How Should Christians Think About the Age of the Earth? The Alisa Childers Podcast #24

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With the new movie Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom in theaters, and a recent worship song referencing evolution, Christians are thinking about all issues pertaining to evolution, creation, and the age of the earth. How should we, as Christians, think about these topics? Are science and the Bible at odds when it comes to origins? I weigh in on how we can think intelligently and biblically on these hot button issues on today’s podcast. 

Alisa,

Very nice summary of the three different positions on the evolution vs. creation, age of the earth debate. I like how explained that young earth or evolution was a false dichotomy, and that you can hold to an old earth and not deny the historicity of Adam and Eve, which is a key theological point. I also like how you defined micro and macro evolution. Very nice!

Just one minor point: At one point, it sounded like you equated micro evolution with natural selection. They are actually different. I got my definitions from this source: http://www.nas.edu/evolution/Definitions.html, which is pretty definitive. Just sharing this in case you want to tweak your broadcast in the future.

Thanks again for the excellent podcast!

Eric Gray
MDiv. Student,
Regent University

Alisa Childers

7/2/2018 04:29:30 pm

Hi Eric, I just listened back and you’re right, I misspoke. I was actually able to make a quick little edit to fix it. Thanks for helping clarify!

Philippe

7/3/2018 09:45:15 am

Thanks for that Alisa!
Ever since the beginning of the podcast, I wanted to suggest John’s book on the subject. I’m glad you ended it with that 😉 I just started reading it and John is always fascinating. I also enjoy hearing him teach and preach. One can tell he loves the Lord strongly!
Keep up the good work.

Jennifer

7/4/2018 10:36:59 pm

I don’t usually listen to podcasts, but I decided to listen to this one, and the question I’m left with is this: isn’t it possible to hold a theistic evolutionist view in terms of how all life developed, AND also still believe in a literal Adam and Eve who literally committed the first sin? In this view, one would see the story of the fall as symbolic in that the first sin may not have been eating forbidden fruit and Satan may not have been an actual snake, but Adam and Eve literally sinned by doubting God’s goodness in some way. If one held this view, then the assumption would be that God breathed life into the very first set of fully-evolved hominids, making them a special creation, and giving them a soul.

I guess the reason I ask is because scientifically, a young Earth view doesn’t seem to adequately explain some characteristics of the Earth (fossils, rock layers, etc). And an old Earth view that basically says each “day” was a long period of time, doesn’t logically make sense because you would have plants for 100’s of 1,000’s of years before you have a sun to nourish the plants. Not to mention that in Genesis 1 man was created last, and in Genesis 2 man was created before the animals, making it unlikely that the accounts are literal, since they contradict each other.

It seems the view that marries what we currently know from science and what we know needs to be taken as literal from the Bible in order to maintain the integrity of the doctrine of original sin, would be agreeing that God is the cause of all creation, that life likely evolved over a long period of time, and when God was good and ready he gave the very first fully-evolved humanoids a soul and breathed his spirit into them. They then lived in perfect harmony with God until they were tempted and sinned, losing the divine life within them, or original justice, and then we all received original sin from them.

Thoughts?

Alisa Childers

7/5/2018 12:01:04 am

Hi Jennifer, thanks for your comment. When I speak of Theistic Evolution, I am speaking of the view that tries to wed Christianity with Darwinian Evolution. Darwinism by definition is an unguided, natural, purposeless process…. which can’t reconciled with Theism, in my opinion. At best, it will give you a Deistic God who started things off, but is uninvolved in the process. And if a person believes that God guided the process, I can’t see how that could fit with the definition of Darwinism, because that would be more of an intelligent design theory.

My problem with the idea that God breathed life into the first set of fully-evolved humanoids is that this “Adam and Eve” would only be representative of humanity, and not our literal first parents. Without the human race actually descending from this pair, we have run right back to the problem from Romans 5 I laid out in the podcast.

Regarding the creation accounts seeming to be in contradiction, much has been written about Genesis 1 being more of a chronological treatment, and Genesis 2 focusing more on the clarification of details and focusing on the creation of humans. I recommend reading Appendix D of John Lennox’s book, Seven Days That Divide the World. He explains that Hebrew has no separate pluperfect tense. In English, this would be the equivalent of saying, “he had formed.” (pluperfect) vs. “he formed.” If the former is the intended meaning, then the sentence isn’t really talking about a sequence of events, and there is no contradiction.

Hi Alisa,

I admire your faith and your desire to worship God with your whole mind. In that spirit, please consider a few points.

You say that Darwinian evolution is a blind, unguided process and therefore could not be used by God. This a common argument. However, what is blind, random, and without purpose from a purely scientific perspective can be fully controlled by God from a larger one.

For example, look at Exod 4:11: “Who has made man’s mouth? Or who makes him mute or deaf, or seeing or blind? Is it not I, the Lord.”

The context is God’s choosing of Moses as his vessel, so it is not a generalization about populations only. God knows all individual circumstances in advance, and knows how he can be glorified in them in each and every case. At the same time it is undeniable that deafness, for example, can be caused by mutations that arise as chemical accidents–randomly–from a scientific point of view. God is nevertheless sovereign over these, weaving them into his purpose.

Now, how is Darwinian evolution supposed to take place? Through genetic mutations that are random in scientific description–but superintended by God for his own ends. The contradiction is illusory, not actual.

Your fixation on narrowly defined, purely genetic parenthood of the human race is also undermined by Genesis itself. Look at the word “father,” ab, in 4:20-21. It cannot there mean father in a narrow, genetic sense, but in the sense of “pattern-setter,” which is also the way Jesus uses it in, for example, Mt 23:29-32; Jn 8:39-40; Lk 19:9; et al.

As for God forming man from the dust, look at Job 31:15; 33:6; Ps 139:13; Jer 1:5. God formed each of us from the dust–in our mother’s womb! Of course, there was a point in the dim past at which the form the dust was in did not reflect God’s image, and then suddenly it did. No one can determine that point from ancient skeletons or artifacts or by any other external means.

Returning to formation in the womb, developmental biology is the evidence-based science of how the embryo develops and differentiates. That’s the external story that science is concerned with. With eyes of faith we see that God is using the natural laws and forces that he sustains to form each human in utero. Again, any contradiction is illusory. Likewise with evolution.

Same with the science of meteorology and its story of how the laws of physics generate rain over the croplands of the Middle East. Yet Paul says that God sends the rains (Acts 14:17). He does so through the laws he not only established but maintains from moment to moment.

Maybe you have already done so, but if you have not I encourage you to visit the Biologos.org website and digest their evidenciary articles prayerfully before jumping to conclusions too hastily (Prov 18:13).

I wish I had time and space to explain a bit more about how to read Gen chaps 1-2, the geneaologies, etc. I am short on both, however.

Like you I believe that all of Scripture is inspired revelation. I have also come to realize in what “diverse manners” God reveals truth in the words of life we find there.

It seems to me that some stories are just obviously not historical. If I tell you that I had a conversation with a snake, that should be pretty much it as far as taking me literally goes. I wouldn’t even call it a lie, because I would expect my listeners to understand that the story didn’t really happen, at least not literally. And if I learned that someone thought I was relating a literally true historical account, I would be utterly dismayed. I mean, a talking snake? Do I really have to add, “oh and by the way, this isn’t literally true”?

Should it have been any different in antiquity?

Mona

9/17/2019 12:59:31 pm

I have really appreciated your podcasts and your apologetics ministry in general. I am in complete agreement with the majority of your views and beliefs. However, I was wondering why theistic evolution is the “mountain you would die on?” I have a mountain too, but it’s young earth (6000-10000 yr old), literal 6 – 24 hour day creation. I took a year long course from Institute of Creation Research called “Creationist Worldview” as a result of my desire to really get some knowledge about this issue. The websites of “Answers in Genesis” and the Canadian apologetics website “Creation.com” have been tremendously helpful, and I know they have been bashed and mocked by many in the evangelical world, which I really don’t understand. They have ph.d scientists who study and offer viable answers to the critics. After studying the theistic evolution also, I am left with a few things that give me confidence in the young earth belief. #1 – The bible gives absolutely no indication anywhere that evolution (macro) was used in God’s creation process. Evolution requires long ages to happen, therefore, if long ages is not true, evolution is immediately removed as a viable option. #2 – The flood is a huge thing to consider in this question of the age of the earth – Mt. St. Helen’s is a strong example of how quickly layers can be laid down and what secular science has said takes millions of year, at Mt. St. Helen’s it took 10 years. Fossil evidence is far stronger in support of young earth (the fossils being laid down during the flood) than it is for old earth. #3 – Even if I hypothetically took both the old earth and young earth views side by side and said they had equally strong physical evidence, which one is more biblical in terms of the plain reading of Genesis – even with the word “yom” is strikes me as very unlikely that the Biblical writers would have chosen a word that is most often used as a 24 hour period rather than another word that would have made it clear it was not just a 24 hour period. I must believe the view that is (Occam’s razor) the most obvious intent of the writer. #4 – The one thing that I always do when there is seeming confusion in biblical texts is to ask, “which view gives more glory to God, and which view gives more glory to man?”. I believe young earth most accurately conveys what the biblical text is saying, and gives more glory to God in that it uses the text as the ultiimate authority and unquestionably trusts, even against the compromising position of alternate views. I would love to engage in a conversation with you about this.

Alisa Childers

9/17/2019 02:02:26 pm

Hi Mona, thanks for your comment. I don’t take a position regarding the age of the earth, so I would not have any reason to argue against your young earth view. I think where we disagree is when you said that any view other than young earth is “compromising.” I don’t believe the young earth view or the old earth view compromises Scripture.

Mona

9/19/2019 08:54:45 am

Thanks for your reply. I have attached a link to a website that contains an article I read recently which I think gives another thought to consider, and in fact may be one of the best arguments I have heard in defense of young earth. I would love to hear your thoughts on it.
https://www.challies.com/articles/evolution-and-a-universe-as-young-as-humanity/
It is a review of a book and in the book the author gives an interesting illustration of what the evolutionary timeline would look like if you crammed it into a 24 hour day, just to help us to wrap our minds around the billions of years, which is impossible for us to really understand. I though Tim Challies thoughts on this author’s book were worth sending on to you. Something to think about it.

Brenda

12/19/2020 12:19:06 pm

I would recommend a resource for kids called God’s Amazing Creation over Genesis 1-2 written by Kay Arthur and Janna Arndt. Pages 60-71 explain how the Bible clearly supports a young earth. I stand on God’s word alone for my belief in a young earth.

Nicole C McCaskill

10/17/2019 03:39:56 pm

Hi Alisa, Thank you for your podcasts. I appreciate your heart for defending the truth of God’s Word and the Gospel. Regarding this podcast, however, I am thinking that any interpretation of Genesis 1 that undermines the linguistic and textual meaning of the word Yom (day), which is determined by context (morning and evening equals a 24 hour period throughout Scripture) actually undermines the foundations of our faith. Also any interpretation of the creation account that disregards the order of creation also undermines the inerrancy of Scripture. According to the Genesis 1 account, there is no room for an old earth or an old universe. Furthermore, Jesus Himself refers to the 6 days of creation as 6 literal days. To my way of thinking, to concede that the earth and the universe is ancient (billions of years old) is to compromise with a faction of scientists who wrongly interpret the scientific data because of their erroneous worldview. There are many esteemed creation scientists who can give scientific evidence that points to 6 day creation. It would be good to point out that fact in your podcasts on this issue. You might enjoy this video by Dr. Jason Lisle and find it both helpful, challenging, and informative. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bheY9AEnSWc

Alisa Childers

10/18/2019 10:22:38 am

Hi Nicole,

Thanks for your comment. Dr. Norman Geisler, who was one of the original framers of the Chicago statement on inerrancy wrote an article about this that I found very helpful. Here it is, for anyone interested:

Does Believing in Inerrancy Require One to believe in Young Earth Creationism?

Christine Brunetti

12/31/2020 02:45:30 pm

I agree totally with the young earth view. If other accounts of the Bible are considered literal days, why isn’t Creation? I came across this article today: https://creation.com/the-dubious-apologetics-of-hugh-ross
By the way, your book “Another Gospel” is excellent.

Katie Graham

2/25/2021 06:22:02 am

Hi Alisa, curious if you’ve read Ken Ham’s “the lie”?

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