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Page 4 of 7 (76 Articles)
World War 1 centenary
New video clip about the evolutionary origins of World War 1, which were the precursors of WW2 and the Nazi Holocaust.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Darwin’s corrosive influence on literature and society as a whole
A confronting look at the impact of God-hating, influential writers.
by Jerry Bergman
The scars of a nation
The scars of the treatment that first Australians received is a lesson in how not to treat people.
by Carl Wieland
Jettisoning Genesis and the silent genocide
The astonishing numbers of abortions performed each year is indicative of the complete loss of society’s Judeo-Christian foundations, which should drive Christians to their knees in prayer.
by Gavin Cox
Soil, trees and their fruit
The Lord Jesus told us that certain trees will produce certain fruit. Gary Bates uses this analogy to show the importance of Genesis creation for our worldviews.
by Gary Bates
African invasion of the bodysnatchers
In the heyday of evolutionary racism, materialistic scientists saw dark-skinned people as mere specimens to be studied, and they engaged in the macabre trade of body parts from various countries.
by William Johnson
Of cows and man
For humans, but not for cattle?
by Mark James
Proclaiming Creation in a scientific age-->
Contrary to the tired old mantra, ‘science has disproved the Bible’, biblical literate and scientifically informed Christians can (and should) proclaim creation with well-founded confidence.
by Philip Bell
Does God exist?
Is there objective evidence that God exists? What are the consequences of atheism? Where did God come from? Can we know God personally?
by multiple authors
“No To Racism” campaign backlash
Will racism ever be eradicated? Does the world have the remedy? A return to biblical creation is needed: God made from one man every nation of mankind.
by Lucien Tuinstra
Abortion Choices
Abortion involves at least three choices which involve personal preference, the value of human life, and whether to take responsibility for one’s actions.
by Thomas Bailey
No monkey business here please, we’re the BBC!
The BBC are enthusiastic purveyors of evolution, so why sack their staff when they base their moral decisions on the BBC’s teaching?
by Gavin Cox