Hi everyone! My first post in this forum...
I have always loved science, did best in maths, biology, chemistry & geography at school, and have always had a fascination with how things are made & function.
I have also always believed in & loved God, although I didn't commit my life to the Lord until I was 23. I guess I grew up believing 2 things about Creation - firstly God made everything; secondly the Universe is x-billion years old, Dinosaurs roamed the earth millions of years before man etc etc. Once I became a Christian, I naturally believed more strongly in point one (John 1 just makes me melt to read, I go into ecstasies over it
), but I never really thought too closely about how my faith affected my opinions about point two...
A couple of years ago, I had a brief conversation in passing with a friend whose intellect I respect immensely. He was mentioning a talk he had attended by someone holding a YEC view. I was intrigued, and asked what he thought, expecting him to dismiss out of hand such a view (being an intelligent, educated man!), but he told me he found the arguments very convincing.
This has played on my mind quite a bit over the years, as someone who has always automatically dismissed the notion of a 6000 year old earth & a literal 6 day creation as "illogical", based on the "facts". So I decided to have a nose in OT (I also followed the AiG links, and had a read of several articles there). Here are my initial thoughts...
There are several points made at AiG, which have really made me think, and I find impossible to dismiss. In particular the translations of the "days" in Genesis is very convincing, but most of all the notion of death & disease existing prior to the Fall, given an Old Earth perspective. That just doesn't sit with me - I find I have to agree that it is absolutely (I use the word delibrately) illogical to think that there was death before the Fall. And I find myself amazed that I could never have considered this before.
I decided long ago (after coming to faith), that if I found myself disagreeing with something in Scripture, it didn't make it wrong, it just meant that my understanding was at fault. Somehow, I never seemed to get round to applying that to Creation!
I have found myself, today, constantly thinking of Babel, and how man is so convinced of his own brilliance that he can build something to reach God. How science feels the need to explain everything and have all the answers all the time. And I have noticed a smugness and superiority towards YEC adherants.
But what I find perhaps the most convincing is the arguments made by evolutionists. I have read all day arguments that follow this pattern... "Scientific evidence says this, so God's word cannot be literal". And I'm horrified! I don't wish to appear some ignorant, uneducated neanderthal (sorry
), but I am just not prepared to "interpret" Scripture to fit some worldly model, no matter how convincing that may be. My Bible says a whole lot of stuff which sounds fantastical and is openly ridiculed by the world. Do I believe the Word? You bet I do. Do I care what the world thinks? not one bit.
So basically, I'm saying that I could well be becoming convinced of a YEC. And even more, I WANT to believe in it. Because, as far as I can see, it's the only theory which accepts that God did what He says He did. And there's nothing I want to believe more than that...
I have always loved science, did best in maths, biology, chemistry & geography at school, and have always had a fascination with how things are made & function.
I have also always believed in & loved God, although I didn't commit my life to the Lord until I was 23. I guess I grew up believing 2 things about Creation - firstly God made everything; secondly the Universe is x-billion years old, Dinosaurs roamed the earth millions of years before man etc etc. Once I became a Christian, I naturally believed more strongly in point one (John 1 just makes me melt to read, I go into ecstasies over it
A couple of years ago, I had a brief conversation in passing with a friend whose intellect I respect immensely. He was mentioning a talk he had attended by someone holding a YEC view. I was intrigued, and asked what he thought, expecting him to dismiss out of hand such a view (being an intelligent, educated man!), but he told me he found the arguments very convincing.
This has played on my mind quite a bit over the years, as someone who has always automatically dismissed the notion of a 6000 year old earth & a literal 6 day creation as "illogical", based on the "facts". So I decided to have a nose in OT (I also followed the AiG links, and had a read of several articles there). Here are my initial thoughts...
There are several points made at AiG, which have really made me think, and I find impossible to dismiss. In particular the translations of the "days" in Genesis is very convincing, but most of all the notion of death & disease existing prior to the Fall, given an Old Earth perspective. That just doesn't sit with me - I find I have to agree that it is absolutely (I use the word delibrately) illogical to think that there was death before the Fall. And I find myself amazed that I could never have considered this before.
I decided long ago (after coming to faith), that if I found myself disagreeing with something in Scripture, it didn't make it wrong, it just meant that my understanding was at fault. Somehow, I never seemed to get round to applying that to Creation!
I have found myself, today, constantly thinking of Babel, and how man is so convinced of his own brilliance that he can build something to reach God. How science feels the need to explain everything and have all the answers all the time. And I have noticed a smugness and superiority towards YEC adherants.
But what I find perhaps the most convincing is the arguments made by evolutionists. I have read all day arguments that follow this pattern... "Scientific evidence says this, so God's word cannot be literal". And I'm horrified! I don't wish to appear some ignorant, uneducated neanderthal (sorry
So basically, I'm saying that I could well be becoming convinced of a YEC. And even more, I WANT to believe in it. Because, as far as I can see, it's the only theory which accepts that God did what He says He did. And there's nothing I want to believe more than that...
It's good to see a new face in here. Welcome TankGirl if there ever is anything that I can do to assist you please don't hesitate to ask. 
