The other day I remarked to Maryanne that not only do the Darwin badges some people put on their cars bother me, but so do the resulting Truth badges that feature a traditional ichthys eating the Darwin parody. While evolution and Creationism may be at odds with each other, evolution and Christianity are not mutually exclusive ideas. I think it's possible for a person to accept scientific ideas and still live a Christian life.
I think this also illustrates the absurdity of fundamental, hard-line Creationism. Maryanne started watching 17 Kids and Counting, a show I find somewhat disturbing not only because of the rigid, inflexible beliefs of the family members, but their belief in Creationism, which took them to a Creationism museum. The museum featured neighboring displays of dinosaurs and Adam and Eve -- not the same display, but they might as well be showing Jesus riding a dinosaur for the scientific inaccuracy of it all.
I also remarked that Creationism is also very self-serving and prejudiced; it presumes to suggest that the Judeo-Christian Creation story is the only one that's truthful, and the creation stories of any other religions (and mythologies) are wrong. I compared this to the First Commandment: "You shall have no other gods before Me." It doesn't say there are no other gods; to me it just says God wants to be first and only on your list.
Enter The Greek Myths by Robert Graves. Here Graves not only analyzes the symbolism of the Greek myths, but compares them to the mythology and the cults of the rest of the eastern Mediterranean. The similarities are fascinating, as he draws parallels between ancient Greek myths and the myths of other cultures, including Egypt and Babylon, and even the Norse and the ancient Jews. It's the kind of academic examination of the stories that seems to be lacking from those who take a literal view of scripture.
Mood: Thoughtful
Music: Led Zeppelin: "Dazed and Confused"
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