Hi Dunamite!You wrote

Dunamite;38220)
Sorry, if I took a tangent.I am not an evolutionist. Nor am I against evolution. Death and sin are real and metaphors. Are you mixing the two?Death is natural. Everyone ever born has died, including Jesus. Death is also used as a metaphor throughout scripture.You also missed my point. As far as I know there is no test to get into Heaven. We aren't saved by works or knowledge. We don't have to do anything. We don't have to believe in Adam and Eve. We don't have to believe in the Garden of Eden. It does not matter if the earth was created in six literal days or a billion years. It does not matter if God took his time and stepped us through stages or did it all at once.We only have to believe in Jesus Christ and what he accomplished on the cross. We can be wrong about everything else.You can be a Christian and believe in evolution because it isn't about us and what we think. Even if evolution is wrong and you believe in it, you will not be turned away. People believe all kinds of wrong things. That is no basis for determining whether one is a Christian or not. Being a Christian does not make us any better or smarter. It does not mean that we are right about everything. Nor do we have to be perfect or right about this matter or any other so long as we believe that which is required.That is why I find this whole discussion weird. People have this notion that you're doomed to Hell if you are a liberal or if you believe in evolution. Christians come from all backgrounds and believe in a wide range of things.When we become Christian, we are changed in a very real and fundamental way. But that change takes a lifetime to complete. What we believe at various times of our life may be interesting but nothing more. If evolution some how diminished my capacity to believe in the person and the work of Jesus Christ or somehow inhibited the work of the Holy Spirit in my life then I could see the point. You have a different view of what it means to be a Christian from me. Mine is very narrow. It focuses on Jesus and not me. I become a Christian when I believe in him and not by what I hold to be true outside of him.I feel that we are a diverse lot. I feel that Jesus is where we can find common ground. That does not mean that I surrender all of my other views and become something else entirely. Jesus loves us just as we are, flaws and all. The Holy Spirit makes us new and we don't become new on our own initiative. I respectfully say that I don't like discussions of this sort because they attempt to add onto what Jesus did as if what he did was not enough. People say, we also have to agree about this or that. I don't think that it works this way. We can disagree and still be Christian so long as we agree on the core elements. Blessings,Dunamite
Thanks, Dunamite, now we are in the same ball-park! Some questions from your post:
As far as I know there is no test to get into Heaven. We aren't saved by works or knowledge. We don't have to do anything.
I think the bible declares that there IS a test. It is not works or knowledge - it is faith in Jesus and what he did for us. OK, so faith is a gift from God, but since the Bible also states that God wants ALL to be saved. If that is so and it requires
nothing from us then surely everyone WOULD have faith, and yet clearly ALL do NOT have faith. So there must be
some requirement from us, albeit small, an openness, readiness, willingness to let Jesus into one's life, perhaps?
We only have to believe in Jesus Christ and what he accomplished on the cross.
Exactly my point
Because all that you know of what Jesus accomplished on the cross is what the Bible tells you. Therefore
believing in Jesus Christ
also requires
believing in the Bible. And since what Jesus did is concerned with sin then it is important to uderstand what sin is and where it came from. THIS is what I am trying to discuss! What is the evolutionists viewpoint of this when the Bible gives a different explanation?
You can be a Christian and believe in evolution because it isn't about us and what we think. Even if evolution is wrong and you believe in it, you will not be turned away. People believe all kinds of wrong things. That is no basis for determining whether one is a Christian or not.
It is not about belief in evolution per se. I am questioning the repercussions of evolutionary theory on other issues which ARE core fundamentals of Christianity, i.e. where did sin come from?
If evolution some how diminished my capacity to believe in the person and the work of Jesus Christ or somehow inhibited the work of the Holy Spirit in my life then I could see the point.
But this is precisely my point
You have a different view of what it means to be a Christian from me.
I have not stated my view on Christianity, anywhere. I have talked about my difficulties in communicating with God which, according to the Bible, must mean I am without God, i.e. a-theist. But that is not my view of Christianity. I live and work very hard to facilitate people's belief in the Christian God, I read the bible constantly, and devote my life to seeking greater understanding of what God is telling us. Inevitably questions arise and that is why I like to bring them to forum's like this. Christianity is a collective faith and forums are places where people can collect and share. I am just asking a question to help me understand something, I ma not taking a personal stand here on any issue one way or another.
I respectfully say that I don't like discussions of this sort because they attempt to add onto what Jesus did as if what he did was not enough. People say, we also have to agree about this or that. I don't think that it works this way. We can disagree and still be Christian so long as we agree on the core elements.
I agree - but I see this as
being a core element! Christ is only relevant if his atonement is relevant. And his atonement is only relevant if there is something to atone for. Therefore the nature of sin, its origin, and its consequences are core aspects of our faith.For example: One pastor working in the same church that I work for believes, and preaches, that Jesus was just a man, that the resurrection is only symbolic, that there is no 2nd coming, that there is no life after death, that there is no such thing as atonement and that the idea of a God sending his son to death on the cross is a gross form of cruel child abuse! - Yet he calls himself a Christian because he believes in love amongst humans as the highest form of life in the universe - what people call "core elements" is pretty broadly defined in our Christian environment - a terribly depressing fact!