Isabella said:
Genetics will tell you that the female line is far older than the male line.
But as Fairlight pointed out, God's Word trumps anything man's "wisdom" might come up with. And the Bible says that Adam was created first, then Eve. In actuality, man's and woman's
DNA is the same age, as is implied by my statement that Adam married himself.
Secular humanist geology says that the Earth was created over millions of years by natural forces. The Bible says that the entire universe was created in six literal days.
How does a scientist date a rock? Simple...he finds a fossil in the rock, and asks a paleontologist to date the fossil. So the rock is as old as the fossil.
How does the paleontologist date the fossil? Simple...he calls a geologist and asks how old the rock is that the fossil was found in. So the fossil is as old as the rock.
Kind of reminds me of what Paul said about who Christians should not compare themselves to (
emphasis mine):
2 Corinthians 10:12 NKJV (12) For we dare not class ourselves or compare ourselves with those who commend themselves. But they, measuring themselves by themselves, and comparing themselves among themselves, are not wise.
But what about radioactive dating? That requires a whole bunch of unwarranted assumptions:
- How much parent element was in the rock when it formed?
How much daughter element was in the rock when it formed?
Was the rate of decay (parent element -> daughter element, often with intermediate elements as well) constant over the supposed millions of years since the rock formed?
Did any of the parent or daughter elements leach in or out over the supposed millions of years since the rock formed?
And the list goes on...
There are undoubtedly many similar assumptions that a geneticist must make when dating DNA.
The bottom line: either the Bible is a pack of lies and we are on our own, or the Bible, where it speaks of history, is an accurate historical document inspired by an eyewitness to how things were created. That eyewitness, of course, is none other than the Creator Himself. He was there; no modern scientist was. And if the Bible is true, then we are accountable to that Creator.
If you believe that the Universe and all it contains is the result of natural processes acting over millions and billions of years, ask yourself these questions:
- Where did the space/time/matter that makes up the universe come from?
Who or what "enacted" those "natural" laws that makes for an orderly universe?
What happened to the "natural" law of entropy? Was it temporarily repealed while the universe as we know it was forming itself?
How did life arise from non-life? I thought Pasteur proved that concept to be false.
Has any scientist actually observed one kind of living organism evolve into another? or even to one of the so-called "missing links?" (There is not one missing link, there are untold millions.)
Has any scientist ever found, in living organisms, any genetic mutation that was actually helpful rather than harmful to the organism that first showed that mutation? Remember, evolution requires millions of helpful mutations to get from one kind to another.
Only the Bible starts with an eternally self-existent God Who created space/time/matter by simply speaking it into existence.
All other "theories" about how things came to be start with pre-existing space/time/matter and pre-existing "natural" law. That includes
ALL religions, past and present, that depart from what the Bible teaches in the first 11 chapters of Genesis. (Evolution is religion, not science. It requires far more faith than I have!)
And if you believe in any form of so-called "theistic evolution," don't you think that the Bible would record that instead of special creation?
If you believe the first 11 chapters of Genesis, you have no problem believing the rest of the Bible. If you don't believe those first 11 chapters, none of the rest of the Bible makes any sense at all. (Thanks, Ken Ham, for stating that on your website!
http://www.answersingenesis.org/)
For more about radioactive dating, see
http://www.halos.com/ as well as Ken Ham's website. (I don't agree with everything Ken Ham teaches - he is apparently anti-poly, stressing "one man and one woman" as often as he can. Not sure, but that might be a slam against divorce more than against against poly. But he is right on about scientific matters and the Bible.)