Those who believe in creationism -- children and adults -- are being taught to challenge evolution's tenets in an in-your-face way.WAYNE, N.J. — Evangelist Ken Ham smiled at the 2,300 elementary students packed into pews, their faces rapt. With dinosaur puppets and silly cartoons, he was training them to reject much of geology, paleontology and evolutionary biology as a sinister tangle of lies.
"Boys and girls," Ham said. If a teacher so much as mentions evolution, or the Big Bang, or an era when dinosaurs ruled the Earth, "you put your hand up and you say, 'Excuse me, were you there?' Can you remember that?"
The children roared their assent.
"Sometimes people will answer, 'No, but you weren't there either,' " Ham told them. "Then you say, 'No, I wasn't, but I know someone who was, and I have his book about the history of the world.' " He waved his Bible in the air.
"Who's the only one who's always been there?" Ham asked.
"God!" the boys and girls shouted.
"Who's the only one who knows everything?"
"God!"
"So who should you always trust, God or the scientists?"
The children answered with a thundering: "God!"
A former high-school biology teacher, Ham travels the nation training children as young as 5 to challenge science orthodoxy. He doesn't engage in the political and legal fights that have erupted over the teaching of evolution. His strategy is more subtle: He aims to give people who trust the biblical account of creation the confidence to defend their views — aggressively.
He urges students to offer creationist critiques of their textbooks, parents to take on science museum docents, professionals to raise the subject with colleagues. If Ham has done his job well, his acolytes will ask enough pointed questions — and set forth enough persuasive arguments — to shake the doctrine of Darwin.
"We're going to arm you with Christian Patriot missiles," Ham, 54, recently told the 1,200 adults gathered at Calvary Temple here in northern New Jersey. It was a Friday night, the kickoff of a heavily advertised weekend conference sponsored by Ham's ministry, Answers in Genesis.
To a burst of applause, Ham exhorted: "Get out and change the world!"
Over the last two decades, this type of "creation evangelism" has become a booming industry. Several hundred independent speakers promote biblical creation at churches, colleges, private schools, Rotary clubs. They lead tours to the Grand Canyon or the local museum to study the world through a creationist lens.
They churn out stacks of home-schooling material. A geology text devotes a chapter to Noah's flood; an astronomy book quotes Genesis on the origins of the universe; a science unit for second-graders features daily "evolution stumpers" that teach children to argue against the theory that is a cornerstone of modern science.
Answers in Genesis is the biggest of these ministries. Ham co-founded the nonprofit in his native Australia in 1979. The U.S. branch, funded mostly by donations, has an annual budget of $15 million and 160 employees who produce books and DVDs, maintain a comprehensive website, and arrange more than 500 speeches a year for Ham and four other full-time evangelists.
With pulpit-thumping passion, Ham insists the Bible be taken literally: God created the universe and all its creatures in six 24-hour days, roughly 6,000 years ago.
Hundreds of pastors will preach a different message Sunday, in honor of Charles Darwin's 197th birthday. In a national campaign, they will tell congregations that it's possible to be a Christian and accept evolution.
Ham considers that treason. When pastors dismiss the creation account as a fable, he says, they give their flock license to disregard the Bible's moral teachings as well. He shows his audiences a graphic that places the theory of evolution at the root of all social ills: abortion, divorce, racism, gay marriage, store clerks who say "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas."
The science Ham finds so dangerous holds that the first primitive scraps of genetic material appeared on Earth nearly 4 billion years ago. From these humble beginnings, a huge diversity of species evolved over the eons, through lucky mutations and natural selection.
The vast majority of scientists find no credible evidence to dispute this account and a tremendous amount to support it. They've identified thousands of transitional fossils, such as a whale that lumbered on land; a bird with reptilian features; and "Lucy," a remote cousin of modern man who walked on two legs but swung from trees like a chimp.
Still, millions of Americans find evolution preposterous. Polls consistently show that roughly half of Americans believe the biblical account instead.
In the 1970s, Ham taught evolution and creationism side by side in Australian public schools. Raised in a Christian family, Ham trusted God's account over Darwin's; the more he studied Genesis, the more he felt moved to defend it. He quit teaching after five years to take up evangelism full time.
A father of five who bears an uncanny resemblance to Abraham Lincoln, Ham moved his family to the U.S. in 1987. He worked for the Institute for Creation Research near San Diego and in 1994 founded the U.S. branch of Answers in Genesis in northern Kentucky. America sorely needed someone to stand up for the Bible, he reasoned. With a network of Christian radio and TV, the U.S. also offered Ham a launch pad to take his movement global.
The gamble paid off. Ham's daily 90-second broadcasts — on themes such as life in the Garden of Eden — are heard on more than 1,000 radio stations worldwide. He's building a $25 million Creation Museum near the Cincinnati international airport. He has produced dozens of books and videos for all ages, including a top-selling alphabet rhyme that begins: "A is for Adam, God made him from dust / He wasn't a monkey, he looked just like us."
At the heart of this vast ministry are the speaking tours — so popular that many are booked three years in advance. Ham, who earns about $120,000 a year, might address a few dozen men at a small-town service club or a packed family service at a suburban mega-church. His multimedia presentations swing in tone from revival meeting to college lecture.
About 6,000 adults and children attended at least some of the recent conference in this suburb north of Newark. (Tickets for the weekend cost $25 per family, though several events were free.)
In six hourlong lectures, Ham and his colleague David Menton, an anatomy professor retired from Washington University in St. Louis, laid out their best arguments for creationism. Ham described the fossil record as "billions of dead things … laid down by water" — proof, he said, of Noah's flood. Menton marveled at the mechanics of the human eye, far too intricate, he said, to have evolved by random mutation.
"We often come across to the world as if we have blind faith: 'The Bible says it. I believe it. That settles it,' " Ham said. In his view, creationists need more than faith to win over the world. They need answers to the questions skeptics toss their way.
"We're giving you answers," Ham said. "We're like bulldozers, coming in to reclaim the ground."
In two 90-minute workshops for children, Ham adopted a much lighter tone, mocking scientists who think birds evolved from dinosaurs ("if that were true, I'd be worried about my Thanksgiving turkey!").
He showed the children a photo of a fossilized hat found in a mine to prove it doesn't take millions of years to create ancient-looking artifacts. He pointed out cave drawings of a creature resembling a brachiosaur to make the case that man lived alongside dinosaurs after God created all the land animals on Day 6.
In a bit that brought the house down, Ham flashed a picture of a chimpanzee. "Did your grandfather look like this?" he demanded.
"Noooooo!" the children called.
"And did your grandmother look like that?" Ham displayed a photo of the same chimp wearing lipstick. The children erupted in giggles. "Noooooo!"
"We are not just an animal," Ham said. He had the children repeat that, their small voices rising in unison: "We are not just an animal. We are made in the image of God."
As the session ended, Nicole Ableson, 34, rounded up her four young children. "This shows your kids that there are other people who are out there who believe what you believe, and who have done the research," she said. "So they don't think 'This is just my parents believing in fairy tales.' "
Emily Maynard, 12, was also delighted with Ham's presentation. Home-schooled and voraciously curious, she had recently read an encyclopedia for fun — and caught herself almost believing the entry on evolution. "They were explaining about apes standing up, evolving to man, and I could kind of see that's how it could happen," she said.
Ham convinced her otherwise. As her mother beamed, Emily repeated Ham's mantra: "The Bible is the history book of the universe."
Ben Watson wasn't quite as confident. His father, a pastor in Staten Island, N.Y., had let him skip a day of second grade to attend. Ben went to public school, the Rev. Dave Watson explained, "and I thought it would be good for him to get a different perspective" for an upcoming project on Tyrannosaurus rex.
"You going to put in your report that dinosaurs are millions of years old?" Watson, 46, asked his son.
"No…. " Ben said. He hesitated. "But that's what my book says…. "
"It's a lot to think about," his dad reassured him. "We'll do more research."
Ham encourages people to further their research with the dozens of books and DVDs sold by his ministry. They give answers to every question a critic might ask: How did Noah fit dinosaurs on the ark? He took babies. Why didn't a tyrannosaur eat Eve? All creatures were vegetarians until Adam's sin brought death into the world. How can we have modern breeds of dog like the poodle if God finished his work 6,000 years ago? He created a dog "kind" — a master blueprint — and let evolution take over from there.
Accountant Paul Ingis, 43, has been studying such material for years, and looks for opportunities to share the answers he's mastered. When clients ask what he's been up to, Ingis responds that he's been studying creation science. If they express interest, he launches into his routine.
"It's fishing. You never know when you might meet the one in 1,000 who will listen," Ingis said.
It's impossible to measure the success of the one-on-one evangelizing inspired by Answers in Genesis. But Glenn Branch, who defends evolution for a living, does not doubt it's having an effect.
Ham and his fellow evangelists "do a lot to promote a climate of ignorance, skepticism and hostility with respect to evolution," said Branch, deputy director of the nonprofit National Center for Science Education.
Evolution has scored a few high-profile victories. A federal judge ruled in December that the school board in Dover, Pa., could not require teachers to discuss intelligent design (the concept that some life is so complex, it could not have evolved by random chance). And in Cobb County, Ga., a federal judge ruled that disclaimers pasted onto science textbooks were illegal. (The stickers, removed last year, called evolution "a theory, not a fact.")
Still, those who teach and promote evolution say the challenges are multiplying.
Several Imax theaters in the South — including a few in science museums — have refused to show movies that mention evolution or the Earth's age.
Bills that would allow or require science teachers to mention alternatives to evolution have been introduced in Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma and Utah. State boards of education in Kansas and Ohio adopted guidelines that single out evolution for critique. The governor of Kentucky used his State of the Commonwealth address to encourage public schools to teach alternative theories of man's origins.
A national conference for science teachers in the spring will focus on helping them respond to creationists' challenges. In an informal survey, the National Science Teachers Assn. found that nearly a third of its members felt pressured to play down evolution.
Ham's dream is to increase that pressure.
He will evangelize in Rocky Mount, N.C., next weekend and in Bossier City, La., after that. The month of March will take him to Modesto; Avon, Ind.; and a college retreat outside Cincinnati. His colleagues from Answers in Genesis will match his pace, preaching over the next few weeks in Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Missouri and Ohio.
At every stop, they will recruit men, women and children to stand up for God as the creator.
link
the soon coming "holy wars".!
Let's hope he is an ex- christian!
(Or she,....lol)
So ham can incorporate his version of evolution whenever he feels it's convenient to do so, to save face for his ignorant beliefs.
This is the reason they are going to schools where the little kids are, there will be no children or teachers to stand up against this jackass, ham is full of shit.
Ken Ham tickled me with this classic gem: "So who should you always trust, God or the scientists?"
If he were suffering from some unimaginable disease he will definitely always trust "the medical scientists". Guaranteed, he'll put a spin of "but God gave them the knowledge..." bull dunkey nonsense on it though.
I also find it strange how they are trying to use science to defend creationism. Go figure.
One of the wonderful pleasures of living an agnostic or atheistic life is that there is no reason to hate others as we don’t compare our lives with others beliefs. We just get along and live life day by day and cherish the wonders of nature that are put before us.
No doubt man will be responsible for his own demise through selfishness, poor judgment and bigotry. Natural disasters are not an act of a God; (which God?) they are simply what have been going on for millions of years. As the world population grows, religion and terrorism will go hand in hand in trying to keep us living in fear.
But they have no problem believing that a "god" breathed life into a chunk of clay ...
...and that a woman came from a single rib of a man...
I think we should all join hands and sing:
Onward Christian soldiers marching on to war
With the cross of Jesus going on before
Christ the royal banner leads against the foe
Forward into battle…
(I forgot the rest of it, but you get my point)
And the power. What kind reverence did he have as just a biology teacher? I’m not saying that he doesn’t believe in what he’s, ah, selling but the cash and clout is unseemly.
Noah “can’t-keep-my-crotch-covered” and his damned boat is something so absurd that it requires such a suspense of reality that no sober person should be able to say that it is possible let alone true with a straight face.
If I were a god with such powers that be granted to a god, I’d just take my Peoplemate™ pen with the Peoplemate™ eraser (the eraser that erases people but leaves the earth beneath them untouched) and erase all of the naughty, hairless primates and leave the saintly ones alone. Then draw some new and more saintly ones. The flood seems a little messy and stench would waver up into heaven and would affront my godly nose. Beside a flood would ruin my view. I like blues, greens and the yellows of the earth. The bloated, dead bodies of the unsaved humans and animals, uproot trees and vegetation all floating around in brackish, mud choked water. Yuck.
How about applying that same principle to the entire Bible?
These fanatics are out to form a religious state, just like Iran. I tell you what, they are radicalizing me for sure. They want war? Maybe they will get it!
Onanite
And then raise your hands and say OUT LOUD!!!!.....A MAN DID, A MAN WROTE THE BIBLE!!!!! not any god.
Teachers are required to be certified to teach in front of students, and then this jackass walks in off the street, and has absolutely no certification, and is allowed to tout his religious propaganda beliefs.
This fool should be arrested for public trespassing, what happened to seperation of church and state?
We will blaze our guns on high
With a M16 in one hand and
sweet jesus by our side
We will concur the world with our weapons and beliefs
With Dick Cheney leading the charge
Either you're with us or you're with the terrorist's
If god be with us who shall be against us
We will over take your country
To save god's promised land
No price is too high and WMD's was a lie
I sent god some heros, just so I look good on camera...GWB
IS ALL ABOUT MAKING MONEY! All Evangelists are all about power and money. This Ham Idiot found a way to make big bucks with this anti evolutionist crap, so he does it. It is no different from a TV magician who discovers that he can do the big illusions and be paid big money for doing them.
There is a ready audience out there for any kind of, magic, psychic, angel, Satan, exorcism, cryptozooology, Bigfoot, alien, UFO, or miracle stuff, because it is much more interesting to some people than reality. That is why there are so many TV shows with those subjects as their theme.
Most of the human race never grew a reality gland, and live their whole lives with a lot of fuzzy beliefs that lie somewhere between reality and fantasy. An otherwise intelligent person when confronted with the fact that we are 98% like chimpanzees, will nevertheless think that God sees us as a different and special species, and sits upon his throne in ecstasy because of constant praise from us. When man invented God he gave him all of the same characteristics of himself.
Once we give up the idea that there is a big guy with a white beard up there in the sky whom we can ask favors of, and we ask long enough and often enough he will relent, and grant those favors, we are left with trying to bring about our own miracles, through hard work and brain power.
Just like when we were kids and believed that everything happens for the best, we can still hope that whatever the power is that created us, is GOOD and in control. We can trust that, that intelligence will make everything all right in the end. Believing in fairy tales though, is just a waste of time.
If you put mythological fantasies into your brain, they just screw up you ability to deal with real problems.
Dan
One day when somebody writes a book about the rise and fall of America, there will be an entire chapter devoted to the dumbing down of the populace.
Good point, Albert. Gibbons Decline and Fall of mthe Roman Empire talked about Christians, and so will the Decline and Fall of the American Empire (published 2040, author unknown).
Let em' stick that in their pipe and smoke it. They can argue science in their own mind. I'm willing to bet though is someone told them that the Sumerians religion has a creator too, they'd have NO CLUE on how to comeback on that. Just stand there going, "Um, well, um"
Onward Posted: Feb 14 2006, 06:36 AM
"Humans are apes, nothing more and nothing less. As primates, we are territorial and violent. It should be no suprise that our religions mirror that very primate nature"
Yea Onward!
It never ceases to amaze me how few people seem to realize this. Considering the fact that we are nothing more than chimpanzee cousins, with really no more significance to a creator than a dinosaur, and certainly not as significant as maybe some truly intelligent species on some other planet that may have learned to live, without war and self destruction.
We are nothing but the latest killen, fuckin, eatin animals to climb to the top of the food chain, and so many of us are believing that the force that created us, suddenly decided to come up with a ridiculous story about having a baby with one of us so it can sacrifice it to itself in order to absolve us of some kind of sinful nature that it designed into us in the first place, and that this "God" is sitting up there in the sky, writhing in ecstasy from all of the praise from us. How many "Houses of worship" are there in this world? No wonder God burns them down and destroys then with hurricanes every chance he gets. It must get irritating for him to have so many little monkeys telling him how wonderful he is.
It is truly sad to me that in an age where the latest digital gadget is obsolete before it gets to the marketplace, so many people can't get past bronze age philosophical thinking.
It is so obvious that we are just apes, but it still is the best kept secret in the world.
Dan
So would have I, but I can also see that as a sign of hope.
Ultimately, I think he's weakening their 'faith' because it's no longer based on blind acceptance (as it's designed for), it's based on so called 'evidence' and 'proof'. So they are at least being taught to think for themselves in some way...
If those kids can continue to challenge, as he's teaching them, then maybe one day they'll learn enough to challenge the 'evidence' and 'proof' that he teaches also?
You and me, anonymous, (and this entire website) are proof that such a thing can happen...
Uh, so, lets get this straight. Mankind has to use genetic engineering to clean up the mess your god created, got it. Good thing your god isn't working for an HMO, or I'd sue for the lack of competence in creating mankind in his image, well, unless, god is as genetically screwed up as we are, there's always that.
Its obvious that you know all about the christians belief,that when God creates something he does it in a second.miracously...immediately.
Really? How come it took a whole six days to create the universe?
Then 4000 years to come up with the Jesus virgin birth plan?
paultroll you can't win with your silly nonsense.
What a wack-job.