pood
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- agnostic
Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.
What does this sentence even mean?
Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.
Miracles don't work. Impossible things don't happen.Then comes the question: how do miracles work? Natural but unlikely events, or something that transcends physics?
YES! Thank you.A lot of the heaviest and most preposterous BS in Christian Doctrine seems to have been added later by theologian's metaphysical speculation. Including the all-everything nonsense. Enough of it to give metaphysics a bad name.
Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.Nothing at all magical about that. Basic chemistry.As magic as when science says we're made from space dust.Be it order from chaos, a living man conjured from the dust of the earth is still magic.![]()
Magic and Miracles seen as the same thing confuses the discussion. We're talking from different angles (not that this is really of interest to you (plural)).
So the miracle of life... which starts inside stars... but not the first ones as they were pure hydrogen/helium combos... but given enough time, future generations of stars would have more "heavier" elements. And more and more elements were being created. A few billion years later... have enough carbon, oxygen, hydrogen to start make organic molecules. Of which we can observe huge clouds of in outer space, just floating there.Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.Nothing at all magical about that. Basic chemistry.As magic as when science says we're made from space dust.Be it order from chaos, a living man conjured from the dust of the earth is still magic.![]()
Magic and Miracles seen as the same thing confuses the discussion. We're talking from different angles (not that this is really of interest to you (plural)).
Strangely in return, people that claim "magic" is biblical, are ignorant of the theological concept.
The bible was correct on the dust part then? Dust as being made up of very small things?
The bible is not against 'scientific names' for testing processes, so there's no argument being made here.
Oddly enough. There is an interesting thought of pondering I've heard that goes by the idea that if a god or God wanted to create life, he would make it able to adapt to it's surroundings and spread to other environments to adapt, flourish and survive.
Then perhaps a theistic view (by some) that takes to the idea...that if evolution was part of the plan then the 'evolved' bit wouldn't really be a difference because as quoted above. that would also be a conjured up magic.
My view as a modern day theist of today in the language of today. In a manner of speaking... God is the ultimate scientist,
The point is mute if you're portraying a different concept to mine.
The point is that God is like a mob boss defending his monopoly. He isn't against the use of magic, he just insists that everyone must use His magic - the preist humbly begs God to transsubtantiate the bread, and God does the deed and takes his cut of the credit.A priest transforms bread into the body of Christ by saying words. That is holy.
A witch casts a spell and that is evil.
It also founders on the fact that not one Nobel Prize has ever been awarded to God.Saying “God is the ultimate scientist” is a feel-good metaphor, not an explanation. It doesn’t predict anything, test anything, or add to our understanding. It’s theology scrambling to stay relevant by piggybacking on discoveries it never made.
It 'even' means that, when you the atheist make those arguments about "magic" i.e. the conjuring or demonic invocations to false gods and images, which is written and condemed by the God of the bible, it therefore means...Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.
What does this sentence even mean?
That actually is a fair point of view. We would have to mutually agree on the particulars of defining terms of course.Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.Nothing at all magical about that. Basic chemistry.As magic as when science says we're made from space dust.Be it order from chaos, a living man conjured from the dust of the earth is still magic.![]()
Magic and Miracles seen as the same thing confuses the discussion. We're talking from different angles (not that this is really of interest to you (plural)).
The distinction may lie between Magic, events that contradict physics, and Miracles as natural events, things that just don't happen often, an extraordinary event seen by some as being miraculous. Whereas a God creating a man out of the dust of the earth may be classed as Magic.
So the miracle of life... which starts inside stars... but not the first ones as they were pure hydrogen/helium combos... but given enough time, future generations of stars would have more "heavier" elements. And more and more elements were being created. A few billion years later... have enough carbon, oxygen, hydrogen to start make organic molecules. Of which we can observe huge clouds of in outer space, just floating there.Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.Nothing at all magical about that. Basic chemistry.As magic as when science says we're made from space dust.Be it order from chaos, a living man conjured from the dust of the earth is still magic.![]()
Magic and Miracles seen as the same thing confuses the discussion. We're talking from different angles (not that this is really of interest to you (plural)).
How many billions of years is it until we don't consider it a miracle before these things get to Earth and hundreds of millions of years later, a self replicating process begins and takes form over a few more billion years?
That actually is a fair point of view. We would have to mutually agree on the particulars of defining terms of course.Yeah sure. Magic performed by individuals is a counterfeit to one who performs miracles (through God), as described in the bible.Nothing at all magical about that. Basic chemistry.As magic as when science says we're made from space dust.Be it order from chaos, a living man conjured from the dust of the earth is still magic.![]()
Magic and Miracles seen as the same thing confuses the discussion. We're talking from different angles (not that this is really of interest to you (plural)).
The distinction may lie between Magic, events that contradict physics, and Miracles as natural events, things that just don't happen often, an extraordinary event seen by some as being miraculous. Whereas a God creating a man out of the dust of the earth may be classed as Magic.
Strangely in return, people that claim "magic" is biblical, are ignorant of the theological concept.
If you’re suggesting that calling biblical miracles “magic” shows ignorance of theology, that cuts both ways. You’re assuming “magic” is always a pejorative term or a misunderstanding, but that’s not the point. The critique is epistemological: invoking divine intervention to explain natural phenomena doesn’t explain them—it stops the inquiry. Calling something “miraculous” without mechanism or evidence is functionally identical to saying “magic did it.” Whether the label is “miracle” or “magic,” both are placeholders unless you can show how and why it happened. The theological concept doesn’t exempt it from scrutiny—it just shifts the burden to faith instead of evidence.
EDIT:The bible was correct on the dust part then? Dust as being made up of very small things?
The bible is not against 'scientific names' for testing processes, so there's no argument being made here.
Saying the Bible was “right” because it mentions dust is like saying ancient myths were scientifically accurate because they mention the sky. The biblical reference to dust (“from dust you are, and to dust you shall return”) is symbolic, tied to mortality and humility—not atomic theory or stellar nucleosynthesis. When science says we’re made of stardust, it’s not a poetic flourish—it’s a specific, testable claim: elements like carbon, oxygen, and iron are forged in the cores of stars and spread through supernovae. We confirm this through spectroscopy, observing the same elemental fingerprints in star remnants and in our own bodies. That’s fundamentally different from saying “dust” in a general, ancient, and metaphorical way. One is grounded in empirical evidence, the other in literary theology.
Oddly enough. There is an interesting thought of pondering I've heard that goes by the idea that if a god or God wanted to create life, he would make it able to adapt to it's surroundings and spread to other environments to adapt, flourish and survive.
Then perhaps a theistic view (by some) that takes to the idea...that if evolution was part of the plan then the 'evolved' bit wouldn't really be a difference because as quoted above. that would also be a conjured up magic.
My view as a modern day theist of today in the language of today. In a manner of speaking... God is the ultimate scientist,
That response is a retreat into poetic language once the facts are unavoidable. Saying “God is the ultimate scientist” is a feel-good metaphor, not an explanation.
It doesn’t predict anything, test anything, or add to our understanding. It’s theology scrambling to stay relevant by piggybacking on discoveries it never made. Let’s be honest: the Bible never hinted at evolution, common ancestry, or the billions of years required for life to diversify.
Evolution wasn’t inspired—it was resisted by religious institutions for over a century. So to now say “maybe evolution was God’s tool all along” is convenient, but hollow. It’s like showing up after the work is done and stamping your name on the blueprints. Science earned its credibility by explaining the world. Theism can’t claim that victory retroactively.
The point is mute if you're portraying a different concept to mine.
That’s not a “different concept”—it’s a clarification of what’s being claimed. If your concept is that God used natural processes like evolution and stellar formation, great—but then you’re not talking about the biblical “dust” story anymore. You’re borrowing from science while still wanting to frame it as divine. That’s fine theologically, but it’s not evidence—it’s reinterpretation. The moment you claim something is testable or explanatory, it’s fair game for scrutiny. If your view can’t be tested, then yes—the point stands: it’s not a competing explanation, just a belief. Calling the critique “mute” doesn’t erase the evasion; it just avoids the challenge.
NHC
I was highlighting about you the atheists getting the context of the bible wrong - and as irony would have it - on the atheists part, by getting the concepts wrong, there does seem to be some exemptions to scrutinity just as you mention...
...the exemptions to scrutinity is by you atheists yourselves!
Retreat into poetic language? Is that an indication that when saying 'God is the ultimate scientist' atheists are going to have to shift to a different approach from the "magic" & God rethoric angle which should now be redundant because now... 'God is the ultimate scientist'? The feel-good line is not a "counter argument" to my statement either, especially when my satement is a valid 21st century perspective!
Erm well, neither do ALL the other books about 'historical' events from antiquity hint evolution either. This is a misleading argument.
In the science community, there are many theists. Science does not cause problems to the belief, however.. there can be disagreements of scientific-data interpretations between individuals in the scientific community - not neccessarily meaning one side claims there is scientific proof for God etc..
Similar to the above, perhaps you are unaware or forgotten that scientists who were also theists contributed massively to science. Evolution as it is now, i.e. the-best-we-know-so-far, is subject to change and to future updates (as theories often are).
(type into google for a list of theist contributions if your interested)
Just See post #36 (apologies haven't got my glasses, too much squinting)