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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.


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

From Nothing, Through Something: Clarifying the Doctrine of Creatio ex Nihilo



Introduction

Few doctrines are as widely affirmed yet frequently misunderstood as creatio ex nihilo—the confession that God created the universe “out of nothing.” The phrase is so familiar that many assume it describes every act of creation in Genesis 1–2. Others use it as shorthand for a particular interpretation of the creation days. Still others imagine it means God never used any pre‑existing material in any creative act whatsoever.

But the historic Christian doctrine is both more modest and more profound. It does not attempt to describe the mechanics of each creative moment in Genesis. Instead, it answers a deeper metaphysical question: Why is there something rather than nothing? And it does so by affirming that the universe owes its entire existence to the free, sovereign act of God.

What Creatio ex Nihilo Actually Means

Definition

The classical Christian doctrine of creatio ex nihilo teaches that:

  • God alone is eternal

  • The universe is not eternal

  • God did not shape the world from pre‑existing eternal matter

  • All things ultimately depend on God’s will for their existence

This definition is affirmed across Christian tradition:

  • Irenaeus, “Against Heresies” (2.10.4)

  • Theophilus of Antioch, “To Autolycus” (2.4)

  • Augustine, “Confessions” (12.7)

  • Thomas Aquinas, “Summa Theologiae” (I.45)

  • The Fourth Lateran Council (1215)

Modern scholarship echoes this consensus:

  • Gerhard May, Creatio ex Nihilo: “The Doctrine of ‘Creation out of Nothing’ in Early Christian Thought” (T&T Clark, 1994)

  • Paul Copan & William Lane Craig, “Creation out of Nothing” (Baker Academic, 2004)

  • Kathryn Tanner, “God and Creation in Christian Theology” (Fortress, 1988)

What the doctrine does not claim

The doctrine does not assert that:

  • Every creative act in Genesis is ex nihilo

  • God never uses pre‑existing materials

  • Genesis 1 describes the metaphysical origin of matter in scientific terms

  • The doctrine depends on a particular chronology of creation

Rather, creatio ex nihilo is a metaphysical claim about the universe’s ultimate dependence on God—not a description of the mechanics of each creative moment.

Biblical Foundations for Creatio ex Nihilo

While Genesis 1 does not explicitly use the phrase “out of nothing,” the doctrine arises from the cumulative witness of Scripture.

  1.  Hebrews 11:3

“By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was made from things that are not visible.”
Hebrews 11:3

This is the clearest biblical statement that the visible world does not arise from pre‑existent visible matter.

  1. John 1:3

“All things were created through him, and apart from him not one thing was created that has been created.”
John 1:3 

The absolute scope (“not one thing”) implies that everything that exists owes its existence to God.

  1. Genesis 1:1

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”
Genesis 1:1

Whether one interprets this as an independent clause or a summary heading, it establishes God as the ultimate source of all reality.

Mediated Creation in Genesis: God Creates Through Creation

Genesis 1–2 contains numerous examples of mediated creation—acts in which God brings forth new realities from already-existing materials. These do not contradict creatio ex nihilo; they simply describe the mode of God’s creative work within the already-created world.

  1. The earth brings forth vegetation

“Then God said, ‘Let the earth produce vegetation…’”
Genesis 1:11–12 

The earth is commanded to produce life.

  1. The waters bring forth sea creatures

“Let the water swarm with living creatures…”
Genesis 1:20

Again, creation participates in God’s creative act.

  1. The earth brings forth land animals

“Let the earth produce living creatures…”
Genesis 1:24 

The pattern continues.

  1. Humanity formed from dust

“The LORD God formed the man out of the dust from the ground…”
Genesis 2:7 

Adam is not created ex nihilo but from material God already made.

  1. Woman formed from man

“God took one of his ribs… and the LORD God made the rib he had taken from the man into a woman …”
Genesis 2:22

A profoundly mediated act.

Why Mediated Creation Does Not Contradict Creatio ex Nihilo

The doctrine of ex nihilo concerns ultimate origins, not proximate mechanisms.

  • Ultimate origin: Only God is eternal; all else depends on God’s will.

  • Proximate mechanism: God may create directly or through created means.

Classical theologians consistently affirm both:

  • Augustine: God created matter ex nihilo, then shaped it (e.g., Confessions XII).

  • Aquinas: God alone can create ex nihilo, but creatures can be instrumental causes (ST I.45–46).

  • Modern theologians: mediated creation is part of God’s ongoing governance (e.g., Kathryn Tanner).

Thus, Genesis’ mediated acts are not exceptions to ex nihilo creation—they are the natural outworking of it.

Why the Distinction Matters Today

Clarifying this distinction helps avoid several common confusions:

  • It prevents conflating metaphysical doctrine with specific interpretations of Genesis.

  • It avoids treating “ex nihilo” as a catch-all term for any preferred creation model.

  • It allows Christians of various interpretive traditions to affirm the same foundational truth:
    God alone is the source of all that exists.

Conclusion: Creation as Gift, Not Accident

The doctrine of creatio ex nihilo is not primarily about mechanics. It is about dependence, gift, and grace. It proclaims that the universe is not a cosmic accident, nor the product of eternal matter, nor the result of necessity. It exists because God freely willed it to exist.

Genesis’ mediated acts of creation—earth bringing forth life, waters teeming with creatures, humanity formed from dust—do not diminish this truth. They enrich it. They show a world invited into participation, a creation empowered to bring forth life under God’s command.

To say that God created “out of nothing” is to say that everything—every atom, every star, every breath—is sheer gift. And to see God shaping creation through creation is to witness the generosity of a God who delights in involving His world in its own unfolding.

In the end, creatio ex nihilo is not merely a doctrine about beginnings. It is a confession about the character of the One who began all things.