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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Mary Schweitzer: Why Her Data Is Welcome — and Her Voice Is Not

The Christian Paleontologist YECs Can’t Afford to Acknowledge



Introduction

Mary Higby Schweitzer is one of the most significant paleontologists of the last several decades. Her discovery of soft‑tissue–like structures in T. rex and other dinosaur fossils reshaped the field and opened new avenues for molecular paleontology. She is also, importantly, an openly professing Christian who has repeatedly said her faith and her science are not in conflict.

Yet within the Young Earth Creationist (YEC) community — particularly at Answers in Genesis (AiG) and in Ken Ham’s public commentary — Schweitzer has become a rhetorical target. Her work is selectively quoted, misrepresented, or framed as part of a secular conspiracy. And her Christian identity is often erased or implicitly denied.

The Discovery

In 2005, Schweitzer and her team published their findings on soft‑tissue preservation in T. rex. The scientific community responded with excitement and curiosity. YEC organizations responded with something else: an opportunity.

Rather than engaging the research on its own terms, AiG and other YEC sources immediately framed the discovery as a crisis for “evolutionists.” In their 2006 article The Scrambling Continues, AiG wrote:

“Evolutionists continue to attempt to explain the presence of soft tissue in a T. rex bone… it certainly taxes one’s imagination to believe that soft tissue and cells could remain so relatively fresh in appearance for the tens of millions of years of supposed evolutionary history.” (1)

This framing is typical: AiG presents mainstream scientists as panicked or dishonest, while ignoring the extensive peer‑reviewed literature explaining the chemical and environmental mechanisms that allow such preservation.

Schweitzer herself has repeatedly corrected these misrepresentations — but the YEC community rarely, if ever, acknowledges her explanations or the scientific literature on the topic.

Erasing Her Christianity

One of the most striking patterns is the tendency for YEC sources to imply that Schweitzer is either capitulating to, or a willing participant in, a secular, anti‑Christian establishment. This is despite the fact that she is a practicing Christian who has spoken openly about her faith. (2, 3)

The modern YEC movement has a long history of labeling Christians who accept mainstream science as “atheists,” “compromisers,” or “undermining Scripture with the ideas of fallible men.” This broader framing makes it nearly impossible for someone like Schweitzer to be recognized as a faithful Christian while also being a competent scientist.

That being said, it's important to be precise here: AiG and Ken Ham have never explicitly called Mary Schweitzer an atheist. They don’t make that direct claim. But their rhetorical strategy accomplishes something similar without ever using the word.

They consistently label her an “evolutionist,” a term that—while technically accurate in the sense that Schweitzer accepts the consensus of mainstream science—carries specific connotations within YECism. In AiG’s ecosystem, “evolutionist” functions as a catch‑all category for anyone who rejects their interpretation of Genesis, regardless of whether that person actually accepts evolution. In practice, this means that in AiG’s usage an “evolutionist” is implicitly grouped with:

  • atheists/agnostics

  • secular scientists

  • skeptics/ “compromisers”

  • those who “reject God and His Word”

Even though Schweitzer is an openly professing Christian, AiG never acknowledges her faith. Not once. They celebrate her data, cite her papers, and build entire arguments around a misrepresentation of her discoveries — but they erase her identity.

This omission is not neutral.

It is a rhetorical move.

The result is a kind of functional misrepresentation: they don’t call her an atheist, but they treat her as if she were one. In practice, this means her Christian identity is hardly ever mentioned in YEC sources. Instead, her work is consistently framed as part of “evolutionist” efforts to hide the truth.

This allows organizations like AiG to use her findings when convenient while dismissing her corrections of their misuse. It’s a pattern that reveals far more about YEC priorities than about Schweitzer’s faith or scientific contributions.

Misrepresenting Her Motives and Methods

As stated, the rhetorical strategy of YEC apologists often involves insinuating that Schweitzer and other scientists are deliberately hiding evidence that would support a young earth. (4, 5, 6) In The Scrambling Continues, Answers in Genesis continues:

“Evolutionists continue to attempt to explain… soft tissue… For evolutionists who argue that dinosaurs died about 65 million years ago, it was a startling discovery.”

The implication is clear: Schweitzer and her colleagues are scrambling to protect their secular worldview.

But Schweitzer herself has said the opposite. She has repeatedly emphasized that science is about following the evidence wherever it leads — and that her Christian faith motivates her to pursue truth, not suppress it.

The Personal Cost — and the Damage of the YEC Dichotomy

Mary Schweitzer has spoken openly about how her scientific views created real relational strain in her life — including in her marriage. That reality matters because it reveals the pressure placed on Christians who refuse to treat Young Earth Creationism as a test of faithfulness.

Within many YEC communities, the message is clear: If you don’t accept a 6,000‑year‑old earth and global flood, you’re undermining Scripture itself.

That framing turns a secondary interpretive question into a spiritual litmus test. And when a community treats disagreement as rebellion, Christians who follow the evidence where it leads often pay a steep relational price — suspicion, alienation, or even the loss of relationships that once felt secure.

Schweitzer’s experience is a sobering example of what happens when a theological model is elevated to the level of orthodoxy. The cost is not theoretical. It lands in marriages, friendships, churches, and families. And it shows how deeply harmful the YEC “either‑or” dichotomy can be when it becomes a measure of spiritual loyalty rather than a matter of honest interpretation.

Why Misrepresent Schweitzer? Because Her Work Is Inconvenient

Schweitzer’s research does not support a young earth. It never has. And she has said so explicitly. (6, 7)

Rather than engage her findings honestly, YEC sources reframe them as:

  • evidence of a scientific cover‑up

  • proof that “evolutionists” are panicking

  • confirmation that mainstream science is collapsing

  • a spiritual battle between “God’s Word” and “man’s word”

This is why Schweitzer is misrepresented: her work is powerful, her credentials are impeccable, and her Christian faith makes her impossible to dismiss without rhetorical distortion.

Conclusion

Mary Schweitzer’s story exposes something deeper than a scientific disagreement. It reveals how fragile the YEC framework becomes when confronted with a Christian scientist whose work does not fit its predetermined conclusions. Rather than adjusting the model, YEC organizations like Answers in Genesis adjust the narrative — by erasing her faith, reframing her motives, and recasting her research as a threat rather than a contribution.

This is not simply a matter of scientific interpretation. It is a pastoral and communal problem. When a movement treats a particular reading of Genesis as the boundary of Christian faithfulness, it inevitably harms the Christians who cannot, in good conscience, deny the evidence in front of them. Schweitzer’s experience — the misrepresentation, the suspicion, the relational strain — is not an anomaly. It is the predictable outcome of a system that confuses loyalty to an interpretive model with loyalty to Christ.

Her work stands as a reminder that truth does not need protection, and that Christian scientists should not have to choose between intellectual honesty and spiritual belonging. The cost she has borne should prompt the church to ask whether the YEC “either‑or” is worth the relational and spiritual damage it continues to cause.







Saturday, April 25, 2026

Dinosaur Soft Tissue and Deep Time: A Christain Perspective on Molecular Fossil Preservation




Introduction

The marvel of God’s creation has long inspired both scientists and theologians. The natural world, with its intricate details and hidden histories, testifies to the wisdom and creative power of the Creator, as the psalmist declares, "The heavens declare the glory of God" (Psalm 19:1). In the early 2000s, reports emerged describing soft-tissue-like structures within dinosaur bones. For some, these findings were seen as anomalous, even bolstering claims that the fossil record supports a young Earth. Yet a closer examination reveals that the recovered “soft tissues” are not preserved biological organs from living animals but vestiges transformed by chemical alteration over millions of years. This article examines this data in the context of modern paleontological research and explains how it aligns with an ancient Earth—a view that many Christians, including historically influential figures such as Sir Isaac Newton and Johannes Kepler, have embraced as they pursued truth both in Scripture and in the natural world.

The True Nature of Fossil Soft-Tissue Remnants

Diagenesis: Transformation Over Deep Time

When initial reports described the recovery of dinosaur “soft tissues,” they captured public imagination. Detailed analyses—using electron microscopy, spectroscopy, and biochemical assays—have since clarified that the structures observed in fossilized bones are not intact, original tissues, but rather degraded molecular remnants. Proteins such as collagen are detected only in fragmented forms. These molecules have undergone extensive diagenesis, a slow process in which original organic material is chemically altered by mineral infiltration and low-temperature reactions over millions of years. As a result, what appear to be blood vessels or connective tissues are, in fact, mineralized tubes and cross-linked protein residues that bear only a molecular echo of the organism’s original anatomy.

The Influence of Microbial Biofilms

Further complicating the picture is the role of microbial biofilms. Bacteria can infiltrate porous bone structures, depositing organic and inorganic materials that, upon microscopic examination, resemble soft tissues. These biofilms incorporate both endogenous molecules and newly introduced components, creating composite structures that can easily be misinterpreted. Rather than evidence of a miraculous preservation of life’s delicate parts, these features reflect natural processes that act over extensive periods—a timeline that fits seamlessly with geological and astronomical data indicating an ancient Earth.

Implications for Young Earth Creationism

Many Young Earth Creationists argue that the presence of seemingly intact dinosaur soft tissues supports a rapid, catastrophic model of history wherein decay had little time to occur. However, from both a scientific and a Christian theological perspective that values truth wherever it is found, such claims do not withstand scrutiny. The chemical modifications, mineral infilling, and incorporation of microbial biofilms indicate that these remnants are products of slow diagenetic transformations rather than vestiges of recently decayed tissue. Their degradation patterns—consistent with low-temperature kinetics operating over millions of years—demonstrate that nature follows well-understood physical and biochemical laws. This natural process is precisely what one would expect if an omniscient God had set in motion creative processes that unfold gradually over time.

It is important to underscore that the Bible is not intended to serve as a laboratory manual describing the minutiae of geological time. The biblical creation account communicates theological truths about God as the sovereign Creator rather than providing a literal scientific chronology. Thus, while it is essential to respect the scriptural narrative, it does not conflict with the robust, convergent evidence from geology, molecular chemistry, and paleontology that supports an Earth billions of years old. Indeed, an integrative Christian worldview sees the study of natural history as a means of understanding the magnificent regularity and order embedded in creation—revealing much about the character and majesty of God (Romans 1:16-20).

Discussion and Theological Reflections

For Christians who seek to harmonize their faith with scientific evidence, the case of dinosaur "soft tissues" offers both a humbling and inspiring lesson. The pursuit of scientific truth is not opposed to faith; rather, it can lead to deeper awe for the Creator. When diagenetic processes, mineral replacement, and microbial activity are carefully studied, the results point emphatically toward gradual processes spanning immense periods. This does not diminish the miraculous nature of creation. Instead, it underscores a fundamental belief held by many Christians: that God’s creative work is both orderly and awe-inspiring, and that natural processes can reveal the layers of time embedded in our world.

Moreover, understanding the degradation of organic material in fossils as a gradual, natural process reminds us that human interpretation requires careful investigation. The tendency to favor simplistic explanations—such as those that posit a young Earth—risks missing the complexity and subtlety inherent in God’s handiwork. In accepting an ancient Earth based on diagenetic evidence, Christians in science are not abandoning their faith; rather, they are embracing both the revelations of Scripture and the lessons of nature. True wisdom, in this view, takes the form of a graceful dialogue between faith and reason.

Conclusion

The recovered dinosaur soft-tissue remnants, as revealed by decades of research, are not evidence of intact, recently decayed organs but are instead degraded, mineralized residues shaped by slow chemical and microbial processes. This transformed state is fully consistent with an ancient, dynamic Earth—a reality that many Christians reconcile with the biblically attested creative power of God. While some proponents of Young Earth Creationism interpret these finds as support for a recent origin, both the scientific data and a balanced Christian perspective affirm that the natural history of our world unfolds over vast, meaningful timescales. In embracing this view, we honor the complexity of God’s creation and the rigorous inquiry that such beauty inspires.







Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Reading Genesis Slowly: Why a Literal Interpretation Doesn’t Fit the Text




Introduction

Few biblical texts have generated as much debate—or as much confusion—as the opening chapters of Genesis. For many modern Christians, these chapters are assumed to be a straightforward, literal chronology of material origins. Yet the text itself contains numerous literary, linguistic, and contextual clues that resist such a reading. When we take these clues seriously, a richer and more historically grounded understanding of Genesis emerges—one that honors Scripture without forcing it into categories foreign to the ancient world.

The question is not whether Genesis is true. The question is how Genesis intends to communicate its truth. And that question becomes especially important when a modern literal‑historical reading creates tensions within the text that the ancient author never intended.

What follows is an exploration of several internal features of Genesis 1–2 that challenge a rigidly literal chronology and invite us to consider the possibility that these chapters are doing something far more profound than offering a journalistic account of material origins.

1. The Earth and Waters Exist Before Day One

Genesis opens with a striking scene:

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness covered the surface of the watery depths, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the surface of the waters.”
Genesis 1:1–2 

If one insists on a strict, literal chronology, a problem emerges immediately: On which day did God create the planet and the water? According to the text, both already exist before God speaks light into existence on Day One (Genesis 1:3).

Furthermore, the phrase “the heavens and the earth” is a well‑attested Ancient Near Eastern merism meaning “the entire cosmos.” This suggests that the creation of the universe itself occurs prior to the six‑day sequence, not within it.

A strictly literal reading therefore creates a chronological tension that the text itself does not resolve—because the text is not attempting to provide a modern chronological account in the first place.

2. Days Without a Sun? The Problem of Days 1–3

Young Earth Creationism (YEC) asserts that each creation day is a literal 24‑hour period. Yet the sun, moon, and stars—the very bodies God appoints to “rule the day and night” and “serve as signs for seasons and days and years”—do not appear until Day Four (Genesis 1:14–19).

This raises an obvious question:
How can the first three days be literal, solar days when the sun does not yet exist?

To solve this, many YEC interpreters appeal to passages such as Revelation 21:23, Revelation 22:5, and Isaiah 60:19–20. But these texts describe the future New Creation, not the original creation. They are symbolic visions of a localized reality (New Jerusalem) in a world where “the former things have passed away.”

Using highly symbolic eschatological imagery to reinterpret Genesis 1 retroactively is hermeneutically precarious. If such a method were applied consistently across Scripture, it would produce interpretive chaos. Yet it is often accepted uncritically when used to defend a modern literalist reading of Genesis.

This tension is not a new observation. Over a century ago, theologian James Orr made the same point with remarkable clarity:

“You say there is the ‘six days’ and the question of whether those days are meant to be measured by the twenty‑four hours of the sun’s revolution around the earth—I speak of these things popularly. It is difficult to see how they should be so measured when the sun that is to measure them is not introduced until the fourth day. Do not think that this larger reading of the days is a new speculation. You find Augustine in early times declaring that it is hard or altogether impossible to say of what fashion these days are, and Thomas Aquinas, in the middle ages, leaves the matter an open question. To my mind these narratives in Genesis stand out as a marvel, not for its discordance with science, but for its agreement with it.”
—James Orr, “The Early Narratives of Genesis,” in The Fundamentals: A Testimony to the Truth, ed. A. C. Dixon & R. A. Torrey, Vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 1993), 237 

The point being made here is devastatingly simple:
If the sun does not exist until Day Four, then the first three “days” cannot be measured by the sun’s cycle.

And far from being a modern concession to science, this insight is deeply rooted in the Christian interpretive tradition. As noted, Augustine, writing in the fourth century, openly admitted that the nature of the Genesis “days” was mysterious and likely non‑literal. And Thomas Aquinas, in the thirteenth century, likewise left the question open.

In other words, the idea that the Genesis days may not be literal 24‑hour periods is not a modern compromise—it is a venerable Christian position stretching back more than 1,600 years.

3. The Meaning of Yôm (Day)

Note: I address the linguistic details of this point more directly in my previous article, “Does Yôm Always Mean a 24‑Hour Day?

The Hebrew word for “day,” yôm (יוֹם), has a broad semantic range. It can mean:

  • a 24‑hour day

  • the daylight portion of a day

  • part of the daylight hours

  • a long, undefined period of time

This flexibility appears immediately in Genesis 2. The form yôm appears in:

Hebrew simply does not have separate words for “day” and “age.” The same term covers both. Thus, the presence of the word yôm in Genesis 1 cannot, by itself, settle the question of duration.

4. “Evening and Morning”: Literal or Literary?

The repeated phrase “and there was evening and there was morning” has often been taken as proof of literal 24‑hour days. But this phrase can just as easily refer to the daylight portion of a day—one of the standard meanings of yôm.

Moreover, the movement from evening → morning (darkness → light) is the reverse of the normal daily pattern. This inversion may be symbolic, representing a movement from disorder to order—a theme that permeates the entire chapter.

Early Christian thinkers such as Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Athanasius, and Augustine recognized this symbolic dimension and did not interpret the Genesis days as literal 24‑hour periods.

5. The Seventh Day Has No Ending

Day Seven stands apart from the other days. It lacks the closing formula “and there was evening and there was morning,” suggesting that it is not a bounded, 24‑hour period.

This interpretation is reinforced by later Scripture:

  • Psalm 95:11 speaks of God’s ongoing rest

  • Hebrews 4:1–11 explicitly states that God’s Sabbath rest continues and that believers may still enter it

If Day Seven is not a literal day, why assume Days One through Six must be?

6. Adam Is Not Created in Eden

Genesis 2:8 states:

“The LORD God planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and there he placed the man he had formed.”
Genesis 2:8 

Adam is created before Eden is planted and is placed there afterward. The text gives no indication of how much time passes between these events. The narrative flow suggests a sequence, not a timestamp.

7. Naming the Animals: A Non‑Literal Timeframe

In Genesis 2:19–20, Adam names “all the animals.” If interpreted literally, this would require Adam to classify every animal kind—including the extinct species which account for approximately 99% of all species that have ever lived—in a matter of hours.

The Hebrew exclamation when Adam first sees Eve—“At last!”—is emphatic and suggests a significant passage of time. The narrative reads like a story of longing and anticipation, not a rapid sequence of events compressed into a single afternoon.

8. Science and the Question of Probability

Christians agree that everything exists for God’s glory and according to His will. Where we differ is in how we interpret the method and timing of God’s creative work.

Both a young universe and an old universe are possible for an omnipotent God. The question is not what God could have done, but what the evidence—biblical and scientific—suggests He did do.

Even leading YEC scholars have acknowledged the tension:

“Only when such a position (the geocentric model) became mathematically and observationally ‘hopeless,’ should the church have abandoned it. This is in fact what the church did. Young earth creationism, therefore, need not embrace a dogmatic or static biblical hermeneutic. It must be willing to change and admit error. Presently, we can admit that as recent creationists we are defending a very natural biblical account, at the cost of abandoning a very plausible scientific picture of an ‘old’ cosmos. But over the long term this is not a tenable position. In our opinion, old earth creationism combines a less natural textual reading with a much more plausible scientific vision … At the moment this would seem the more rational position to adopt.”
—Moreland & Reynolds, Three Views of Creation and Evolution, p. 73 

This is not a concession of defeat. It is an invitation to humility.

Conclusion: A Call for Patience, Humility, and Literary Sensitivity

The early chapters of Genesis are rich, profound, and theologically saturated. But they are also ancient, literary, and deeply contextual. When we impose a modern literal‑historical framework onto these chapters, we create problems that the text itself never creates—and never attempts to solve.

Given the internal clues we have examined—the pre‑Day‑One existence of earth and water, the absence of the sun during the first three “days,” the flexible meaning of yôm, the symbolic structure of “evening and morning,” the open‑ended Seventh Day, the narrative pacing of Genesis 2, and the scientific evidence for an old cosmos—it may be wise to slow down and reconsider whether Genesis 1–2 is offering a literal, sequential account of material origins at all.

A modern literalist reading generates tensions within the text that the ancient author does not seem concerned about. A literary‑theological reading, however, allows Genesis to speak with its own voice, in its own ancient idiom, and with its own inspired purpose.

In the end, we will one day know precisely how God created. But when that day comes, it is hard to imagine that anyone will be troubled by the debates that preoccupied us here. What matters now is that we approach Scripture with reverence, curiosity, and the humility to let the text—not our assumptions—set the terms of the conversation.