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• 1Tim 6:20 . . Avoid impious and vain babblings, and oppositions of science
falsely so called:
Not all science is false. However, there are disciplines that fall into a
category called "theoretical" referring to unproven ideas and concepts in
chemistry, astronomy, geology, archeology, medicine, genetics,
paleontology, anthropology, history, literature, physics, engineering,
mathematics, etc.
Impious babbling probably refers to science-sounding arguments
deliberately intended to discredit the Bible.
Vain babbling tells us that science-sounding arguments are futile; defined by
Webster's as trifling and frivolous, i.e. of no real practical use or value.
1Tim 6:20 is especially applicable to informal group discussions, i.e. forums,
bull sessions, and brain storming; conducted by people with a head full of
scientific opinions who likely haven't a clue what they're talking about.
For example: one day at work a man in the break room said it's arrogant to
assume there is no other intelligent life in the universe but that found on
earth. You know why he said that? Because he heard it said first by someone
he admires, ergo: he was perpetuating false science in the form of a
respectable opinion.
People throw that kind of unproven stuff up to Christians all the time in
attempts to debunk their religion and prove that it deserves no more
credibility than myth, superstition, and/or fantasy. But seriously; don't
impossible-to-prove scientific theories deserve the very same labels?
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