When a view (philosophy) is in a continual state of flux, how does one that is finite in knowledge determine which ebb or flow of the philosophy is or is not true?
I have a copy of a Time Magazine (April 26, 1998) in my library that has on its' cover: The Truth About Dinosaurs (Surprise: Just About Everything You Believe is Wrong). To begin with I doubt that the publisher of Time Magazine knows what I believe about dinosaurs. If he doesn't know what I believe about dinosaurs, then how does he know that it is wrong? How do we not know but what in April of 2006 another Time Magazine will come out with the cover: The Real Truth About Dinosaurs (Surprise, Surprise, Surprise: Just About Everything You Believe is Wrong).
Although the Bible was compiled over a period of approximately 1,500 years, in three different original languages, and written by some forty different earthly writers, it is not in a continual state of flux, e.g. in Isaiah 40:22 when God says that it is He who sits enthroned above the circle (sphere) of the Earth, it was true. It was true when it was written, sometime between 740 and 690 B.C., and it is true today. I choose as one finite in knowledge to place my faith in one that is infinite in knowledge. (Realizing that my statement of God being infinite in knowledge is a statement of faith in that I am not infinite in knowledge.)
