Geography, asked by aying41, 16 days ago

the world after God created the world vs the world today?​

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Answered by sanjaykumarverma93
0

Answer:

Hope this answer helps you to be

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Answered by neetuguptaynr
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Answer:

the world after God created the world vs the world today?

Explanation:

Central to the current cultural debates over evolution versus creation is the question of how God actually creates. Many modern Christians argue that the Bible teaches that God created plants, animals and especially humans through direct “special creation” without mediating such creation through any so-called natural causes. “Special creationist” Christians hold that the idea of God's “indirectly” creating through “natural processes” is a concept entirely foreign to the witness of Scripture. According to these believers, Scripture unambiguously confesses that human beings (both as a species and as individuals) are in particular created by exemplary supernatural “events” that are distinctive from the processes whereby God creates the rest of the natural world. But is this in fact really the case? In this essay, I will examine the language describing creation in Scripture and contest this common assumption of many contemporary Christians by showing that Scripture affirms the idea of God's creating through process; the distinction between direct ‘special’ creation and ‘indirect’ creation through natural law is a false and Central to the current cultural debates over evolution versus creation is the question of how God actually creates. Many modern Christians argue that the Bible teaches that God created plants, animals and especially humans through direct “special creation” without mediating such creation through any so-called natural causes. “Special creationist” Christians hold that the idea of God's “indirectly” creating through “natural processes” is a concept entirely foreign to the witness of Scripture. According to these believers, Scripture unambiguously confesses that human beings (both as a species and as individuals) are in particular created by exemplary supernatural “events” that are distinctive from the processes whereby God creates the rest of the natural world. But is this in fact really the case? In this essay, I will examine the language describing creation in Scripture and contest this common assumption of

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