Bible Vs Scientism

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,606
13,863
113
#62
This isn't a flat earth thread, Magenta. It's a "Bible Vs Scientism" thread. And according to Scientism, the earth moves in relation to the sun. In the Bible, it is the sun that moves in relation to the earth. Which one of those is the truth?
Comparing the Bible to Scientism is no more valid than comparing Science to Creationism; it's a strawman argument.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#63
In the heavens God has pitched a tent for the sun.

So God has not pitched a tent for the sun?
Isaiah 40:22... It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in.

No, God has not pitched a literal tent for the sun. Metaphorically, yes, God has spread out the heaven as if it were a tent in which we dwell.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#64
Are you not a flat earth proponent?
I don't know of any such thing as a spherical tent, do you? I am familiar with nomadic tents of Isaiah's day, that were like a dome covering a flat circle of land. What do you think Isaiah and David had in mind when they compared God's heaven to a tent?
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
61,149
30,296
113
#65
Isaiah 40:22... It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in.

No, God has not pitched a literal tent for the sun. Metaphorically, yes, God has spread out the heaven as if it were a tent in which we dwell.
It seems you interpret those types of verses differently than some others might.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#67
Do you mean any of these verses?
All of those verses would convey the idea of the sun moving in relation to the earth, yes. The Hebrew verses (what Jesus called "scripture") don't actually say "rise" and "set". They say "come in" and "go out" - which is more accurate. The NT verses do say "rise" and "set", which is what the sun definitely appears to do. Of course it's not literally what the sun does - whether the earth is flat or a spinning ball.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
61,149
30,296
113
#68
All of those verses would convey the idea of the sun moving in relation to the earth, yes. The Hebrew verses (what Jesus called "scripture") don't actually say "rise" and "set". They say "come in" and "go out" - which is more accurate. The NT verses do say "rise" and "set", which is what the sun definitely appears to do. Of course it's not literally what the sun does - whether the earth is flat or a spinning ball.
Coming in and going out of its tent...
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#69
I have no idea what method God would have used if he had told us how many earth years old the earth is.
I suppose God could have said, "The earth is X years old" at some point, but then we'd be in the same predicament as we are now - trying to ascertain from ancient genealogies exactly when He said those words, and how many years have actually transpired since then. In reality, if we take the Bible at face value, we already have the info we need to make a valid estimate - give or take a thousand years. But not give or take 4.5 billion years. 😉
 
Feb 24, 2022
1,346
288
83
#70
This isn't a flat earth thread, Magenta. It's a "Bible Vs Scientism" thread. And according to Scientism, the earth moves in relation to the sun. In the Bible, it is the sun that moves in relation to the earth. Which one of those is the truth?

And the Bible doesn't say the sun literally resides in a tent. It does say in more than one place that the manner in which God spread out the heaven over the earth is reminiscent of Him spreading a tent out over the earth. Do you believe that Biblical teaching?
Science and the bible are not against one another, rather, they are COMPLEMENTARY. What science fails to explain, the bible does; what is hard to grasp in the bible, it's demonstrated through science. Real science is not a censensus among a bunch of experts, it's a testimony of God's divine providence.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#71
It seems you interpret those types of verses differently than some others might.
As opposed to what? I see your photo of the hanging tent. That is cool and now I want one. But you suppose that's what Isaiah and David had in mind? How do YOU interpret the Biblical descriptions, "spreads out the heaven like a tent" and "pitched a tent in the heaven for the sun"?
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#72
Coming in and going out of its tent...
No, the tent is the entire heaven. David says the sun rushes out of its chamber. Enoch describes it similarly, except it comes out from and enters into many different gates.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#73
Comparing the Bible to Scientism is no more valid than comparing Science to Creationism; it's a strawman argument.
Please point out the strawman I've created. I'm actually contrasting what the Bible teaches with what Scientism teaches, ie: God created the earth during a six day period vs big bang/expansion/accretion/earth during 10 billion year period.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,606
13,863
113
#74
Please point out the strawman I've created. I'm actually contrasting what the Bible teaches with what Scientism teaches, ie: God created the earth during a six day period vs big bang/expansion/accretion/earth during 10 billion year period.
The problem is that you're using the term "scientism" in reference to all science, both valid and falsely so-called.
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#75
Science and the bible are not against one another, rather, they are COMPLEMENTARY. What science fails to explain, the bible does; what is hard to grasp in the bible, it's demonstrated through science. Real science is not a censensus among a bunch of experts, it's a testimony of God's divine providence.
In the OP, I explained that science and the Bible are not at odds... but Scientism (blind faith belief in flawed people's interpretations of raw data, ie: what you called "consensus among experts") and the Bible are very contradictory. For example, the Bible says God created heaven, earth, sea, and all that is in them during a six day period. Scientific data doesn't contradict this account - but Scientism certainly does. Scientism claims that from no earth to earth with humans took 4 billion years - not six days.

Which claim is the truth?
 

MichaelBoll

Active member
May 1, 2022
168
48
28
#76
The problem is that you're using the term "scientism" in reference to all science, both valid and falsely so-called.
Read the OP again. You are mistaken, as I explicitly explained the difference between the two, and haven't conflated the two terms throughout this entire discussion.

Science is an investigation and gathering of raw observational data. Scientism is a faith-based belief in certain CONCLUSIONS drawn from that data by certain flawed human beings.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,606
13,863
113
#77
All of those verses would convey the idea of the sun moving in relation to the earth, yes. The Hebrew verses (what Jesus called "scripture") don't actually say "rise" and "set". They say "come in" and "go out" - which is more accurate. The NT verses do say "rise" and "set", which is what the sun definitely appears to do. Of course it's not literally what the sun does - whether the earth is flat or a spinning ball.
Do the phrases "come in" and "go out" somehow preclude the sun's disappearance over the horizon as the Earth spins on its axis, when viewed from the surface of the Earth?

No.

I suggest that if you want a serious discussion about creation vs evolution, you're going to have to leave the flat earth issue completely out of it.
 
Feb 24, 2022
1,346
288
83
#78
In the OP, I explained that science and the Bible are not at odds... but Scientism (blind faith belief in flawed people's interpretations of raw data, ie: what you called "consensus among experts") and the Bible are very contradictory. For example, the Bible says God created heaven, earth, sea, and all that is in them during a six day period. Scientific data doesn't contradict this account - but Scientism certainly does. Scientism claims that from no earth to earth with humans took 4 billion years - not six days.

Which claim is the truth?
Yeah, scienTISM is definitely a cult. It's essentially Nicolaitanism - "Nico" + "Laity" = Conquering the Commoners. In political terms, it's technocracy.
 

Dino246

Senior Member
Jun 30, 2015
25,606
13,863
113
#79
Read the OP again. You are mistaken, as I explicitly explained the difference between the two, and haven't conflated the two terms throughout this entire discussion.

Science is an investigation and gathering of raw observational data. Scientism is a faith-based belief in certain CONCLUSIONS drawn from that data by certain flawed human beings.
Following up to my previous post, the flat earth hypothesis fits in the latter category. ;)
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
61,149
30,296
113
#80
No, the tent is the entire heaven. David says the sun rushes out of its chamber. Enoch describes it similarly, except it comes out from and enters into many different gates.
A tent is a chamber. Are you refusing to take Scripture literally? @Eli1 might be interested to know that ;)