Creation: Once Upon All Time—A Review
A guest column by Jim Pamplin of the Creation Science Fellowship of Calvary Chapel
(Costa Mesa, California, USA)
June 11, 2005
Photo courtesy of Ink Foundry Public Relations
Promoted nationwide on American TV, “Creation”—performed this
past week at the famous Crystal Cathedral—distorts God’s straightforward
account of creation in Genesis in order to accommodate theistic evolution over vast
periods of time.
I attended the Thursday evening premiere of the heavily promoted musical production
held at the large Crystal Cathedral (Garden Grove, California, USA, pastored by
the well-known television preacher, Robert Schuller) Creation: Once Upon All Time.
It is a beautifully orchestrated, breathtakingly performed extravaganza …
of old earth creationism, theistic evolution and beautiful if bewildering theatrics.
Blending computer-generated imagery (CGI) on a massive 200-foot screen, with a spectrum
of swirling lights, live actors, giant puppets, troupes of dancers and vocalists,
a circus-load of aerialists, and such audience-immersing special effects as wind,
mist and thematic aromas, Once Upon All Time aims to inspire people of
all faiths and skeptics, too, with its fanciful version of the creation of the universe.
Set-up of the story
While fishing from a rowboat, a boy named Michael expresses his interest in science,
and asks his grandfather to tell him a story. The grandfather begins. It is a story
about creation.
Strained theology
Photography: Coral von Zumwalt Photography
God gets a new name in Once Upon All Time. He is called “The Presence,”
and is represented first by a blue-lit cloud of stage fog, later by an enormous
blue sheet that descends to the stage as a tubular curtain. Only Lucifer calls this
Being “Deity.” When Michael asks why the Presence is referred to with
personal pronouns like “he” and “him,” Grandpa answers,
“Because it’s my story!”
Stars and galaxies appear in Scenes 2 and 3 of Act 1, while the earth does not appear
until Scene 4. This directly conflicts with Genesis 1:1-4, where the earth is created
on Day 1, and the sun, moon and stars on Day 4.
In Scenes 2-4, billions of years are implied in the visual homage paid to the big
bang and to a molten earth that eventually cools over a long period to support life.
This long-age view of the universe conflicts with the six 24-hour periods of creation
described in Genesis 1, and confirmed in Exodus 20:11:
For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and
all that in them is, wherefore the LORD blessed the seventh day and hollowed it.
Furthermore, the big bang is expressly taught against in Genesis 1, where
we are told that the sun was created after the earth (the big bang model has the
sun first).*
In Scene 7, Creation portrays death before Adam’s sin, another
anti-biblical teaching. In this scene, a Tyrannosaurus rex collapses and
an elephant “evolves” from its corpse. As the CMI website often declares,
such animal death before Adam conflicts with Scripture. (See
The Fall: a cosmic catastrophe and Grotesque dinosaur
cannibals!).
Like so many in the church who compromise regarding the book of Genesis, writer/producer/director
Carol Schuller Milner (daughter of the church’s pastor) sadly forces long-ages,
evolutionary thinking into Genesis 1—like stuffing a stepsister’s big
ugly foot into Cinderella’s glass slipper. It doesn’t fit. It won’t
fit. It cannot fit. The two are mutually incompatible.
And yet, Milner tried. Indeed, the program handout says, “What took God seven
days and nature millions of years to create, has taken Carol 13 years to
theatrically represent” (emphasis ours).
Beautiful if bewildering theatrics
The stage and air are often filled with beings in leafy variegated gowns and tunics
who dance on stage or perform stunning aerial ballets. A cluster of robed chanters
appears from time to time—one only wonders who or what they represent!
Most bizarre, there is not one Adam. There are two, one dancing or pantomiming while
the other sings. Likewise, there is not one Eve. There are two. Strange …
very strange.
Playwright Milner has recounted a vivid dream she had after working intensely with
her science consultant, physicist Dr. Michael Guillen, trying to reconcile faith
and science. A press release relates the story:
“I was peering into a keyhole, looking in on the other side. It took my breath
away.” It was through her dream that Milner realized that her quest to find
the answer [to reconciling faith and science] wasn’t likely, adding: “I
believe we have permission not to know.”
But we do know. The Creator presented the Answers … in Genesis.
*For a devastating scientific critique of the big bang, read
What about the big bang?
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