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Saturday, May 23, 2026

Does Deep Time Diminish Divine Character?

 




Introduction: The God Behind the Cosmos

For many Christians, the age of the earth and the mechanisms of creation are not merely scientific questions—they are theological ones. Young Earth Creationism (YEC) often frames the debate in stark terms: to accept an old earth or evolutionary processes is to impugn the character of God. This claim, though well-intentioned, is both theologically precarious and logically flawed. It risks reducing the Creator to a caricature—one whose glory is contingent on a specific chronology rather than the grandeur of divine wisdom, patience, and providence. This article challenges the assertion that deep time or evolutionary mechanisms are incompatible with the goodness, sovereignty, or truthfulness of God, drawing on biblical scholarship, ancient Near Eastern context, and theological reasoning.

The YEC Concern: A Crisis of Character?

YEC proponents often argue that an old earth or evolutionary history implies a God who uses death, suffering, and wasteful processes—thus undermining His goodness and truthfulness. They claim that if death existed before the Fall, then the gospel collapses, and God becomes the author of suffering. (1, 2) Furthermore, they argue that accepting deep time compromises biblical authority by reinterpreting Genesis 1–3 in light of modern science. 

But this framing assumes that the only faithful reading of Genesis is a literal, six-day creation roughly 6,000 years ago. It also assumes that God's character is best defended by a particular interpretation of chronology rather than by the broader biblical witness to His justice, mercy, and redemptive purposes. (3)

The Genre of Genesis: What Did the Author Intend?

Dr. John Walton, an Old Testament scholar at Wheaton College, has argued extensively that Genesis 1 is not a modern scientific account of material origins but an ancient functional cosmology. In The Lost World of Genesis One, Walton contends that Genesis 1 describes God assigning functions and order to creation, inaugurating the cosmos as His temple. The focus is not on how or when God materially created the universe, but on who God is and why creation exists. (4) This reading does not diminish God's character—it elevates it. It portrays a God who brings order from chaos, who dwells with His creation, and who invites humanity into sacred vocation.

The Problem of Death Before the Fall

One of the most emotionally charged objections from YEC is the presence of death before Adam’s sin. But this objection often conflates biological death with spiritual death. The Apostle Paul, in Romans 5:12, writes, “just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, in this way death spread to all people, because all sinned.” But what kind of death?

Dr. Michael Heiser, in The Unseen Realm, argues that the biblical concept of death in Genesis 2–3 is primarily about estrangement from God, not the cessation of biological life. Adam and Eve didn’t drop dead when they sinned. They were expelled from sacred space—from God’s presence. (5)

This understanding allows for the existence of animal death and natural processes prior to the Fall without undermining the gospel. It also aligns with the biblical pattern of God working through long, often painful histories to bring about redemption (e.g., Genesis 50:20, Romans 8:22–23).

Theological Dangers of Handcuffing God to Chronology

To insist that God must have created in six 24-hour days to be good or truthful is to impose a human standard of efficiency and immediacy onto the divine. It risks turning the doctrine of creation into a litmus test for orthodoxy rather than a doxology of divine majesty.

Moreover, it subtly undermines God's sovereignty. If God cannot use evolutionary processes or deep time without compromising His character, then His freedom is constrained by our expectations. But Scripture consistently portrays God as one who works through history, through exile and exodus, through crucifixion and resurrection—not always quickly, but always redemptively.

The Witness of Nature and Scripture

Psalm 19:1 declares that “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the expanse proclaims the work of his hands.” If the created order bears witness to God’s glory, then we must take seriously what it reveals. The overwhelming testimony of geology, astronomy, and genetics points to an ancient cosmos and a long, unfolding history of life.

This does not mean Scripture is wrong. It means we must interpret it wisely, in light of its genre, context, and purpose. As Augustine warned in The Literal Meaning of Genesis:

“Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of this world... Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian... talking nonsense on these topics... 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...” (6)

Conclusion: A Bigger God for a Bigger Universe

The God of Scripture is not threatened by deep time or evolutionary processes. He is the Alpha and the Omega, the one who brings life from dust and hope from despair. To tether His character to a narrow reading of Genesis is to risk idolatry—a God made in our image, bound by our timelines.

Instead, let us embrace a theology that is as expansive as the cosmos it seeks to understand. A theology that sees in the 13.8-billion-year history of the universe not a threat to faith, but a canvas of divine artistry. A theology that trusts that the God who raised Jesus from the dead can also bring meaning from the long, slow unfolding of creation.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

When Evidence Becomes Deception: How Young Earth Creationism Turns God Into the Deceiver

 


Introduction

There is a quiet irony at the heart of modern Young Earth Creationism (YEC). In order to defend a 6,000‑year‑old universe, its advocates insist that everything in creation only looks ancient. But the moment this logic is followed to its conclusion, something far more troubling emerges: a God who intentionally constructs a universe that tells a false story. This is not a small problem. It is a theological earthquake.

A clear example of this dynamic appears in an article by Dr. Andrew Snelling, originally published in 2009 and later featured in The New Answers Book 3. (1) Although the article is more than a decade old, it continues to circulate widely in YEC circles and is still promoted by Answers in Genesis (AiG) as authoritative. The piece leans heavily on the idea that God created a world whose physical evidence must not be trusted. This raises a deeper question: why does YECism need this argument in the first place?

The Necessity of “Appearance of Age”

The reason YECism appeals to “appearance of age” is simple: the physical world overwhelmingly testifies to deep time. Rather than engaging that testimony directly, Snelling argues that we cannot trust our observations of the natural world, that present processes are misleading, and that the Flood explains nearly all geological features. In this telling, God Himself is the sole “eyewitness” who informs us of the earth’s true age, and any apparent evidence to the contrary must be reinterpreted or dismissed.

But beneath this argument lies a single unavoidable assumption: God created the universe in such a way that it looks old, even though it is not. The “appearance of age” argument is not a side point in YECism—it is a foundational pillar. Without it, the physical world would contradict the YEC timeline at every turn.

The Theological Problem: A Deceptive Universe

Here is the unavoidable theological problem: if God created a universe that looks old by every conceivable measure, then God intentionally made a world whose physical testimony is false. This contradicts the character of God revealed in Scripture. God does not lie (Titus 1:2). His works are faithful and true (Psalm 33:4). The heavens declare God’s glory, not a cosmic illusion (Psalm 19:1). Creation reveals God’s nature, not a misleading façade (Romans 1:20).

If creation is a revelation of God, then it cannot be a deception.

Yet the YEC model requires that the world’s apparent history—its layers, its fossils, its starlight, its radiometric clocks—be treated as misleading. This is not simply “maturity.” It is the embedding of a false history into the very fabric of creation. A universe created with fabricated evidence of events that never happened is not a universe that “declares the glory of God.” It is a universe that misleads every honest observer and, according to numerous YEC sources, prevents people from coming to Christ.

The Internal Contradiction: God Creates the Illusion, Satan Gets the Blame

Snelling’s article adds another layer of theological tension. He claims that Christians who accept an old earth are “beguiled by Satan,” that rejecting YEC is the result of spiritual deception, and that those who trust geological evidence are the “scoffers” predicted in 2 Peter 3. (A claim I have already discussed at length in Scoffers and Young Earth Creationism.) Many YEC teachers go further, treating those who do not adopt their views with suspicion and labeling them “harlots” and “idolators.” (2)

But within the YEC framework, the physical evidence itself is the problem—and that evidence comes from God’s own creation.

This creates a profound paradox:

  • God creates a universe that looks old.

  • People examine the universe God made and conclude it is old.

  • YEC teachers say this conclusion is satanic deception.

But the supposed “deception” originates in the physical world God made.

If the evidence is misleading, then God—not Satan—is the one who misled.

Yet YEC rhetoric consistently blames Satan, secular scientists, compromised Christians, and anyone who accepts deep time. The result is a theological system that collapses under its own claims. It attributes to Satan what the YEC model itself attributes to God. (3)

Scripture Never Teaches a Secret History

While YECs rightly appeal to biblical passages as evidence for their views on creation and the Flood, Scripture itself never teaches the specific scientific mechanisms modern YECism relies on to compress the entire history of the universe into 6,000 years. The Bible does not say that God created starlight already in transit, that radioactive decay rates were dramatically accelerated, or that the entire geological record formed in a single year. These are modern proposals informed by science and developed to defend a particular interpretation of Genesis, not doctrines taught in the text itself.

What Scripture does affirm is God’s truthfulness (Numbers 23:19), the trustworthiness of His works (Psalm 111:7), and the clarity of His self‑revelation in creation (Romans 1:20). The physical world is consistently portrayed as a faithful witness to God’s power and character, not as an illusion designed to mislead. This is why the modern “appearance of age” argument creates such tension: it requires believers to treat the natural world as though it were filled with false signals and fabricated histories that God never discloses in Scripture and reveals only to the “initiated.”

This dynamic is illustrated starkly in Tod Friel’s claim in the Answers in Genesis article “How Do I Stay Humble When I Know I’m Right?” Friel writes that the real reason young‑earth creationists know the earth is young is that “the Holy Spirit taught them the truth,” and that the difference between a YEC and someone like Stephen Hawking or Neil deGrasse Tyson is not intelligence but the presence or absence of the Spirit. (4) In other words, only those filled with the Holy Spirit can see that the earth is young. This is problematic in its own right, because Romans 8:9 states that those without the Spirit “do not belong to Christ.” The implication is unavoidable: Christians who reject YEC are, by this logic, not merely mistaken — they are outside the faith entirely.

The Spiritual Cost

Snelling’s article ends by framing non‑YEC Christians as victims of Satan’s deception. This is not a neutral theological claim. It has real pastoral consequences. It divides the church, casts suspicion on faithful believers, weaponizes Scripture against fellow Christians, creates fear around scientific discovery, burdens people with false guilt, and makes intellectual honesty feel like spiritual rebellion.

Most tragically, it teaches that trusting the physical world God made leads to apostasy—while simultaneously claiming God made the world look that way.

This is not the gospel. It is not historic Christianity. It is not the faith “once delivered to the saints” (Jude 3). It is a modern system built on a fragile interpretive foundation.

Conclusion

The problem is not God’s ability to create with maturity; it is that YEC theology declares the universe’s apparent age to be satanic deception and evidence of spiritual deficiency, even while claiming God is the one who made it look that way.
Christians do not need to choose between Scripture and creation. We do not need to believe God embedded false evidence into the universe. We do not need to treat scientific honesty as spiritual compromise. We do not need to blame Satan for conclusions drawn from the world God made.

The heavens declare God’s glory.
The earth reveals His handiwork.
Creation is not a trick.
It is a testimony.

When we allow Scripture to speak in its own genres, and creation to speak through its own processes, we discover a harmony far richer than the cramped, defensive world of YEC theology. A God who is truth does not create a deceptive universe. A God who is light does not hide reality in darkness. A God who reveals Himself does not bury false clues in His creation.

We can trust the Scriptures.
We can trust the world God made.
And we can trust that the God who is faithful in His Word is also faithful in His works.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Beyond the Years: The Meaning Behind Biblical Genealogies





Introduction

Throughout history, interpreters of Genesis 5 and 11 have debated the nature of the extraordinary lifespans recorded in the biblical genealogies. Should these ages be understood as literal chronological markers, tracing humanity’s lineage from Adam through the generations? Or do they reflect a deeper symbolic tradition, consistent with ancient Near Eastern numerology?

The numbers embedded in Genesis are not arbitrary. Across ancient Mesopotamian traditions—including the Sumerian King List (1)—idealized figures often appear to signal theological or historical transitions rather than biological lifespans. Furthermore, the Bible itself demonstrates complex numerical patterns, particularly involving the numbers 2, 5, 6, 7, 12 and their multiples. Such structuring raises the question: are the long lives of the Genesis patriarchs meant to be read as historical fact, or do they serve a greater literary and theological function?

This article examines the evidence, from textual inconsistencies within Genesis itself to external parallels in Near Eastern literature, and proposes that the lifespans of the patriarchs were never intended to serve as strict chronological markers but rather as theological constructs rooted in sacred numerical systems.

Numerology and Longevity in the Ancient Near East.: A Tradition of Idealized Numbers

The Sumerian King List, one of the most famous ancient Near Eastern records, provides a striking parallel to the long lifespans in Genesis. This list, which dates back to the early second millennium BC, records the reigns of kings before and after a great flood. The pre-flood rulers are said to have reigned for tens of thousands of years, with figures such as Alulim ruling for 28,800 years and En-men-lu-ana for 43,200 years. After the flood, however, lifespans decrease dramatically, with post-flood kings ruling for more historically plausible durations.

This pattern closely mirrors the structure of Genesis 5 and 11, where lifespans are significantly longer before the flood and gradually decrease afterward. The similarity suggests that both traditions use exaggerated numbers to mark historical epochs rather than literal lifespans.

Other Mesopotamian king lists, including those from Babylon, Assyria, and Mari, also exhibit numerical structuring. The reigns of rulers often follow symbolic patterns, reinforcing the idea that numbers in ancient texts were used for theological and political purposes rather than strict historical record-keeping.

Internal Inconsistencies in Genesis: A Challenge to Literal Chronology

One of the strongest arguments against a literal interpretation of the Genesis lifespans arises from the narrative tension within the biblical text itself. The miraculous nature of Isaac’s birth depends on Abraham and Sarah’s advanced age:

  • Genesis 17:17; 18:11 emphasizes Abraham being 100 years old and Sarah 90, underscoring the improbability of natural conception at such an age.

  • However, if Genesis 11’s genealogies are read literally, and Abraham was 75 when he left Haran following his father Terah’s death at 205, then Abraham’s father must have sired children at the remarkable age of 130 (Genesis 11:26-32; 12:4; Acts 7:4).

  • Furthermore, Abraham’s grandson, Jacob, fathered multiple children between 84 and 105 years of age. He did not even meet his wife, Rachel, until he was 77 years old, only marrying her after seven years of labor.

This raises a contradiction: if men were regularly fathering children in their 100s, why was Isaac’s birth considered miraculous? The emphasis on Abraham and Sarah’s old age only makes sense in a cultural context where 100 years would have been perceived as beyond typical childbearing years.

Another inconsistency emerges in the portrayal of aging and death in Genesis. Genesis 25:8 describes Abraham dying "at a good old age, an old man full of years." Yet, if we accept the genealogies as chronological, Abraham’s father Terah lived to 205—outliving his son by 30 years. Even more striking, Abraham’s great-great-great-great grandfather Eber outlived him by an additional 30 years, and Shem, Noah’s son, also lived into Abraham’s lifetime.

This pattern continues with Isaac. In Genesis 27:2-4, Isaac believes himself to be dying and asks Esau to prepare him food before giving his blessing. Esau confirms Isaac’s old age, stating in Genesis 27:41: "The days of mourning for my father are approaching." Chronological calculations place Isaac at 137 years old at this point. However, Genesis 35:28-29 later states that Isaac lived to 180, meaning he survived another 43 years—even outliving his father Abraham by five years.

Such discrepancies suggest that Genesis genealogies were not intended as precise chronological records. Instead, they adhere to structural patterns that point to symbolic meaning rather than historical accuracy.

Numerology in Genesis: The Role of Sacred Numbers

Biblical authors frequently employed numerological structuring. The genealogies of Genesis are no exception, exhibiting patterns deeply intertwined with numbers considered sacred in the ancient Near East.

In Genesis 5, most lifespans cluster around numbers divisible by 5 or ending in 2 or 7. The striking exception is Methuselah’s 969 years, which stands apart but can still be expressed in terms of symbolic factors of 7. Some interpreters even note that if 7 is subtracted twice, Methuselah’s age becomes divisible by 5. This has led to the suggestion that his original lifespan may have been 955, later expanded by the symbolic addition of the sacred number 7 twice over. Such numerical structuring points to deliberate stylization rather than random recording of historical ages.

Genesis 11, however, does not follow the same neat scheme. Its lifespans end in a wider variety of digits (0, 3, 4, 8, 9, 5), showing that the numerological patterning is not uniform across both genealogies. Some scholars have also noted that different textual traditions (Masoretic Text, Septuagint, Samaritan Pentateuch, Dead Sea Scrolls) adjust the numbers in various ways, often to ensure that no patriarch outlives the Flood or to maintain symbolic symmetry.

This fluidity demonstrates that ancient scribes saw these numbers as flexible, reinforcing theological themes rather than rigid historical facts. The genealogical alterations in the Genesis traditions are consistent with similar structuring in Matthew 1:1-17, where generations are artificially grouped into symbolic sets of 14 rather than recorded in strict historical sequence.

Conclusion: Theological Chronology Over Literalism

The genealogies of Genesis 5 and 11—along with the broader biblical use of numerology—suggest that these lifespans are not mere historical records but symbolic constructs. The structured use of 2, 5 and 7 across patriarchal ages, the overlapping lifespans that disrupt expected chronology, and the textual fluidity among biblical manuscripts all support the idea that these numbers were designed with theological intent.

Furthermore, the parallels between Genesis and ancient Near Eastern kings lists—particularly the Sumerian King List—reinforce the notion that exaggerated lifespans were a common literary device used to mark historical epochs. Recognizing these patterns allows us to appreciate the depth and artistry of biblical storytelling, aligning its genealogies with the broader tradition of numerological symbolism found across the ancient Near East.

This doesn’t mean the genealogies are meaningless; on the contrary, they reflect the theological depth of the biblical narrative. Whether marking important historical events, reinforcing divine themes, or conveying cultural significance, these numbers serve a greater purpose than simply listing lifespans. Understanding them in this way allows us to appreciate the Bible’s sophistication while recognizing its role in shaping theological concepts rather than rigid historical timelines.

Instead of focusing solely on whether these ages are scientifically plausible, perhaps we should ask what deeper truths they reveal about the biblical worldview and its place within ancient history.