iouae
Well-known member
I don't believe anyone can define what a "biblical kind" is.
Usual definitions go something like this...
A Biblical kind includes all those who can breed with each other, or came from those who can breed with each other.
So, if one kind turns into another, Christians will just say they were the same kind to begin with.
Evolutionists will say "See, we have a new kind".
I don't think God ever intended it to be a LAW that things bring forth according to their kind, as many assume.
There is a difference between a PRINCIPLE and a LAW. It is a PRINCIPLE that most organisms produce after their kind, but if, after isolation, they become a separate "kind" that's fine with God. I am thinking of chiclids or those thousands of "kinds" of fish found in African lakes.
To give another example of a PRINCIPLE vs a LAW. David said he had never seen the righteous forsaken or his seed begging for bread. Ps 37:25. This is a PRINCIPLE not a law. It is entirely possible that a Christian ends up begging bread. Look at the beggar Lazarus in Luke's parable.
Both Christians and evolutionists have been suckered into demanding a strict definition of a Biblical "kind".
Usual definitions go something like this...
A Biblical kind includes all those who can breed with each other, or came from those who can breed with each other.
So, if one kind turns into another, Christians will just say they were the same kind to begin with.
Evolutionists will say "See, we have a new kind".
I don't think God ever intended it to be a LAW that things bring forth according to their kind, as many assume.
There is a difference between a PRINCIPLE and a LAW. It is a PRINCIPLE that most organisms produce after their kind, but if, after isolation, they become a separate "kind" that's fine with God. I am thinking of chiclids or those thousands of "kinds" of fish found in African lakes.
To give another example of a PRINCIPLE vs a LAW. David said he had never seen the righteous forsaken or his seed begging for bread. Ps 37:25. This is a PRINCIPLE not a law. It is entirely possible that a Christian ends up begging bread. Look at the beggar Lazarus in Luke's parable.
Both Christians and evolutionists have been suckered into demanding a strict definition of a Biblical "kind".