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The Bible is the bedrock of civilized society
History’s most influential book has been widely abandoned as the world rejects its transformative power and embraces evolution.
by
Warren Nunn
How to think (not what to think)
Understanding the difference between what opposing theories predict helps to discriminate between them and thus avoid useless arguments.
by
Robert Carter
Faith and facts
When debating skeptics who insist that science is all about evidence, it’s important to show that their worldview is incoherent; it does not make rational sense of the world we live in.
by
Don Batten
Precambrian rabbits—death knell for evolution?
Richard Dawkins says a rabbit fossil in the Precambrian would be evidence against evolution, but would that really be the case?
by
Shaun Doyle
Worldviews, logic, and earth’s age—part 1
Old-earth creationists should face the reality that their position more aligns them with a worldview that opposes Christianity.
by
John K. Reed and Shaun Doyle
God created with functional maturity, not ‘appearance of age’
Did Adam and Eve have navels, and the first trees have growth rings? Did God create light in transit from stars? What did Philip Gosse really teach?
by
Jonathan Sarfati
Evidence
for
young-earth creationism
How to build a case for biblical creation
by
Shaun Doyle
Can all those scientists be wrong?
What does history say?
by
Gordon Howard
How do we love our neighbor?
It is difficult sometimes to get the appropriate balance of ‘grace and truth’ when responding to opponents. Here are some principles that CMI uses.
by
Gary Bates, Lita Cosner, Keaton Halley
What distinguishes origins and operational science?
What’s the difference?
by
Lita Sanders
‘The dingo’s got my baby!’
Carl Wieland chats with
Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton
.
by
Carl Wieland
Defining arguments away—the distorted language of secularism
How key terms in the origins debate have been defined to slant the ‘rules of engagement’ between Christianity and secularism against Christianity.
by
Shaun Doyle
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