EarlyActs
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Of course the creation account doesn't lend itself to that interpretation—because the creation account pertains to a categorically different explanatory domain (redemptive history). Man as "image of God" belongs to a redemptive-historical category, while man as "evolved" belongs to a natural-historical category. Redemptive history on the one hand, natural history on the other. Your objection fails by flattening these categories, thereby committing a category error.
My argument recognizes and maintains those categorical distinctions, which is why I can hold both positions as true without conflict, that man is both evolved and imago Dei. Natural history, unfolded in general revelation (nature), is the stage upon which the drama of redemptive history plays out, and it is redemptive history that reveals the meaning and purpose of natural history, disclosed through special revelation (scripture). We explore natural history scientifically; we explore redemptive history theologically.
I understand terms like "theoretical physics," but what exactly is "theoretical evidence"?
There is nothing 'redemptive history' about Genesis 1 as it touches on nature. The category is specious. If you use transliteration and attempt to sketch (draw) the steps of action along the way, which forces you to account for what it is saying, you can easily see a local, placed, designed, immediate-thriving creation, that has nothing to do with the spreading out of distant places and objects. It also matches the deposited fossil explosion, the Cataclysm being even more recent than Creation Week, but neither demanding that the planet's lifeless materials underlying them was recent.
The image of God is a term about kings marking boundaries and God was saying that each living person was an evidence (an image) that the place belongs to him as King. The climax of the Kingship theme comes in Acts 2 when Christ is proclaimed as enthroned, per prophecy etc, as the King, in the resurrection. Maybe if your theology was about the King theme, it wouldn't have to work so hard to attach opposites to eachother.
So I have almost no use for the presuppositions that you repeat over and over and over, as if that makes them true.
So please take down your disrespectful video response post above.