Believe it or not—the earth is young!
by Tas Walker
Photo stock.xchng
Believe it or not, methods to ‘date’ the earth as being very old just
don’t add up. For a start, the various methods contradict one another, and
are often contradicted by the evidence itself.
For example, wood from sandstone near Sydney, Australia, supposedly 230 million
years old, gave an age of 34,000 years using carbon dating. (See
Dating dilemma.)
Samples of rock from lava erupted just in the last 50 years from Mt Ngauruhoe,
New Zealand, gave potassium-argon ages up to 3.5 million years. (See Dating failure.)
Wood from Jurassic rocks in the UK, said to be 190 million years old, gave
an age of 24,000 years using carbon dating. (See
Geological conflict.)
Ten-year-old rock from a volcanic lava flow on Mount St Helens, USA, gave
a radiometric age of 350,000 years. Minerals from the same samples gave
an age of 2.8 million years. So which date do you choose? (See
Excess argon.)
In the USA a flour mill flooded and saturated a bag of flour with mineral-rich water
that petrified the flour into rock in three weeks. (See
Petrified flour.)
When Mount St Helens exploded on 12 June 1980 it buried parts of the surrounding
countryside under six metres of ash. The sediment contained fine laminations and
looked like it had been deposited over thousands of years.1
Photo wikipedia.com
Diamonds from the USA, supposedly more than a billion years old, gave a
carbon-14 date of 56,000 years. (See
Diamonds.)
When sandy sediment from Lightning Ridge, Australia, was combined with a certain
liquid, glistening opal began to form within a few weeks. Under
the microscope it had the same mineral structure as natural opal. (See
Creating opals.)
On 19 March 1982 a mudflow on Mount St Helens carved a canyon, called Little Grand
Canyon, within a single day. It now has a small creek flowing through it
and looks like it took thousands of years to form.2
A company in the USA will use the ashes from the cremation of your loved one and
transform them into a diamond in weeks. (See
LifeGem.)
A cavern in an abandoned mine in Colorado, USA, is filled with stalactites and stalagmites
that look like they took thousands of years to form. Yet the mining ended
only 20 years ago. (See
Mollie Kathleen.)
The idea that the world is billions of years old is not a modern scientific ‘discovery’.
Scientists cannot measure the age of the earth directly but base their estimate
on how they imagine the world formed.
Scientists cannot measure the age of the earth directly but base their estimate
on how they imagine the world formed.
For nearly two thousand years Christians have accepted that the Bible records reliable
history and that the world was created in six days about 6000 years ago.3
The first edition of
Encyclopedia Britannica in 1771 gives the age of the earth as thousands
of years, and describes the global Flood of Noah as a real historical event.
The Bible says that the creator God is wise, loving and good, and the world he made
reflected His nature (Genesis 1:31; Romans 1:20).
In the world that God made originally there was nothing that caused hurt or harm.
Originally all animals ate plants (Genesis 1:30). Even today many animals with sharp teeth,
including fruit bats, and panda bears, do not eat meat (See
The lion that would not eat meat).
Death and corruption came into the world as a consequence of the disobedience of
Adam and Eve, our original ancestors. (See
How did bad things come about?)
The global Flood
in Noah’s day, 1700 years after Adam and Eve, explains the fossils in the
geological strata—so those billions of dead creatures died after
the first man sinned (not millions of years before).
God the Son, Jesus Christ, died on a wooden cross to pay the penalty for our sin.
He rose from the dead because his sacrifice was accepted by God.
We will all die because we are descended from Adam and Eve and because we are all
sinners. However, we can all receive eternal life from Jesus Christ by turning from
our sin and trusting him. (See
Good news.)
Believe it or not, there is a lot of geological evidence that suggests the rocks
formed rapidly and that the world is young, as the Bible says.
Related resources
References
- Morris, J. and Austin, S.A., Footprints in the Ash, Master
Books, Green Forest, AR, pp. 50–55, 2003. Return to Text.
- Morris, J. and Austin, Ref. 1, pp 74–77.
Return to Text.
- Batten, D. and Sarfati, J., 15 Reasons to Take Genesis as
History, CMI, Brisbane, pp. 19–21, 2006. Return to Text.
Published: 28 November 2007(GMT+10)
(Also available in Albanian)
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