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Creation Science

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  1. Setting the Stage

    First Steps
    4 Steps
  2. 1. An Overview of Everything
    7 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  3. 2. What is Science?
    7 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  4. 3. The Biblical Record
    10 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  5. Advanced Topics: Biblical Authority to Philosophy of Science
    6 Steps
  6. Understanding the Flood
    4. The Cause of the Flood
    8 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  7. 5. The Evidence for the Flood
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  8. 6. Catastrophes in the Past
    7 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  9. 7. The Fossil Record - Part 1
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  10. 8. The Fossil Record - Part 2
    7 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  11. 9. The Age of Things: Evidence for a Young Earth
    8 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  12. 10. The Age of Things: Radioisotope Dating
    7 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  13. 11. The Natural History of the Earth
    9 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  14. 12. The Post-Flood Period
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  15. Advanced Topics: Precambrian Rocks to Flood Boundaries
    7 Steps
  16. Understanding Life & Design
    13. Intelligent Design in Nature
    9 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  17. 14. Created Kinds: Living Creatures
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  18. 15. Created Kinds: Humans
    7 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  19. 16. Diversity, Design, & DNA
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  20. 17. A World of Beauty & Death
    8 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  21. Advanced Topics: Molecular Biology to Genomes
    2 Steps
  22. Understanding the Stars
    18. The Design of the Earth & the Solar System
    8 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  23. 19. Competing Cosmologies
    5 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  24. Advanced Topics: UFOs to Black Holes
    5 Steps
  25. Understanding Archeology & Culture
    20. The Tower of Babel
    5 Steps
    |
    1 Quiz
  26. 21. The Culture of Genesis
    5 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  27. 22. The Church & Genesis
    6 Steps
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    1 Quiz
  28. Advanced Topics: Biblical Archeology to the Hebrew Alphabet
    4 Steps
Lesson Progress
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“Who questions much, shall learn much…”

Francis Bacon

Old Questions

The idea for a documentary on Genesis came out of a series of conversations with young people. I have taught students from middle school to college for over 20 years, so I have often heard the questions they ask concerning Genesis. I recently was reminded that those questions haven’t changed much from when I was their age.

In fact, they are almost the same questions. What I find is that kids pick up their Bibles and open to the first chapter and read that God created the earth in six days, that He made Adam out of the dust (and Eve out of Adam), that He put them in a garden, and that that they sinned and were cast out of the garden into a cursed world.

These same kids take science classes or go to museums or see movies that say the earth took billions of years to form by random processes, that man evolved from an ape-like creature (which evolved from something else), and that the idea of a garden of Eden and sin and a global flood are all myths someone made up.

The result is cognitive dissonance. Young people ask questions like: how old is the universe? Were Adam and Eve real? What about the Big Bang? Did God really create in six, 24-hour days? What about the dinosaurs? Was there a global flood? And so on and so forth. All these questions go back to a central question in everyone’s mind: is Genesis accurate when it comes to statements about the history of the world?

These are important questions; and their answers have important consequences. After all, these same kids know that Jesus and the apostles all talk about God creating the world, about Adam and Eve, about Noah, and about the Flood. The New Testament writers seem to present these people and events as being real. If, however, they didn’t happen, then what does that mean for the trustworthiness of Jesus and the apostles?

My Daughter’s Dissonance

These questions all became personal when I sat with my then 10-year-old daughter and listened to a debate concerning the merits of creation vs. evolution. As points were made this way and that, I watched the same cognitive dissonance begin within her. I saw a sense of confusion as she tried to put conflicting pieces together into a Biblical/historical/scientific framework she wasn’t quite old enough to grasp. (And, to be honest, a framework which I had not done a great job providing for her.)

As an aside, I think some level of cognitive dissonance is good for young people. I distinctly recall feeling it myself at 15-years-old when I was confronted with these same questions. My response, perhaps, was a bit unique in that I sat down to research both sides of the debate as thoroughly as a 15-year-old could by reading books by men like Dr. Richard Leakey and Dr. Henry Morris, side-by-side. It was a healthy intellectual challenge, and although I’m sure I didn’t understand everything I read, it did give me a better perspective on the framework surrounding these questions.

That experience, however, happened almost 30 years before my daughter’s experience. I hadn’t studied or read anything on these topics for decades. And I palpably felt my own ignorance. As a result, in light of what I had been hearing in my Sunday School classes from students, and was now hearing from her, I decided to research and create a documentary to address this very question.

My goal was to set out to create a feature-length documentary and accompanying materials that would provide Christians a comprehensive Biblical, historical, and scientific framework to help them think through the questions they were asking about Genesis.