it/within it)
2. Light
Oh come come ! They are words in a book written by men likely millions of years after the Earth was created. It's entirely possible that it's all a myth, a simple story.It is impossible to dismiss the events of Genesis 1 as a mere legend. They are accounts of real history, even if they are told in a style of historical writing (3000 years old) that Westerners do not typically use.
Cardinal Ratzinger didn't say the creation story is myth. He said there must be a distinction between form and content. Your argument is based on content in the absence of form.
You make an extraordinary claim that God had drawn the world from pre-existent matter. Does that mean "pre-existent matter" had no beginning? "pre-existent matter" came from infinity? How did "pre-existent matter" get there in the first place? This is where you defy the first three words of Genesis: "In the beginning..." by sticking to a rather rigid literal viewpoint.
No, I am implying that
1) You are not reading the Catechism correctly
2) "pre-existent matter" is a philosophical argument that defies science.
Furthermore, the truths of science and the truths of the faith cannot contradict themselves. Truth cannot contradict truth. Doctrines deepen with more clarity over time, they develop without intrinsic change.
Faith is not based on assumptions. Faith is compatible with reason. Since you lack faith, you have to make assumptions about the nature of God, falling into the trap of materialism and rationalism.
All Catholic doctrine is derived from the Bible, explicitly or implicitly. You are at odds with what the Bible says about creation because you uphold content and ignore form. You treat God as if He were another item in the universe, apart from "pre-existent matter". That is simply a form of atom worship.
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Atheists Seem to Have Almost a Childlike Faith in the Omnipotence of Atoms
The atheist places extraordinary faith in matter. Indeed, this is a faith of a non-rational, almost childlike kind.www.ncregister.com
You make an extraordinary claim that God had drawn the world from pre-existent matter. Does that mean "pre-existent matter" had no beginning? "pre-existent matter" came from infinity? How did "pre-existent matter" get there in the first place? This is where you defy the first three words of Genesis: "In the beginning..." by sticking to a rather rigid literal viewpoint.
Furthermore, the truths of science and the truths of the faith cannot contradict themselves. Truth cannot contradict truth. Doctrines deepen with more clarity over time, they develop without intrinsic change.
How do you square that with the fact that Heaven wasn't created until Day 2? (Genesis 1:8)Having re-read these verses over and over I'm no longer in agreement with you.
Surely the entire first day of creation is covered by ALL the verses 1 thru 5
Thus on that first day god created:
1. The heavens and the earth (which included it's formless existence and the deeps/waters on it/within it)
2. Light