Why YEC?

From: Allen Roy (allenroy@peoplepc.com)
Date: Sun Aug 19 2001 - 19:33:54 EDT

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    I got this from a YEC email list. I thought It might spark an interesting discussion. The person's name has be removed to protect his identity. If you (singular) absolutely must know who this is, I'll talk to the author and see if his is willing to be identified to you.

    Allen
      ----- Original Message -----
      Sent: Friday, August 17, 2001 9:02 PM
      Subject: Why YEC?

      Hi everyone,
            Several people have answered the basic question "Why did you become
      YEC?" These are interesting, and I'll add my answer.

            When I was in school in the 30's and early 40's, I had never heard of
      anyone with an interest in science who actually believed early Genesis. I
      was raised in church, and believed the Bible (except for early Genesis). But
      my church was liberal and I hadn't become a born-again Christian. Since I
      had an active interest in science, I believed in evolution and ancient
      Earth-age. That belief was reinforced when the Army put me in the Manhattan
      Project (first atomic bomb) and I met a number of scientists whose names
      you've all heard of.

            Later, while I was Chief Engineer of Isotopes Inc., several of our top
      staff were Ph.D.'s, including one who was also Professor of Geochemistry at
      Columbia University. He and a few others were Wheaton graduates, and
      Christians who believed in Progressive Creation. We often had lunch
      together, and the subject of origins was one of our favorite "arguing
      points." By that time I had become a born again Christian, and studied the
      Bible. But I still never heard of any scientist who accepted the YEC
      viewpoint, so I didn't either.

            But I asked many questions, about radioactivity, dating methods, etc.
      This Professor was generally recognized as one of the world's experts on
      geochronology, gave testimony before Congress on that subject, and was also a
      true gentleman who tried to answer my queries honestly. He and another Ph.D.
      believed fervently in OEC and progressive creation over extreme times. My
      questions kept getting back to "Well how do you really know?" on various
      aspects of the foundations of radio-dating. Our lunchtime group wasn't just
      a bunch of dummies -- we were all quite knowledgeable about dating procedures
      etc -- that was one of our company's products. But I kept feeling subtle
      doubts about the foundational accuracy of radio-dating. (BTW, this was in
      the years around 1960.)

            I kept studying technical journals and books, and finally became
      convinced that circular logic and faith in prior beliefs played a strong part
      in radio-dating -- in other words, it wasn't a "scientific fact, provable by
      scientific methods." There was too much unprovable belief involved. By this
      time I was a dedicated Christian, who kept being bothered by this dichotomy
      of my own beliefs. I became open to a YEC attitude, but still had never
      known there was such a thing as a "scientific creationist" who believed in
      YEC. When I finally met one, and he gave me one of the early copies of a
      Bible-Science Newsletter, I found there was actually such a thing as a
      scientist who really believed in early Genesis. I subscribed, and quickly
      became an active scientific creationist -- (that was the common term in those
      days, and I still don't like that term).

            When someone asks me why I'm YEC now, one facet of my answer always
      includes the closer relationship to God the Creator, and the comfort that
      gives. No, you don't have to believe in YEC to be a Christian, but it
      certainly does help one's relationship with God.



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