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Saturday, March 28, 2026

Outpaced by the Evidence: How Fossil Footprints Shoot Flood Geology in the Foot

 



Contradictions are called lies...Calvin Smith, Executive Director, Answers in Genesis Canada (July 13th, 2025)


Introduction: When Evidence Walks Away from the Flood

Young Earth Creationists (YECs) often point to fossilized dinosaur footprints as compelling evidence for a global flood and a young Earth. Simultaneously, they argue that the Great Unconformity—an erosional surface separating ancient crystalline basement rock from overlying sedimentary layers—was formed by the same catastrophic event. But these two claims, when examined together, are not just inconsistent—they are mutually exclusive.

This article critically examines the internal contradictions in YEC flood geology, particularly the incompatibility between the preservation of delicate trace fossils and the violent tectonic and sedimentary processes they claim occurred during Noah’s Flood. Drawing on both YEC sources and mainstream geological literature, we demonstrate that the very footprints YECs celebrate as evidence actually undermine their entire model.

The Great Unconformity: A Geological Reset?

YEC proponents such as Steve Austin and Andrew Snelling argue that the Great Unconformity was created during the early stages of the Flood, when massive erosion stripped the continents down to crystalline basement rock, followed by rapid deposition of sedimentary layers miles thick. (1, 2, 3) Snelling, for example, claims that “continental-scale erosion” occurred in the opening days of the Flood, producing a beveled surface across continents.

But this model requires unimaginably high-energy processes: continent-wide tsunamis, catastrophic plate tectonics, and rapid subduction of oceanic crust. John Baumgardner, a leading YEC geophysicist, acknowledges that such processes would generate so much heat that only divine intervention could prevent the Earth from becoming uninhabitable. (4)

Footprints in the Flood? The Trace Fossil Paradox

At the same time, YECs claim that fossilized dinosaur footprints—such as those found in the Glen Rose Formation in Texas or the Connecticut River Valley—were made during the Flood, as dinosaurs fled rising waters. (5, 67) Ken Ham of Answers in Genesis has even suggested that these footprints were made in “subaqueous, moderate-to-high energy conditions” during the Flood. (8)

But this claim collapses under scrutiny. As paleontologist Glen Kuban and others have shown, the preservation of such footprints requires low-energy, stable conditions: moist but not saturated sediment, minimal disturbance, and rapid but gentle burial. As one critic aptly put it, “The same kind of ‘rapid burial’ that would fossilize bones would destroy footprints.” (9)

In short, the sedimentary conditions required to preserve footprints are incompatible with the catastrophic processes YECs invoke to explain the Great Unconformity and global sedimentation.

Internal Contradictions: A Model at War with Itself

Let’s juxtapose the two core YEC claims:

Claim

Implication

Conflict

The Flood stripped continents to bedrock and deposited miles-deep layers of sediment in days.

Requires high-energy, erosive, tectonic chaos.

Would obliterate any footprints or delicate trace fossils.

Dinosaur footprints were made and preserved during the Flood.

Requires low-energy, stable, gently buried surfaces.

Cannot occur in the same timeframe or environment as above.

This is not merely a tension—it’s a fatal contradiction. As geologist Stephen Mitchell notes, “How do you get dinosaurs walking around atop over a mile of recent flood deposits?” (10) The answer, within the YEC framework, is: you don’t.

Scholarly Consensus: What the Evidence Actually Shows

Mainstream geology offers a coherent explanation. Trace fossils like footprints, burrows, and nests are found in specific sedimentary environments—floodplains, tidal flats, and deserts—formed over long periods of time. The Great Unconformity, meanwhile, reflects a billion-year gap in the rock record, likely caused by a combination of tectonic uplift and erosion over deep time. (11)

As geologist Timothy Helble has shown, the sediment transport rates required to deposit formations like the Coconino Sandstone in a single year are physically impossible—even under the most generous Flood assumptions. (12)

Conclusion: When the Footprints Don’t Fit the Flood

The footprint paradox is more than a scientific contradiction—it reveals a deeper methodological fracture within Young Earth Creationist flood geology. By attempting to subsume all geological phenomena under a single catastrophic framework, YEC proponents sacrifice internal consistency, forcing the model to accommodate mutually exclusive conditions: violent tectonic upheaval and delicate sedimentary preservation, global erosion to bedrock and localized surface stability, high-energy floods and low-energy footprint formation.

These contradictions don’t merely reflect scientific gaps—they expose a form of apologetic overreach that elevates rhetorical expedience above intellectual integrity. If evidence like the Great Unconformity requires obliterative geological violence, then YECs must reckon with the logical fallout: that such a scenario necessarily precludes the preservation of trace fossils. To appeal to both phenomena without addressing their incompatibility is to construct a house of cards.

Mainstream geology, in contrast, provides not just explanatory power but temporal plausibility. It allows for both the preservation of delicate surface traces and the accumulation of massive erosional surfaces—because it does not compress all geological history into a single year.

What’s more, the theological consequences of these scientific inconsistencies cannot be ignored. When a model undermines itself internally, it invites scrutiny not just of its data, but of its hermeneutics. The insistence that a particular interpretation of Genesis must align with every layer of sediment or ripple mark risks reducing Scripture to a geological treatise and tying the authority of the text to a crumbling model of Earth history. As Proverbs 18:17 reminds us: “The first to state his case seems right until another comes and cross-examines him.” Cross-examination, in this case, reveals a model collapsing under its own burden of proof.

In the end, the footprints tell a different story. They speak not of creatures fleeing a planet-drowning deluge, but of ordinary moments—wandering, foraging, resting—etched into stable landscapes over long epochs. These traces are not the remnants of a singular, catastrophic event but the record of a world shaped by time, environment, and endurance. And ironically, it is these footprints—so often heralded by YECs as evidence for their case—that quietly, indelibly, walk it into the ground.



Wednesday, March 25, 2026

From Geocentrism to Genesis: What Concordism Gets Wrong About Scripture

 


Introduction:

For many Christians today, the origins debate feels like a litmus test for faithfulness. The pressure is real: If you can’t believe Genesis is literal history, how can you believe the resurrection is literal history? It’s a familiar refrain in Young Earth Creationist (YEC) circles, and at first glance it sounds like a reasonable defense of biblical authority. But beneath the surface lies a deeper problem — one that quietly reshapes how we read Scripture, how we understand science, and how we present the Christian faith to the watching world.

The claim that “If you can’t trust Genesis, you can’t trust the rest of the Bible” rests on an unspoken assumption: that Genesis is written as a modern historical narrative and is intended to provide scientifically accurate descriptions of cosmic and biological origins. Under this framework, any passage that appears to touch on the natural world — not just in the origins debate, but anywhere in Scripture — must align with contemporary scientific knowledge or else be seen as a threat to biblical authority. But this is precisely where the problem begins.

That problem is concordism.

From the outset, it’s important to recognize that concordism isn’t limited to any one group — Christians, skeptics, and even well‑meaning apologists often fall into it for different reasons Concordism is the attempt to make the Bible “line up” with modern scientific knowledge, as though Scripture’s truthfulness depends on its ability to function as a scientific textbook. It assumes that if the Bible is true, it must speak in the language, categories, and expectations of contemporary science. With that assumption in place, both critics and defenders of the Bible end up fighting the same battle on the same mistaken terms. One side tries to shock people into belief by claiming the Bible contains advanced scientific foreknowledge that could only be divine in origin. The other points to scientific inaccuracies in Scripture as evidence against its credibility. Both sides are employing concordism — often without realizing it. To understand why this assumption is so influential — and so problematic — we need to name it clearly.

What Concordism Actually Is

At its core, concordism is the belief that:

  • The Bible contains modern scientific facts and foreknowledge.

  • Those facts can be extracted from the text with the right interpretive method.

  • The truth of Scripture stands or falls on its ability to match current scientific models and/or cultural expectations.

This is why some Christians insist that Genesis must describe a literal, scientific sequence of events, or else the entire Bible collapses. And it’s why some skeptics argue that if Genesis doesn’t match modern cosmology, the Bible must be false.

Both sides share the same assumption: Scripture must conform to modern science to be trustworthy.

But that assumption is historically anachronistic. It asks an ancient Near Eastern text to behave like a 21st‑century lab report. It demands that pre‑scientific authors use modern categories they did not possess, writing for audiences who would not have understood them. Reading Genesis according to its ancient genre protects biblical authority rather than undermining it.

It is, in short, a category mistake.

A Thought Experiment: Rewinding to the 1500s

Imagine yourself in the middle of the heliocentrism debate. The scientific consensus is shifting. Telescopes are revealing new data. And someone stands up and declares:

“If you can’t believe the Bible when it says God set the earth on its foundations and it cannot be moved (Psalm 104:5), then you can’t believe the Bible when it says Christ died for your sins.”

We would immediately recognize the problem. The argument ties the truth of the gospel to a specific, pre‑scientific cosmology. It makes the resurrection depend on scientific evidence for an ancient phenomenological description of the world. And it sets Christians up for embarrassment the moment scientific knowledge advances.

This is precisely the danger of concordism today. Scientific models change. Interpretations shift. Data accumulates. If we tether the credibility of Scripture to the current state of scientific understanding, we all but guarantee that our faith will appear fragile, outdated, or foolish every time the scientific frontier moves forward.

Augustine Saw This Coming — 1,600 Years Ago

Long before telescopes, long before Darwin, long before modern science existed, Augustine warned Christians not to make Scripture look ridiculous by forcing it into scientific roles it was never meant to fill. His words are astonishingly relevant:

Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of the world, about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the years and the seasons, about the kinds of animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this knowledge he holds to as being certain from reason and experience. Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. The shame is not so much that an ignorant individual is derided, but that people outside the household of faith think our sacred writers held such opinions, and, to the great loss of those for whose salvation we toil, the writers of our Scripture are criticized and rejected as unlearned men. If they find a Christian mistaken in a field which they themselves know well and hear him maintaining his foolish opinions about our books, how are they going to believe those books in matters concerning the resurrection of the dead, the hope of eternal life, and the kingdom of heaven, when they think their pages are full of falsehoods on facts which they themselves have learnt from experience and the light of reason? Reckless and incompetent expounders of Holy Scripture bring untold trouble and sorrow on their wiser brethren when they are caught in one of their mischievous false opinions and are taken to task by those who are not bound by the authority of our sacred books. For then, to defend their utterly foolish and obviously untrue statements, they will try to call upon Holy Scripture for proof and even recite from memory many passages which they think support their position, although they understand neither what they say nor the things about which they make assertion.”
St. Augustine, The Literal Meaning of Genesis (ca. 415 AD)

Augustine’s concern was pastoral, not scientific. He feared that Christians who insisted on reading Scripture as a scientific treatise would undermine the credibility of the gospel itself. And he recognized that Scripture’s authority does not depend on its conformity to the scientific knowledge of any age — ancient, medieval, or modern.

Why Concordism Fails Both Believers and Skeptics

I. It misreads the Bible.

The Bible was written in a pre‑scientific world, using the literary conventions, cosmology, and symbolic patterns of its time. It communicates theological truth, not astrophysics. Demanding that it speak modern scientific language is like demanding that a parable include GPS coordinates.

II. It sets Christians up for unnecessary crises of faith.

If the Bible’s truthfulness depends on matching current scientific models, then every scientific discovery becomes a threat. This is precisely the kind of brittle faith Augustine warned against.

III. It unintentionally validates skeptical critiques.

When skeptics say, “The Bible is unscientific,” and Christians respond by trying to prove that ancient texts secretly contain modern science, both sides reinforce the same mistaken premise. The critic says, “The Bible says apples are oranges,” and the concordist replies, “Actually, apples are oranges if you really think about it.” Meanwhile, all the text itself is saying is that God created fruit and that fruit glorifies Him.

IV. It distracts from the Bible’s actual purpose.

Scripture is not trying to teach us the mechanics of cosmic origins. It is revealing who God is, who we are, and what it means to live in covenant relationship with the Creator. When we force it into modern scientific molds, we risk missing the theological beauty it is actually offering.

A Better Way Forward

The alternative to concordism is not skepticism. It is contextual reading — taking Scripture on its own terms, in its own world, according to its own literary forms. This approach honors both the integrity of the biblical text and the integrity of scientific inquiry.

It allows Christians to affirm the resurrection without insisting that the Bible must function as a modern scientific textbook. It frees us from tying the credibility of the gospel to the shifting sands of scientific theory. And it opens the door for meaningful dialogue with skeptics who have only ever encountered the Bible through the lens of concordist assumptions.

Closing Thoughts: Let Scripture Be What It Is

The Bible does not need to be a science textbook to be true, because Scripture’s authority doesn’t rise or fall with the scientific paradigm of any age. And it does not need to conform to our contemporary expectations to reveal the living God.

When we let Scripture speak in its own voice, we discover that its truth is deeper, richer, and more enduring than any scientific model could ever capture.

Concordism tries to protect the Bible, but in doing so it often distorts it. A better path is the one Augustine urged long ago: read Scripture wisely, humbly, and in a way that honors both God’s Word and God’s world.

That is not a retreat from truth. It is a return to it.


Saturday, March 21, 2026

Was Noah’s Flood Global? The Text, the History, and the Modern Assumptions

 



The Global Flood: A Theological Necessity or a Historical Inheritance?

The global flood narrative has long been a cornerstone of Young Earth Creationist (YEC) thought, often presented as a theological certainty derived from the Hebrew text of Genesis. However, upon closer examination, the emphasis on a worldwide flood appears to be more about scientific implications than biblical exegesis.

The Age of the Earth and the Need for a Global Flood

Modern YECism hinges on a literal-historical interpretation of Genesis that asserts the earth is only a few thousand years old. This view stands in stark opposition to the overwhelming scientific consensus that places Earth's age at approximately 4.5 billion years. In order to reject conventional geology, YEC advocates rely on Flood Geology—a framework that attributes most geological formations and fossil deposits to Noah's Flood rather than deep time. This approach allows them to dismiss mainstream geological dating methods and maintain their young-earth worldview.

The Origins of Flood Geology in Seventh-day Adventism

While some 17th–19th century writers (often called “scriptural geologists”) attempted to explain earth’s features through Noah’s Flood, these views were largely abandoned as geology professionalized in the late 1700s and 1800s. As a result, few YECs today realize that their commitment to a global flood has been inherited from Seventh-Day Adventist teachings rather than emerging purely from biblical interpretation. Flood Geology as we know it today was initially formulated by George McCready Price, a self-trained geologist and staunch Seventh-day Adventist apologist in the early 20th century. (1) Prices theory was developed as an alternative to mainstream geology, specifically to affirm the visions and teachings of Ellen G. White, the prophetess of the SDA church. (2) In particular, Price’s model was designed not only to defend the Adventist teaching of a global, cataclysmic flood and a young earth, but also the belief that all death is the result of Adam’s sin — a doctrine that requires the entire fossil record to be post‑Fall and therefore demands a global flood to explain it.

Price argued that Noahs Flood was responsible for shaping the earth’s geological record, directly challenging conventional geology. His ideas gained traction among fundamentalist Christians who sought scientific backing for a young-earth model. However, it wasn’t until the mid-20th century that Flood Geology became mainstream within evangelical circles.

The Influence of "The Genesis Flood"

In 1961, John Whitcomb Jr. and Henry M. Morris published The Genesis Flood, a book that repackaged Price’s theories for a broader evangelical audience. Morris, who later founded the Institute for Creation Research (ICR), played a pivotal role in popularizing Flood Geology beyond Adventist circles. The Genesis Flood became a foundational text in YEC apologetics, giving proponents a scientific-sounding alternative to mainstream geological explanations.

One of Morris’s most influential readers was Ken Ham. First exposed to The Genesis Flood in 1974, Ham became deeply invested in creation apologetics, founding the Creation Science Foundation (CSF) in Australia in 1980. His influence grew further when he moved to the United States and worked for Morris at ICR before founding Answers in Genesis in 1994—a ministry that continues to champion Flood Geology as a crucial component of YEC thought.

The Forgotten Question: Biblical vs. Scientific Interpretation

Many Christians today remain unaware of the historical trajectory of their flood beliefs. They accept a global flood as an unquestioned biblical truth without considering its extrabiblical origins. While a regional or local flood interpretation aligns with certain elements of the Genesis text, the necessity of a global deluge is often driven by scientific concerns rather than theological ones.

Flood Geology remains a linchpin of YECism—not because the Bible demands it, but because rejecting it would unravel the young-earth framework. Thus, many believers remain convinced that a worldwide flood is an undeniable biblical doctrine, even though its modern iteration owes more to 20th-century Adventist apologetics than to ancient Hebrew tradition.

The Linguistic Complexity of the Flood Account

A 2025 Facebook post by Ken Ham illustrates how this debate plays out in practice. In critiquing the idea that the continents split apart in the days of Peleg (Genesis 10:25), Ham argues that the Hebrew word (הָאָ֫רֶץ / hāʾāreṣ)— “earth/land” — must refer to nations or peoples in that context. (3) Yet in his global flood interpretation, the very same word is pressed to mean the entire planet. This inconsistency highlights the need to examine how Hebrew terms actually function in context, rather than assuming they always carry modern, global connotations. What makes this more striking is how often hāʾāreṣ appears in the very passages Ham treats as global in scope. The term occurs 22 times in Genesis 1–2 alone, and another 46 times in the flood account (Genesis 6–9). Beyond these opening chapters of Genesis, the word appears an astonishing 2,436 times throughout the Old Testament, where its meaning shifts with context—sometimes “land” or “ground,” other times “region” or even “people of the land.” The sheer frequency of the word underscores that it is not a technical term for “planet Earth” but a flexible expression shaped by context (as Ham admits in the previously cited social media post). Ham’s selective narrowing in Genesis 10:25, while insisting on a global sense in Genesis 6–9, reveals that his interpretation is driven more by apologetic necessity than by the Hebrew text itself.

Dr. Michael Heiser’s work highlights this further and reveals an often-overlooked issue in Flood Geology models—mainly, the assumption that biblical language necessarily points to a worldwide event. (4) Heiser’s linguistic analysis of Genesis 6–8 reveals that key terms in the flood narrative, such as “all” (כֹּל / kōl), “earth” (אֶרֶץ / erets), and “mountain” (הַר / har), do not always indicate exhaustive totality.

For example, in Genesis 41:57, we read: “All (כֹל; kōl) the earth came to Egypt to Joseph to buy grain.” Clearly, this does not mean every human being on the planet traveled to Egypt. Similarly, and as noted previously, the term ʾerets (אֶרֶץ), often translated as “earth,” can refer to a specific land or region rather than the entire globe (e.g., Genesis 12:7, 10; 15:18). Even har (הַר), translated as “mountain,” does not exclusively refer to massive peaks like Everest but can signify smaller hills (Genesis 22:14; Joshua 13:19; Haggai 1:8).

Additionally, biblical phrases like “all flesh” (כֹּל בָּשָׂר / kōl bāśār) and “the whole heavens” do not necessarily indicate universal scope. Isaiah 14:7 states, “The whole earth is at rest and is quiet,” but this clearly refers to a specific region experiencing peace—not a total global silence.

It is also worth remembering that this perspective is not unique to the Old Testament. We actually see it echoed in the New Testament as well. When Luke records that “a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that the whole empire should be registered” (Luke 2:1), the phrase “the whole world” is clearly framed within the Roman sphere of authority. The Romans themselves knew of other peoples—the Persians, and the so‑called barbarians beyond their borders—yet these groups fell outside Caesar’s jurisdiction and were exempt from his decree. And this isn’t limited to the Bible: extrabiblical records show that ancient rulers frequently spoke of themselves as “kings of the world,” even though neighboring monarchs made the same claim over their own domains. (5, 6) Such language reflects an ancient conception in which “earth” or “world” meant one’s own realm or the familiar expanse of the known world, not the globe in its entirety.

Context: The Key to Interpreting the Flood

According to both Ham and Heiser, context determines word meaning. With this principle in mind, Genesis 10 lists nations descended from Noah’s sons, covering only the Mediterranean and ancient Near East. There is no mention of Australia, China, or the Americas. Thus, when Genesis 9:19 states, “From these [Noah’s sons] the people of the whole earth were dispersed,” it defines “all the earth” in terms of Noah’s immediate descendants, not the entire globe.

This understanding provides a framework for interpreting Noah’s Flood as a local or regional event that was catastrophic and unprecedented in that it destroyed the known world from Noahs perspective, but does not require it to be global.

Conclusion

The global flood narrative within YEC circles is not merely about biblical literalism—it is a historical and scientific construct designed to defend a young-earth paradigm. By tracing its roots from George McCready Price to prominent YEC advocates like Henry Morris and Ken Ham, we uncover an intellectual lineage that shapes modern Christian thought. Understanding this history invites believers to critically examine their assumptions and ask whether their flood interpretation is genuinely derived from Scripture—or inherited from a movement attempting to redefine the geological record.

While deeply embedded in YEC thought, the present global flood interpretation owes more to modern theological necessity than to the original Hebrew text. By examining the historical origins of Flood Geology and applying linguistic insights from scholars like Dr. Michael Heiser, it becomes evident that the flood narrative does not require a worldwide deluge. The language of Genesis 6–8, when read in its ancient Near Eastern context, allows for a regional interpretation—one that remains faithful to Scripture while avoiding unnecessary conflict with geological science.

Thus, the real question is not whether the flood covered the entire planet, but whether modern readers are willing to reexamine inherited assumptions and approach Genesis with linguistic and contextual precision.