Gunbot wrote:I believe as Einstein believed. There is a creator but it is beyond our present capability to conceive of him. As children create stories so did early man to explain the nature of life. There is nothing wrong with faith but I can't believe in talking serpents and the earth being only 12,000 years old. The universe is so huge and marvelous and for man to have the arrogance to believe he understands it all and to put it in a nice tidy package called the bible is beyond me. If we can ever evolve enough to use perhaps 50 percent or more of our brain maybe then we can have a clearer picture of the true creator of all of this.
Hi Gunboat,
You know, not only Einstein believed that, because this is also the view held in my faith. God is something which not comprehensible to man, or in Baha'i terminology is the "unknowable essence" who we call God, Yahweh, Khoda, Allah, etc., etc., Your points about talking serpents and the earth being 12,000 years old are good ones. However, it is possible to approach religious works, such as the Bible, with a less literal approach and arrive at meanings that have primarily symbolic and spiritual meanings that do not contradict scientific fact.
I like what you say about having a "true picture" of the creator. Ultimately such a picture is impossible, yet to get the best approximation, I think both spiritual and religious knowledge, as well as practical physical knowledge such as science, are required. Reality and truth are one, however to discover what that reality is requires science and religion, since both, when used appropriately, are compliments of each other, each shedding light on a different aspect of reality.