Growing up in conservative territory like central Pennsylvania I just simply assumed that Christians believed in a six-day, young earth creation. It wasn’t until late high-school that I ran across the “gap theory” that presented a time gap between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2. A gap of time that may have allowed for a previous world to exist before ours was created where angels were put on probation and where Lucifer first got his idea to “ascend above the heights of the clouds” to be like the most High. (Isaiah 14:14). For some it is difficult to imagine sin originating in heaven, the “gap theory” gives the option that possibly an earlier world existed where the angels could choose to reject or follow God. Whatever the case, if such a world existed, it was destroyed, leaving behind a shell that was without form and void which does not allow for a fossil record millions of years old.
So, with the “gap theory” set aside,
what has troubled me has been recent statistics that show more and more
evangelicals looking to blend evolution and creation. According to the Pew survey
“1 out of 4 Americans believes God has guided evolution.”[1]
This idea has been called theistic evolution. It was after the famous Billy Nye
and Ken Ham debate that televangelist Pat Robertson declared, “There ain't no
way that's possible. We have skeletons of dinosaurs that go back 65 million
years,” Robertson said. “To say it all dates back to 6,000 years is just
nonsense, and I think [it’s] time we come off of that stuff, and say this isn’t
possible.”[2] Is
it a fallacy to believe in a young earth? Does the 65-million-year dinosaur
skeletons mentioned by Robertson debunk the Genesis narrative? I would like to
suggest in this article that if we take the Bible as truly God’s infallible
Word as true Christians should, then there is overwhelming Biblical evidence
confirmed by science and archeology for a young earth.
24 Hours or Thousands of Years?
Christians have looked for all kinds
of loopholes to allow for an old earth so as to not look like prehistoric cave
men when pitted against so called “expert” scientists who claim the fossil
record is millions of years old. Once such loophole is to say that the six days
of creation in Genesis were actually long periods of time not just twenty-four
hours. Verses like II Peter 3:8 are often quoted as evidence that a day for the
Lord is like a thousand years. Just maybe each day of creation lasted thousands
or at least a thousand years. First of all, scholars have made a strong case
for twenty-four hour days of creation. To see a more in-depth study on this issue
go to https://answersingenesis.org/days-of-creation/seventh-day-24-hours-long/.
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The Death Factor
To accept that dinosaur skeletons are
65 million years old as Pat Robertson claims as part of an evolutionary process
guided by God, would mean that those dinosaurs died long before Adam and Eve
sinned. Does that theory fit into the Biblical narrative? Genesis 1:30 makes it
clear that man and beast were both vegetarians before the fall.
Yet, the fossil
record shows animals eating other animals. Fossils have also been found that
show disease and deformities. If we are to stay true to Biblical teaching,
there is no way these fossils pre-date the fall of man.
Part of God’s judgement upon Adam was
that the earth would be cursed and it would produce thorns and thistles
(Genesis 3:18). Yet, fossils of thorns have been discovered that contradict an
old earth theory.
Conclusion
Christianity is not anti-science.
Science and God’s Word go hand-in-hand and science confirms much of what is
written within this sacred book. However, we are on dangerous ground when we
forsake the clear Bible narrative and look to infuse evolutionistic theories
with creation. Just as water and oil do not mix, an old earth just does not
jive with the account of creation that is given to us in Genesis whether Pat
Robertson says so or not.
[1] Bruinius,
Harry. “Pat Robertson rejects ‘young earth’ creationism. ‘Nonsense,’ he says.
The Christian Science Monitor. https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Society/2014/0206/Pat-Robertson-rejects-young-earth-creationism.-Nonsense-he-says
(accessed February 23, 2019)
[2]
Ibid
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