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Agnosticism ’s Worldview of Humanity:
Dogmatic belief in evolution, even when scientific observation refutes evolution. In essence, they believe that people came from rocks and that hydrogen, over time, turns into people. The Agnostic's own confirmation bias will often keep the Agnostic from being able to see past the false claims of this pseudo-science.
Agnostics believe that humanity is basically without purpose, other than some rationalized purpose. They believe that random processes somehow created the complex mechanisms of life and then breathed life into that mechanism, even though such a belief is in direct conflict with what can be easily observed regarding the second law of thermodynamics.
In addition, they believe that humanity is evolving; they believe that random processes are adding to the information in the DNA. They believe this, even though no instance of information being added to anything by a random process has ever been observed anywhere by any scientist who published it in a scientific journal. |
Biblical Christianity’s Vision of Humanity:
To compare Agnosticism to Biblical Christianity, go here. To compare Agnosticism's worldview of humanity to the vision of humanity which is given to Scriptural Christianity, go here.
Biblical Christians have a reason for living and a purpose for life. Humans are created beings, set a little lower than the angels but destined for a higher place in the created order. As Christians walk into the glory of God's kingdom, they walk from light to light and from glory to ever-increasing glory. The glory that they will one day experience is beyond what the human mind can currently comprehend.
We see a glimpse of the future that God has planned for us in the prophets, the apostles, and the life of Christ. The miracles that have been done are only a fraction of what the life of those who enter into the ultimate Christian experience, the manifestation of the sons of God, as the KJV terms it. Notice that, in Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, we all come as one perfect man to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. This is a unity that is consistent with the prayer of Jesus when He prayed that we all would be one as Jesus and the Father are one and that They would be in us and us in Them. |