Creation Archive > Volume 22 Issue 1 > Creation: ‘where’s the proof?’
Creation: ‘where’s the proof?’
When the
person you talk to on creation insists that you ‘leave the Bible out of
it’, they are really saying the deck should be stacked one way.
by Ken Ham
Over the years, many people have challenged me with a question like:
‘I’ve been trying to witness to my friends.
They say they don’t believe the Bible and aren’t interested
in the stuff in it. They want real proof that there’s a God who
created, and then they’ll listen to my claims about Christianity.
What proof can I give them without mentioning the Bible so they’ll
start to listen to me?’
Briefly, my response is as follows.
Evidence
Creationists and evolutionists, Christians and non-Christians
all have the same evidence—the same facts. Think about it:
we all have the same earth, the same fossil layers, the same animals and
plants, the same stars—the facts are all the same.
The difference is in the way we all interpret the
facts. And why do we interpret facts differently? Because we start with
different presuppositions. These are things that are assumed to
be true, without being able to prove them. These then become the basis
for other conclusions. All reasoning is based on presuppositions
(also called axioms). This becomes especially relevant when dealing
with past events.
Past and present
We all exist in the present—and the facts all exist in the
present. When one is trying to understand how the evidence came about
(Where did the animals come from? How did the fossil layers form? etc.),
what we are actually trying to do is to connect the past to the present.
However, if we weren’t there in the past to
observe events, how can we know what happened so we can explain the present?
It would be great to have a time machine so we could know for sure about
past events.
Christians of course claim they do, in a sense, have a
‘time machine’. They have a book called the Bible which claims to be
the Word of God who has always been there, and has revealed to us the
major events of the past about which we need to know.
On the basis of these events (Creation, Fall, Flood,
Babel, etc.), we have a set of presuppositions to build a way of thinking
which enables us to interpret the evidence of the present.
Evolutionists have certain beliefs about the
past/present that they presuppose, e.g. no God (or at least none who
performed acts of special creation), so they build a different way of
thinking to interpret the evidence of the present.
Thus, when Christians and non-Christians argue about the evidence,
in reality they are arguing about their interpretations based on their presuppositions.
That’s why the argument often turns into something
like:
‘Can’t you see what I’m talking about?’
‘No, I can’t. Don’t you see how wrong you are?’
‘No, I’m not wrong. It’s obvious that I’m right.’
‘No, it’s not obvious.’ And so on.
These two people are arguing about the same evidence, but they are looking at the evidence through different glasses.
It’s not until these two people recognize
the argument is really about the presuppositions they have to start with,
that they will begin to deal with the foundational reasons for their different
beliefs. A person will not interpret the evidence differently until they
put on a different set of glasses—which means to change one’s
presuppositions.
I’ve found that a Christian who understands these
things can actually put on the evolutionist’s glasses (without
accepting the presuppositions as true) and understand how they look at
evidence. However, for a number of reasons, including spiritual ones, a
non-Christian usually can’t put on the Christian’s glasses—unless they
recognize the presuppositional nature of the battle and are thus
beginning to question their own presuppositions.
It is of course sometimes possible that just by
presenting ‘evidence’, you can convince a person that a particular
scientific argument for creation makes sense ‘on the facts’. But
usually, if that person then hears a different interpretation of the same evidence that seems better than yours, that person will
swing away from your argument, thinking they have found ‘stronger
facts’.
However, if you had helped the person to understand
this issue of presuppositions, then they will be better able to
recognize this for what it is—a different interpretation based on
differing presuppositions—i.e. starting beliefs.
As a teacher, I found that whenever I taught the
students what I thought were the ‘facts’ for creation, then their other
teacher would just re-interpret the facts. The students would then come
back to me saying, ‘Well sir, you need to try again.’
However, when I learned to teach my students how we
interpret facts, and how interpretations are based on our
presuppositions, then when the other teacher tried to reinterpret the
facts, the students would challenge the teacher’s basic assumptions.
Then it wasn’t the students who came back to me, but the other teacher!
This teacher was upset with me because the students wouldn’t accept her
interpretation of the evidence and challenged the very basis of her
thinking.
What was happening was that I had learned to teach the students how to think rather than just what to think. What a difference
that made to my class! I have been overjoyed to find, sometimes decades
later, some of those students telling me how they became active, solid
Christians as a result.
Debate terms
If one agrees to a discussion without using the Bible as some people insist, then they have set the terms of the debate. In essence these terms are:
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‘Facts’ are neutral. However, there
are no such things as ‘brute facts’; all facts
are interpreted. Once the Bible is eliminated in the argument, then
the Christians’ presuppositions are gone, leaving them unable
to effectively give an alternate interpretation of the facts. Their
opponents then have the upper hand as they still have their presuppositions — see Naturalism, logic
and reality.
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Truth can/should be determined independent of God. However, the Bible states: ‘The
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom’ (Psalm 111:10);
‘The fear of the Lord is the beginning
of knowledge’ (Proverbs 1:7). ‘But
the natural man does not receive the things of the Spirit of God,
for they are foolishness to him; neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned’ (1 Corinthians 2:14).
A Christian cannot divorce the spiritual nature of the battle from the battle itself. A non-Christian is not neutral. The Bible makes this very clear: ‘The one who is not with Me is against Me, and the one who does not gather with Me scatters’ (Matthew 12:30); ‘And
this is the condemnation, that the Light has come into the world, and
men loved darkness rather than the Light, because their deeds were evil’ (John 3:19).
Agreeing to such terms of debate also implicitly
accepts their proposition that the Bible’s account of the universe’s
history is irrelevant to understanding that history!
Ultimately, God’s Word convicts
1
Peter 3:15 and other passages make it clear we are to use every argument
we can to convince people of the truth, and 2
Cor. 10:4–5 says we are to refute error (like Paul did in his
ministry to the Gentiles). Nonetheless, we must never forget Hebrews 4:12:
‘For the word of God is living and powerful
and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the dividing apart
of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the heart.’
Also, Isaiah 55:11: ‘So shall
My word be, which goes out of My mouth; it shall not return to Me void,
but it shall accomplish what I please, and it shall certainly do what I
sent it to do.’
Even though our human arguments may be powerful,
ultimately it is God’s Word that convicts and opens people to the
truth. In all of our arguments, we must not divorce what we are saying
from the Word that convicts.
Practical application
When someone tells me they want ‘proof’ or ‘evidence’, not the Bible, my response is as follows:
‘You might not believe the Bible but I
do. And I believe it gives me the right basis to understand this
universe and correctly interpret the facts around me. I’m going to give
you some examples of how building my thinking on the Bible explains the
world and is not contradicted by science. For instance, the Bible
states that God made distinct kinds of animals and plants. Let
me show you what happens when I build my thinking on this
presupposition. I will illustrate how processes such as natural
selection, genetic drift, etc. can be explained and interpreted. You
will see how the science of genetics makes sense based upon the Bible.’
One can of course do this with numerous scientific examples, showing
how the issue of sin and judgment, for example, is relevant to geology
and fossil evidence. And how the Fall of man, with the subsequent Curse
on creation, makes sense of the evidence of harmful mutations, violence,
and death.
Once I’ve explained some of this in detail, I then continue:
‘Now let me ask you to defend your position concerning these matters. Please show me how your way of thinking, based on your beliefs, makes sense of the same evidence. And I want you to point out where my science and logic are wrong.’
In arguing this way, a Christian is:
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Using biblical presuppositions to build a way of thinking
to interpret the evidence.
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Showing that the Bible and science go hand in hand.1
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Challenging the presuppositions of the other person
(many are unaware they have these).
-
Forcing the debater to logically defend his position
consistent with science and his own presuppositions (many will find
that they cannot do this).
-
Honouring the Word of God that convicts the soul.
Remember, it’s no good convincing people to believe in
creation, without also leading them to believe and trust in the
Creator/Redeemer, Jesus Christ. God honours those who honour His Word.
We need to use God-honouring ways of reaching people with the truth of
what life is all about.
Naturalism, logic and reality
Those arguing against creation may not even be conscious of their most basic presupposition, one which excludes God a priori, namely naturalism/materialism (everything came from matter, there is no supernatural, no prior creative intelligence).2 The following two real-life examples highlight some problems with that assumption:
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A young man approached me at a seminar and stated,
‘Well, I still believe in the big bang, and that we arrived
here by chance random processes. I don’t believe in God.’
I answered him, ‘Well, then obviously your brain, and
your thought processes, are also the product of randomness.
So you don’t know whether it evolved the right way, or
even what right would mean in that context. Young man, you don’t
know if you’re making correct statements or even whether
you’re asking me the right questions.’
The young man looked at me and blurted
out, ‘What was that book you recommended?’ He finally realized that his
belief undercut its own foundations —such ‘reasoning’ destroys the
very basis for reason.
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On another occasion,
a man came to me after a seminar and said, ‘Actually, I’m an atheist.
Because I don’t believe in God, I don’t believe in absolutes, so I
recognize that I can’t even be sure of reality.’ I responded, ‘Then how
do you know you’re really here making this statement?’ ‘Good point,’ he
replied. ‘What point?’ I asked. The man looked at me, smiled, and said,
‘Maybe I should go home.’ I stated, ‘Maybe it won’t be there.’ ‘Good
point,’ the man said. ‘What point?’ I replied.
This man certainly got the message. If there is no God, ultimately,
philosophically, how can one talk about reality? How can one even
rationally believe that there is such a thing as truth, let alone
decide what it is?
Ed. Note: for more information on formal logic and
the Christian faith, see Loving God With All Your Mind: Logic and Creation. Return
to text. |
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References and notes
- In fact, science could avoid becoming still-born
only in a Christian framework. Even secular philosophers of science
are virtually unanimous on this. It required biblical presuppositions
such as a real, objective universe, created by one Divine Lawgiver,
who was neither fickle nor deceptive—and who also created
the mind of man in a way that was in principle capable of understanding
the universe. [Ed. note: Refuting
Evolution, Ch. 1, discusses this in more detail.] Return
to text.
- This assumption is even defended, as a ‘practical necessity’ in discussing scientific things including origins, by some professing Christians who are evolutionists. Return to text.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v22/i1/creation.asp