Evolution is Believable
Of course Evolution is believable! But believable doesn’t mean true.
If God wanted us to have free will, there would have to be something else to believe, other than Him. At this point in time, evolution is one of the primary alternatives.
Your choice is whether you believe what man has made up, or something that was passed down to man. No person on earth has ever or will ever be able to claim being the originator of Christianity – except of course, Christ. But, if Christ were a mere man, Christianity existed before He came along; it was prophesied about many hundreds of years before Christ came to Earth.
The thing with Evolution is that we know who made it up and we know when it happened. We can look back at his ideas and agree with what we see or disagree.
If I thought God was a control-freak or a big old mean guy with a big stick in the sky waiting for me to do something wrong so He could beat me, I would probably want to formulate some other origin of species as well. The problem is not that I’ve come up with another idea about how the earth was formed. The problem is that my view of God is wrong. God isn’t a control-freak. He didn’t make us as puppets or punching bags. Instead, He made us to have relationship with Him, to love us and for us to love Him in return. A genuine love; based on choice. And if based on choice, then there has to be other options. And those other options would have to seem plausible.
Christianity doesn’t change with what we think is right. It doesn’t change as we get more and more scientific evidence. What is written in the Bible hasn’t altered in several thousand years. And no one has ever proved any error in it. For a book that is in parts dated four thousand years old, that is a remarkable achievement. Will the theory of evolution stand up to that kind of test and remain largely unchanged?
See, you either believe what evolutionists tell you, or you believe what the Bible tells you. Either way you have to believe because you cannot prove it. What are the consequences of believing Christianity if it’s wrong? Nothing; if Christianity is wrong, you die and that’s it. What are the consequences of believing evolution if it’s wrong?
If God wanted us to have free will, there would have to be something else to believe, other than Him. At this point in time, evolution is one of the primary alternatives.
Your choice is whether you believe what man has made up, or something that was passed down to man. No person on earth has ever or will ever be able to claim being the originator of Christianity – except of course, Christ. But, if Christ were a mere man, Christianity existed before He came along; it was prophesied about many hundreds of years before Christ came to Earth.
The thing with Evolution is that we know who made it up and we know when it happened. We can look back at his ideas and agree with what we see or disagree.
If I thought God was a control-freak or a big old mean guy with a big stick in the sky waiting for me to do something wrong so He could beat me, I would probably want to formulate some other origin of species as well. The problem is not that I’ve come up with another idea about how the earth was formed. The problem is that my view of God is wrong. God isn’t a control-freak. He didn’t make us as puppets or punching bags. Instead, He made us to have relationship with Him, to love us and for us to love Him in return. A genuine love; based on choice. And if based on choice, then there has to be other options. And those other options would have to seem plausible.
Christianity doesn’t change with what we think is right. It doesn’t change as we get more and more scientific evidence. What is written in the Bible hasn’t altered in several thousand years. And no one has ever proved any error in it. For a book that is in parts dated four thousand years old, that is a remarkable achievement. Will the theory of evolution stand up to that kind of test and remain largely unchanged?
See, you either believe what evolutionists tell you, or you believe what the Bible tells you. Either way you have to believe because you cannot prove it. What are the consequences of believing Christianity if it’s wrong? Nothing; if Christianity is wrong, you die and that’s it. What are the consequences of believing evolution if it’s wrong?

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