- Feb 17, 2005
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I actually studied the TE's side first. Then I wanted to see what the YECs had to say. I used to be Catholic, and my priest taught an old Earth. I was surrounded by TE's and believed them. Purely because I had nothing else to believe in and the evidence seemed to point to its correctness. I was convinced the Earth HAD to be old. Period.
In other words, you were a TE because you didn't know you could be anything else. Well, that's a poor comparison to TEs who know about the YEC, day-age, gap theory, OEC, etc, positions and still choose to be TE. For me it was almost the other way around - I only knew I could be a YEC until I joined this forum and realized that hey, TEs are alive-and-kicking Christians, not half-baked compromisers.
Nothing in particular really. It all seems to point to a young Earth.
If the "it" in sentence two refers to the "nothing in particular" in sentence 1, then what you are saying is:
Nothing at all seems to point to a young Earth.
Exactly!
My question is why there are so few burrows if we're talking millions of years and how come they retained their form so well over that time. Like you Jig, I'm happy to conclude the evidence points to a young earth.
I'm not sure just what burrows these are, gluadys, but the first thought popping into my head is "how is a humongous flood supposed to preserve burrows?"
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