4. And God said And there was light! And God saw that the light was good. Let there be light!
5. And God said Let there be a huge space between the waters . And it happened! And that happened too! God said, Let the water under the sky be gathered into oceans. Let dry land appear!
6. Then God said: And it happened! Let the land produce plants and trees, each bearing fruit with seeds in it. And God saw that it was good!
7. And God saw that it was good! And God said, Let there be lights in the huge space of the sky, a sun and a moon to give light to the earth.
8. God said: Let the waters be filled with living things. Let birds fly above the earth.
9. God said: Let the land produce all kinds of living creatures: cattle and snakes and tigers.
11. Then God said, Let’s make human beings; let’s make them like us. They can take care of the fish and the birds and all of the animals for us. God blessed them: Have children, fill the earth and bring it under your control.
19. From 2,000,000 to present Homo annarborensis Homo habilis Homo instrumentalis
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21. Creation and/or Evolution How should we read Genesis 1 & 2 in light of current scientific theory?
22. Creation and/or Evolution Origins: A Reformed Look at Creation, Design, & Evolution by Deborah B. Haarsma and Loren D. Haarsma (www.faithaliveresources.org/origins) What questions does this topic raise for you? We will identify and analyze the different approaches to the topic Perspectives on an Evolving Creation , Keith B. Miller ed. Eerdmans Pub.
23. Creation and/or Evolution Session 1: God’s Word and God’s World Session 2: Interpretations of Genesis 1 & 2 Session 3: Evidences of Evolution Session 4: Intelligent Design Session 5: Human Origins (Who were Adam and Eve anyway?) Session 6: Human Origins, cont. Emergent Complexities
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25. Principles of Biblical Interpretation 1. Each passage should be interpreted in light of the rest of the Bible. Progressive revelation— progressive understanding— narrative advance 2. Attention must be paid to the genre of the text: poetry, proverb, narrative (history, epic, legend, anecdote, fable, myth…)
26. Principles of Biblical Interpretation 3. How did the original author and the intended audience understand the text? The Holy Spirit had no intention to teach astronomy; and in proposing instruction meant to be common to the simplest and most uneducated person He made use by Moses…of the popular language…. Calvin
27. Principles of Scientific Interpretation Observation Hypothesis Prediction Testing Theory: a comprehensive explanation of some aspect of nature that is supported by a vast body of evidence (e.g. heliocentric theory, theory of relativity)
28. Criteria for Good Scientific Theory: Explanatory power of large amounts of data Predictive power (testable expectations) Fruitfulness (ability to generate new questions and new directions of research) Aesthetics (beauty, simplicity, symmetry) The reason evolutionary theory is a powerful theory is that it makes sense of an incredible variety of observations and continues to generate fruitful and testable hypotheses.
29. When Science and Biblical Interpretation Clash Science - a handmaiden to theology Science - an equal partner with theology Copernicus : from geo- to heliocentrism He set the earth on its foundations; it can never be moved. …The sun knows when to go down. -Psalm 104: 5, 19 The sun stopped in the middle of the sky… -Joshua 10:13
30. When Science and Biblical Interpretation Clash Science - superior to theology Materialism is absolute, we cannot allow a divine foot in the door. -Richard Lewontin The universe that we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference. –Richard Dawkins