chase Wrote:
Laodicea Wrote:
Hee Haw!!!! That der is fuuuuuny. So is our market economy, unless I'm reading the original post wrong.
yeah, you know more about this than i do: would people in your area that would be interested in an IMAX movie about volcanoes be offended by mentions of similarities between microbial and human DNA? i just feel like even the most profoundly christian volcano-enthusiast would see that as "hey, neat" and not feel like it ran contradictory to the whole of his spirituality. i just can't conceive that it would really be an issue. would it?
You are right, as The Artist Formerly Known As Saved has also pointed out.
For those of you who think that things are getting worse, get this:
According to a Gallup Poll drawn from more than a thousant telephone interviews conducted in February 2001, no less than 45% of responding U.S. adults agreed that
"God created human beings pretty much in their present form at one time within the last 10,000 years or so.". Evolution, by their lights, played no role in shaping us.
[two paragraphs on additional polling data omitted]
The most startling thing about these poll numbers is not that so many Americans reject evolution, but that the statistical breakdown hasn't changed much in two decades. Gallup interviews posed exactly the same choices in
1982, 1993, 1997 and 1999. Thre creationist conviction—that God alone, and not evolution, produced humans—has never drawn less than 44 percent.
That was from National Geographic, November 2004.
Now, consider this. If one of every two people you know believes this way, how many of them also take the action to boycott such displays that may be contrary to their creationist beliefs? Quite few I would assume.
The reason, of that 45%, only a minority actually feel so strongly to raise a ruckus about these sorts of exhibits. Mainstream Christians aren't the ones raising a fuss over these issues. Mainstream Christians may believe that abortion is wrong, but they aren't the ones holding up signs of bloody fetuses or shooting doctors.
To automatically leap to the most extreme assumption, dig in and show outrage is not an effective way to change anything. I get the feeling from member of both sides that are ridiculously exclusive. Furious Bible-toters who ignore "Love one another", and and self-professed open-minded progressives who would rather watch O'Reilly than allow a Christian with strong beliefs share a roundtable discussion. Both sides are guilty, and both sides are wrong.