I'm always impressed at the zeal with which "modernists" slam creation science as "non-science", and that it should never, ever, ever, be mentioned in the science curriculum, even as just a footnote that says something like "not everyone buys the evolution myth".
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Meanwhile, most of the contemporary scientific evidence that IS documented, in the form of existing fossil records, archeology, molecular biology, genetics research, and even probability studies, points emphatically to the creation account as the more scientifically credible of the two.
But we can't call it "science", because those of us who simply present it also happen to have faith in the God who made it all. And that disqualifies us. And it. God is in there somewhere. And the naturalistic science establishment cannot accept such evidence, even if it's sitting right there in plain daylight (created in Day 4, by the way). It's not about truth. Or even evidence. It's about their world view, and their need to preserve it.
But we can't call it "science", because those of us who simply present it also happen to have faith in the God who made it all. And that disqualifies us. And it. God is in there somewhere. And the naturalistic science establishment cannot accept such evidence, even if it's sitting right there in plain daylight (created in Day 4, by the way). It's not about truth. Or even evidence. It's about their world view, and their need to preserve it.
As for the paltry body of actual "naturalistic" evidence for evolutionary origins, I suppose it's clear by now that Mr Darwin and his more open minded disciples would be, and in fact those still living are, extremely disappointed in the modern scientific evidence results for their theory, so far ...
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