TheFonz wrote:I am going to go a different way on this one. If a Christian can dismiss the Genesis account of creation, it will weaken the authority of the Bible.
I strongly disagree, Fonz. I don't think you have to
dismiss Genesis if you accept it as something other than a factual, blow-by-blow, historical account of the actual way the universe, the earth, and life as we know it (including ourselves) came into being. I think dismissing it as a
literal account of those things should only
lend credibility (or, as you view it, "authority") to the Bible, and tremendously
strengthen it as a serious work of literature to be respected by those who hold it in "reverence". Insisting on taking the Genesis account of creation
literally, in the face of the nearly limitless oceans of evidence to the contrary (evidence which, I might add, some consider to be the only trustworthy revelation from God there is and the only revelation needed), truly weakens the credibility of its believers - if not of the Bible itself.
Hanging onto a literal interpretation of the creation story in Genesis is not very much unlike continuing to believe in Santa Claus after your parents tell you there is no such thing, and watching them go shopping, bring home the presents, wrap them, and place them under the tree - without ever observing any "Santa" doing those things. You can stop believing in Santa Claus without giving up your belief in the
reality of Christmas underlying the Santa story - which some might say is far greater than Santa....
Jim