That thread started out as someone saying how much they love Jesus, and then getting blasted by a lot of atheists pretending to be scientists and saying how much they loved science books, and how science books prove there cannot be any god(s).
The point of this thread is quite different.
No, that is not how that thread started. Here is the OP
Lost at Sea:
I was just wondering how many people out there believe in "Creation" and how many people believe in "Evolution." I would just like some feed back. Please keep comments polite and be respectable to other people's comments.
Personally, I believe in Creation. I was raised round church but never really paid any attention. So, I use to believe in Evolution, but now I believe in Creation due to the fact I became saved. In my opinion, I think evolution is no good. Anytime a scientist can not figure out when something walked this earth, they say something like "Fourhunderd Million Years Ago." Now come on! How old do people think the world really is. I think the world is only six - seven thousand years old. Most evolutionist, not all, believe in the big bang theroy. Now, what caused the big bang? Is it so hard to believe that maybe a higher being, "God" as we all call him, created us. Not everything can be explained with facts, sometimes we have to have FAITH.
That' my opinion. I have a lot more to say, but for time sake I kept it short and vague. I just want to see what you all have to say.
So you can see that A. this person did not say anything about how they love Jesus and B. They dismissed the science of evolution. Please make sure you have your facts straight, before posting a comment like this nereas as it reflects poorly on the rest of your arguments if you post something that is blatantly false.
Now to relate that back to this thread. This person said that the world is 6000-7000 years old.
ALL reputable scientific evidence is to the contrary. So, when there is a conflict between actual evidence that one can go out and research and confirm themselves, and what the Bible (or any other religious text or religion says), then I think science is right and the religious idea wrong. When has there been a scientific idea that has lost out to something in the Bible as far as evidence goes?
Moving along though, as far as I am concerned, religion and science are not incompatible at all, if they stick to what they are defined as (just a dictionary definition here but it carries the point of what they are supposed to be):
Science - systematic knowledge of the physical or material world gained through observation and experimentation.
Religion - system of belief in, and worship of, a supernatural power or god/s
So, religion cannot ever prove its ideas because of the fact it concerns itself with something that is not measurable or observable, and science cannot disprove the ideas of religion precisely because they are not measurable or observable. I.e evolution is observable and measurable so it is within the realm of science and religious people should drop their ideas that directly contradict this such as an original creator as they are not provable (but may be correct - no one currently can prove whether there was an original creator or not, this is something that both sides should realise)
I consider myself an atheist, even though I don't believe I can disprove God, as I see God as being completely unnecessary for the world around me. The existence of human kind is explained fairly adequately by science (with the exception of the original formation of life on Earth - but I expect this to be answered in my lifetime).
Also regarding near death experiences, well there is a perfectly logical and scientific explanation for the experiences people get at a time like that. They've been able to recreate the "religious" feeling people get when their brain is deprived of oxygen (like what one experiences in a near death experience) in a significant percentage of fighter pilots in high G forces and as well as subjecting people to other scenarios (generally induced by drugs) that simulate near death.