Thank you, Gavin, for the way you’ve addressed this issue. I still hold to a young earth view, but as a mother, especially a homeschooling mother, Ive been burdened about the way my kids understand these issues, especially in light of the deconstruction movement. I want my kids to understand that the truth of God’s Word doesn’t rise or fall depending on how you understand these secondary issues.
One of the many things I appreciate about Gavin is that it is so obvious that he genuinely cares about people with whom he disagrees. He values how he comes across to his opponents just as much as he values his arguments against them.
Dr. Ortlund, you're really an excellent example of how to dialogue. I'm still not convinced of evolution or old-earth creationism, but I don't see how Ken Ham's attitude towards others are helping the YEC's case. Keep up the good work sir!
Refreshing to see young earth creationists in the comments that are comfortable to "agree to disagree"! I think this is very healthy for the body of Christ, at least in these secondary matters.
Ken Ham has the superior argument, playing by run-of-the-mill Protestant rules. I'm a devout Protestant, but, I'm not wholly onboard with "each day of creation being truly 24 hours", though perhaps its true. And I think this particular issue should just be argued in Christian charity. This is not about the historicity of God Himself, salvation, or good and evil. I do think that using this argument primarily to shove in Evolution is wrong. Don't pretend to care about this argument, if what you really care about is peddling Evolution. With that said, I don't think Ken Ham has to act like hyperbole isn't anywhere in his Bible; I also don't think Ham just has to act conceited against Ortlund, since Ham's argument is better. Its hard to imagine Ortlund is some kind of dishonest actor, or heretic.
This is the best response I've heard to Ken Ham's assertion that everyone who disagrees with him "reinterprets" Scripture. This loving presentation is a great example.
Thank you for how humbly and graciously you continue to interact with this issue, and also how you are standing firm on your position and not backing away under pressure. These videos have all been so incredibly helpful and insightful
One thing I've learned from Gavin over the time I've listened to him is how we should humble ourselves before scripture and over issues like these. A lot of Christians and even pastors are prepared to die on certain theological hills rather than accepting some of the ambiguity in scripture. I don't think we will ever fully understand the creation of the world here on earth and do not need to become divisive over these topics. Thank you Gavin!
I have been a big fan of AIG and Ken Ham. I have been following your channel for about 4 months now and you have given me some things to think about on a variety of topics. I will add this one to the list. I appreciate your humble and grace approach as you interact with people. It is a great example of how we should dialogue with those we don't agree with.
Great response Gavin. I have your book on Augustine’s view of creation and it has been such a blessing. I struggled for years from elementary to the end of high school in regards to science “vs” the Bible, but your channel, Augustine’s work, as well as the channel Inspiring Philosophy has helped me so much. Thank you! And I agree that the stories of people leaving the faith over science need to end.
Unfortunately, people don't leave the church over faith vs. science. It is abandoning the authority of the Word of God. Abandoning the clear teaching of Genesis 1-11 only feeds that exact problem. God moves in peoples hearts. Never compromise his word. God says give the "truth in love." Love without truth is powerless and quite unloving.
It is so cool to me that one day you are extending a charitable hand to Rhett and Link and then the next day you are extending a charitble hand to Ken Ham and other YEC proponents. As I've said before, you are a pastor's pastor. Thank you for mentoring me from afar.
I totally agree with your position, but had always been taught the world-wide flood position growing up. I love how you bring light to these subjects in such a thoughtful and gracious way.
It grieves me that this kind of black/white, overly-simplistic, and schismatic thinking has obtained such influence in the evangelical world. Thank you, Dr. Ortlund for speaking up on this!
Evolution = buncha death before fall, orthodoxy theology for centuries= death after fall. Nothing thats not black and white about it. It’s impossible for you to even find a sound exegesis that harmonizes evolution and Genesis, no one’s buying it.
The problem isn’t that there’s black-and-white thinking. The problem is the choice of issues to which to apply that kind of thinking. There are issues that require such thinking, particularly the nature of God and how we must approach Him.
As a yec, the agonizing part is how accusatory and paranoid many of my fellow yec brothers are. I’ve come to really appreciate the careful study many oec do and humility it takes to just admit we don’t know. I for one advocate for this approach. Grace and Christian discussion rather than yelling compromise at the first hint of disagreement
"Trying to 'Hammer' home" I see what you did there! ;) Sorry about the cheesy dad joke. Loved the response video and I am learning a lot from these video, Dr. Ortlund.
Really encouraged by your response. I personally adhere to literal days in Genesis 1, but I appreciate that you've shown that other interpretations aren't heretical (though we can't both be right). And I appreciate you showing that a lot of the arguments against your position are historically ignorant and attributing motive.
Ken Ham will never change. He’s staked way too much money on museums and lectures. That’s the only thing people look to him for, and he’s not even particularly good when it comes to his debates. It is against every instinct in his flesh to humbly admit he might be wrong about this.
Gavin, your videos have given such clarity to my own thoughts on these issues. I have been deconstructing in a sense my upbringing of “young earth creation or else”. There’s so much humility needed on this topic and I think your work is pointing that out. Recently I have experience such relief by acknowledging I don’t thing Genesis intends to be a scientific historical account. Honestly I think coming to Genesis with that understanding helps me see the greater theological truths that are revealed in it. All this to say, thank you, Gavin. Please keep up the good work.
Talk about picking the wrong hill to die on, Ken Ham’s insistence on attacking fellow christians like Gavin and William Lane Craig who I would argue are doing way more to propagate the Gospel on todays intellectual battlefield than he is, is outstanding. I cringed so hard throughout Ken Ham’s debate with Bill Nye, if I wasn’t already a believer I would think christians didn’t really have a foot to stand in the modern scientific world and leave fully convinced science has debunked Christianity.
Ya. We can only hope he sees real science a day the lord convicts him to belive the truth. Becuase yec and flat earth have made christians out to be bulling fools... sad thing he fooled me around last christmas as I got fired and was depressed. Went to bed one night remembering wat I wanted to be. (A geologist) I gave the dream up. Life happened. And he scared me with u ain't christian unless u think this
I have often said that Ken Ham has had a tendency to die on the wrong hill. Calling everyone who disagrees with you on non-primary doctrines a false teacher is the quintessential marker of “bad fundamentalism.”
You are incredibly kind and respectful to someone who is never kind and respectful. Ham has done a great deal of harm to the body of Christ as well as harming our witness. Keep up the fantastic work in your ministry.
Thanks for your comments. I wholeheartedly agree. I particularly appreciate your thoughts on opposing the "...everybody who doesn't agree with this way..." mentality. The same attitude is present across a wide range of issues. Perhaps we should all take time to examine our own "hard lines" that we have drawn so large as to obscure Jesus.
Hi Gavin, I'm an Orthodox Christian married to a protestant. My (also protestant) family as well as my wife's family all believe in young earth creationism. These videos have been really beneficial. I've believed in an old earth view for a while. I greatly appreciate especially your discussion of the development of this idea, as well as how many notable Protestants didn't believe in 19th century-style young earth creationism. I am wondering if you have any book recommendations on Augustine's favorable reception in the east? As I am sure you are aware, Orthodoxy is split on St. Augustine's theology, and have been at least since the mid-20th century. I'd be very interested to learn more about how other Eastern fathers viewed his work especially!
Reading how others interpret the Scriptures can be very helpful, but at the end of the day they are not infallible like the Bible. I think a lot of people are missing something when they read the first part of Genesis. It states that ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth’. A point in time? Or a point before time? Who knows? Then we have the curious statement that the ‘earth was without form and void’! Why? Why didn’t God create the earth perfectly at this time? Mystery! And had a vast time passed between the first creation of the heavens and the earth, and this ‘forming and fashioning’ of the earth as a home for mankind which the Bible says God then took 6 days to do? Who knows? But something is definitely going on here, that is why we need to be humble. When we consider the ‘ages’ of rocks etc, we need even more humility, for in creating the earth originally, everything was of the same age wasn’t it, or was it? And if scientists talk of the ‘age’ of certain rocks etc, aren’t they made up of particles of other substances of perhaps varying ‘ages’? A rock is only a conglomeration of sand, in the case of sandstone isn’t it? And other types, igneous for instance, didn’t start out ready made, but formed from the melting of other rocks and materials. So ‘ages’ surely are a bit of of a puzzle. I for one do not understand how science can ‘age’ rocks when they are formed this way. I am not arguing against rocks being millions of years old, for in the original creation they are mature ‘rocks’ aren’t they? So much mystery! And we shall perhaps never be able to reconcile all the puzzling facts. So science can show its findings and the Bible have the infallible explanation for our existence. Either one does not have to exclude the other!
Praise God for filling you with His Spirit Gavin! You are a gift to us all. Thank you so much for speaking up and speaking out. As a pastor who has been grappling with Genesis 1-11 for the last 20 years, it has painful to see so few conservative pastors or theologians going public and speaking up about these important but not 1st order matters. Thank you for your gracious and thoughtful responses to quick judgments and over simplistic exegesis.
Anti-intellectualism is a strong component of many ministries and denominations. It was a huge contributor to the theological bondage that held sway over me for several years at the beginning of my walk. Keep educating yourselves folks. Reading can seriously damage your ignorance. Thank you Gavin for taking the time to address this and please continue to suggest reading material.
My heart is IFB, but my education and intellect always put me at odds with those around me. Outside that movement, there’s too much tolerance for heterodox teaching. I look forward to heaven because I can’t feel at home in any of the churches in my area.
Is it "anti-intellectualism" that is a strong component of many ministries and denominations, or a rejection of the secular humanist worldview which dominates the public academy and from which its scholarship and conclusions are directly derived?
@@williamjpellas0314 Both. Calling a fundamentalist pastor an intellectual will get you either a dirty look or a laugh with a request not to insult him. For example, look at the faith-based arguments of the KJV-Onlyists who think the KJV corrects the Hebrew and Greek. Outside fundamentalism, look at the deplorable hermeneutics of Progressives and of Pentecostal variants such as Word-Faith and NAR. I would say that rejecting an idea just because you can link it to another religion (such as Secular Humanism) motivates anti-intellectualism, rather than being an alternative to it. Attacking the source rather than responding to the idea itself commits ad hominem and genetic fallacies, which is an anti-intellectual practice. Apologetics teaches you that you have more tools available than Bible quotes that some people refuse to even consider.
@@ricksonora6656 No. I attack the secular humanist worldview and the epistemic assumptions and a priori conclusions inherent in that worldview, and how that affects how people think and do their scholarship in the first place.
@@williamjpellas0314 I am speaking of the folks who believe reading anything other than the Bible is wrong. It is strong and straight up anti-intellectualism. I am not commenting on the fact that other factors are at play.
I’m a new follower after seeing you on The Remnant Radio. As a homeschool mom I have so many thoughts here. Briefly: - thank you! - Ken Ham has a huge corner of the HS/Christian market. Probably more than a corner. Any resources for families, kids, curriculum that teaches differently? - I have no doubt this is how Ken Ham has gained so much traction in this conversation (via homeschool/family curriculum). If we don’t have other resources we can’t easily teach anything different. I see a beautiful opportunity for someone. 😊 - Lastly, your humility and humble approach is so refreshing! I believe the gospel is steeped in mystery from beginning to end. It's important we all learn to say "I dont know." Thank you for leading by example!
Thank you for taking the time to answer! I will check it out. My son is very science minded and I have always been hesitant to teach Young Earth straight but it's everywhere. This is helpful! @@TruthUnites
@@ME-hsmomof4 I'm a homeschool dad, though my wife has done most of the research for curriculum. I've wondered the same thing recently as I'm an OEC. I always figured I would just tell my kids when they're older that some people think the Bible is saying YEC and some, like me, OEC and leave it at that unless they have more questions.
@@telleroftheone my kids are elementary age and home schooled. I’m YEC but am very open that there are many interpretations of Genesis. My main concern is they retain their faith in Christ and the resurrection. If they decided the flood was not global, it wouldn’t be the end of the world.
Wonderful video, Dr. Ortlund. Thank you for your patient, informed responses on these issues. I've seen how the attitude and statements of those like Ken Ham's remarks have been damaging to the body of Christ. This kind of response is not only helpful, but necessary. Your humble heart, consistent demeanor, and lack of accusatory tone along with your desire to seek clarification and help explain is something this world needs a lot more of, especially in the body. You are an exemplary teacher that resembles the teachings of our Lord. Thank you for what you do.
He's not a good teacher if he doesn't teach the truth. So explain to me how Ken's remarks have done harm to the body of Christ, and please provide examples. Because I don't think you have a clue of what you're talking about.
@@BillMurrey Ken Ham's remarks cause damage to the body of Christ by throwing accusations against other Christians of not being 'true' Christians by questioning their commitment to the scriptures. When Ken Ham says that you must agree with his interpretation of the Bible, he equates it with the Bible itself. This kind of conflation elevates his interpretation to infallible status not unlike God Himself. My friend, we as human beings are not infallible. Can you see why suggesting that your interpretation is infallible saying it is on par with the Bible itself could be damaging to the body of Christ?
@@Narikku If the 'other christians' are not teaching the Bible correctly then they need to be confronted with that. You agree? Why is Genesis the first book of the Bible? Just happen to write it first? Or is it because it lays the groundwork and foundation for everything else in the Bible? You think God would've thought of that? Do you believe that God's word is the ultimate authority on the earth? We are talking about God's authority here. Does He have absolute authority over you? If He told you to do something you thought was wrong would you do it? If God promised you a son that He was going to make a great nation from and then He told you to take your promised son and sacrifice him on an altar, would you do it? Abraham did. He respected God's authority and knew that He could do what He had promised. You think God could do the things mentioned in Genesis? Or has a group of self-worshipping scientists, who are known for making mistakes, proven God to be a liar? You believe that? I'm sorry for you if you do. Ken NEVER says "This is MY interpretation, you must obey it!" He always says "God has told us..., God says this....God has written..." He knows it's not his Bible, it's God's Bible. Most of what he teaches is about the Authority of God, not young earth, you got a problem with the authority of God? He stands on the authority of God and preaches what it says in the Bible. Show me where he doesn't preach from the Bible! Genesis is plain reading, a child can understand it, but if you want to go clipping verses from it, because you don't like what it says, go ahead. But don't be surprised if God does a little clipping Himself. As far as I can see you are being willingly ignorant regarding God's word.
@@BillMurrey> If 'other christians' are not teaching the Bible correctly then they need to be confronted with that. You agree? Yes, my friend. This is precisely why discussion about this topic is warranted: because Ken Ham is teaching the Bible wrongly in many ways. This is one example. > Why is Genesis the first book of the Bible? Because that is the way that we, as a people, organized it. There is nothing in scripture that says that Genesis has to be the first Book of the Bible. There is nothing in scripture that says Revelation has to be the last. To illustrate what I mean, why is Proverbs after Psalms? > Or is it because it lays the groundwork and foundation for everything else in the Bible? Is Christ your foundation, or your personal view of creation? > Do you believe that God's word is the ultimate authority on the earth. Yes. That's why I don't trust Ken Ham at his word, and I examine every word he says with scripture. And I don't find Ken Ham's interpretations to fit well with scripture. > Ken never says "This is my interpretation, you must obey it." He always says, "God has told us... God has written... God has says..." Then promptly after saying these things, Ken Ham gives his interpretation of what those mean. Are you trying to tell me Ken Ham doesn't have a preferred interpretation of the Bible? That he understands it 100% correctly? Every single meaning of every single word? There are so many questions here, my friend. I cannot answer them all. Hopefully this suffices to get my point across.
I appreciate the videos. My background is being influenced primarily by the young earth creation focus. I think we all agree on Genesis 1:1. As I read and listen I agree that we should be able to have discussions and disagreements about the specific details and time frame and still maintain respect.
Exactly, YEC and OEC both agree God made the heavens and the earth. We just disagree about *how and when.* It’s really not an issue to disfellowship over imo
We are all united in the spirit, we shouldnt disfellowship over sth like that @jncon8013 I'd argue most things aren't worth disfellowing over. The theif on the cross is our fellow and yet he probably had a very limited theology. That said, we should absolutely stand for truth when it presents itself absolutely, like for instance, now we have the full revelation of scripture and we know there will be new heavens and new earth so we should stand for that 100% but we shouldn't disfellow someone that may disagree if they haven't been exposed to that knowledge yet or are extremely young in the faith Only if they present bad fruit, i.e. they start rejecting clear evidence But the yec oec debate doesn't have clear evidence so while we can discuss it I strongly think polemics should be avoided :) Just my personal opinion Ultimately this will all pan out how God wants, what matters is that we are faithful to him in spirit even with limited knowledge of the faith (like the thief on the cross or like cornelius) or the OT saints as well! We have varying responsibilities (based on the knowledge each of us has) (some are mentally disabled and so I strongly believe God has nuance for them on judgement day) God is all knowing, reveals all hidden secrets on day of judgment, is all just!
And, ofcourse, Jesus is the way the truth the life and no one will reach the father but by him. It's just how the mechanics of that pan out that we have to entrust to God
Realizing that early church fathers didn't believe in literal 24 hour days and young earth creationism only becoming popular in the early 20th century helped me get out of this mentality you're talking about. Thanks for bringing this issue up, a lot of people need to hear it.
@@heather602 St. Augustine. I think that's all I need to say. And you're using a logical fallacy, an argument from silence, to say that the Early Church did not disagree on creation.
The church will be far better off and stronger when we finally learn to stop looking to Ken Ham as though he is an actual leader or reliable source concerning these important issues. How he ever came to have the influence he has genuinely boggles my mind.
Ham has influence because he correctly diagnoses the fulcrum of the problem. Origins. He's right when he says that Genesis 1:1 is everything. But he then insists that the only solution is a literal reading of the creation account combined with a hypercalvinist reading of Romans 5. Nuance is the enemy. Naturalistic science overplayed its hand, creating mistrust. I have read "scientific" accounts of origins and evolution that read like fairy tales.
Wow! Some who is bringing biblical answer should be disregard? Gavin's arguments are not biblical and contradicts Sola Scriptura. Imposing his beliefs onto Scripture.
I'll go with the Bible and observable science. Death before sin in evolution. Evidence of a world wide flood across the Earth. Creationists are also PhD. from the same universities as Gavin. Amazing how you people believe in the virgin birth of Jesus and His resurrection and annonment of sins, but young Earth and God doing it all in 6 days as said in Genesis is just too much. All of God's word is truth.
We are just starting our verse by verse on Genesis and just came to a similar conclusion but without your valuable quotes of church fathers. Thanks for this clear perspective.
So beautiful, Gavin. Thank you for speaking out in love and kindness. I am an old earth creationist and totally agree that we miss so much when we limit the conversation to just one aspect. Genesis 1 is so rich and I am learning Hebrew just to understand it better - and then that opens up so many more truths. God bless you brother. I hope that Ken Ham will also listen to your approach and will be praying for that.
Excellent point -- anyone's interpretation of a text is not, cannot be infallible, but Scripture is. I think you're right that many times people get these two things tangled up. And they defend their interpretation with an intensity that's too much, don't allow anyone to disagree as if that negates the authority of Scripture. But it's not called for.
“Every act of interpretation involves our fallible brains.” Then you can’t _know_ that Christ the God-man died for the sins of the world and rose again for the justification of His sheep; you can’t know _anything._ Your interpretation could be wrong. Your post-modernist view of the truth of God’s word relegates Christians to a life of “always learning and never arriving at a knowledge of the truth.”
@@matthewdyer2926 Sticks and stones Some topics (like Jesus Son of God came save us from death and sin) get a lot more development than others (like rapture or age of the earth). And so somethings are more reliably understood. If an idea has less to support it, interpretation is more needed. And we shouldn't be more certain than is called for in Scripture.
@@matthewdyer2926 And NT Scriptures tell us that we are given the Holy Spirit after salvation as a guarantee, a down payment, of our place in heaven. This is an added confirmation of salvation, outside the realm of interpretation. There is nothing comparable for lesser doctrines, as mentioned earlier. We must do our best to study to arrive at a true understanding, but it's not the same degree of confidence. There should be humility, acceptance that error is possible. And kindness to those who disagree in non-essentials -- signs the HS is present in a person's heart. Traits Gavin shows in his videos.
@@Joan-ph2es This… “And the waters prevailed so mightily on the earth that *all* the high mountains under *the whole heaven* were covered. The waters prevailed above the mountains, covering them fifteen cubits deep. And *all flesh* died that moved on the earth, birds, livestock, beasts, all swarming creatures that swarm on the earth, and *all mankind.* *Everything* on the dry land in whose nostrils was the breath of life died. He blotted out *every living thing* that was on the face of the ground, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens. They were blotted out from the earth.” Is no less clear than this- “And we apostles are witnesses of all he did throughout Judea and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a cross, but God raised him on the third day and made him to appear.” Or this- “For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep.” “Humility” is _believing what is plain and obvious in God’s word._ Syncretizing scientism with Scripture is the height of arrogance in the guise of “humility”. The only reason you and Ortland don’t, is because of cowardice, syncretism, and capitulation to the pressures of modernity.
@@matthewdyer2926 Still with the ad hominem? Rhetoric unreliable? Even in English, "all" and "every" don't have to carry a global-wide meaning. -- I lost my keys! I searched everywhere, all over! 1 Kings 10:23-24 "So King Solomon exceeded all.... And all the earth sought to Solomon, to hear his wisdom, which God had put in his heart." "All the earth" -- it's not syncrynistic (or even cowardly) to think that the Kings of Tahiti, Incas, or Australian aborigines never made to Jerusalem. Because "all" can cover just the Levant or even the Middle East, and still be an absolutely true statement according to all rules of grammar. You're doing your interpretation in a hyper-literal manner, and leaving regular text meaning and word sense behind. Sometimes "all" is a smaller set of possibles. To anybody speaking a language. Context matters.
We throw terms like “false teacher” and “heretic” at each other so easily these days. Whether you’re right or wrong on this issue, that type of accusation is uncalled for.
My approach is to read Genesis and accept its message whilst acknowledging today's scientific claims without having to resolve the two. Paradox can be quite comforting.
I do something similar. “Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth? Tell me, if you have understanding. O Lord, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high; I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvelous for me.
I’ll take the Bible as it says and the theory of evolution as what scientists say…neither are compatible or intertwinable, why cant we just accept what the Bible says, why cant we be proud of Scripture and Tradition, why must we appease secularists that dont care for us. We witness to them, not appease them.
I think you mean, being able to say “I don’t know” is comforting. Paradox is discomforting because it requires God to be either illogical or dishonest. But having the humility to admit one’s limitations and trusting the solution to God is what brings comfort.
100% I stand with you on your final points here. I tend to lean young-earth (but not with a great degree of confidence, and I'm certainly open to many possibilities in this area). However, I am definitely opposed to the enemy's attempts to divide and weaken the church through unnecessary insistence on this issue. I know many dear brothers and sisters in Christ who disagree about it, and are able to get past that disagreement to remain in fellowship with one another. That should be the case for all of us.
Two things to consider: Did death enter the world before or after sin? (Is sin the cause of death?) and Hebrews 11:1-3 11 Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. 2 For by it the people of old received their commendation. 3 By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible. Did it really take billions of years for God's Word to effect the earth and universe (along with death piling up throughout the world before the first sin)?
Well done Gavin. Very useful to restate your points several times, building upon them- just like Ken Ham does. I also confess I used to teach AIG material as though it was essential gospel truth. Also also you remind me of my mere infantile exposure to church fathers.
Pastorally, I have found that most people want plain, simple, and easy answers. Few desire to wrestle for the truth. It easier to accept a simple solution and just fight for it than it is to think deeply and humbly. Those who seek find... only few seek and therefore few find.
I think you hit it right on the head. I believe most Christians are content with the fortune cookie version of their beliefs and it is rare to find those who are willing to wrestle with the Scriptures. I see Ken Ham as being the one who provides the bare minimum to these much deeper theological discussions while Gavin Ortlund and others are providing deep theological study on these matters. The question we must always ask ourselves is, are we content with the quick google search or are we the one’s who will sometimes have multiple commentaries open along with several translations of the Scriptures in order to get to the bottom of subject? I know for me, the latter describes my studying.
... Didymus the Blind... was... Clear on his view.... that made me chuckle, Gavin I feel like you should have said "no pun intended" there. thanks for the video, I love the effort you put into your videos, I know it's not easy packing so much into short form videos.
I think it would be very interesting if you responded to Christian Combatives 20 minutevideo about your flood concerns. His focus is on the theological issues a local vs global flood raises and I think interacting with his points would be a great way to move the conversation forward since his objections are some of the strongest and best thought out of any that I've seen so far.
thanks for the suggestion -- are his arguments different from those I already addressed in my follow-up video? I went through 6 common responses there.
@@TruthUnites yes. His main concerns are things like the new testament references to it, the extent of the flood corresponding to the extent of the covenant (small flood, small covenant) and what the connections between the flood and baptism can tell us about it. His response video is about 20 mins long as opposed to the initial video(s) you might have seen which were watching through your video. The shorter response has much more condensed arguments and points.
I discovered Christian Combatives because of the Truth Unites local flood video and thought his response was literally moving the conversation forward….he is or recently was a military chaplain so he can be a little different the way military folks can be…but he walked the conversation forward a few steps. Example: if the flood was local, was God’s promise afterwards just for that local area. Why did God cause the flood? Wouldn’t it have been easier to just move Noah and the family and the animals to safe ground rather than move them all to the ark? What about tectonic plate shifting to explain those pesky lemurs and koalas?
@@onepingonlyplease Yeah I really appreciated that he was genuinely focusing on what he thought the central theological issues are, not speculating about motive, or mudslinging in any way. I really hope Gavin can maybe do a discussion with him, or a response video because I think the two of them are both intelligent, charitable, and genuinely Christian. Their discussion of these questions would be very fruitful and insightful.
I hope they do a video! I’m certain that the first thing Christian Combatives (Paladin Actual) will ask Dr Ortlund will be “what in the text leads you to believe it was a local flood?” Not if the text allows for a local flood. I want to hear Dr Ortlund respond and keep moving this train forward!!
Great video. I recently did a study on the Hebrew translation based on the work of David Instone Brewer, and I came away thinking that in the original language, the global flood view is much less certain than most of us realize. It was surprising to see how much more open the Hebrew is to the local flood interpretation compared to the English translations.
i clicked on this because I saw this in the sidebar and I saw the recent FB post by Ham about you, Gavin, and I was curious as to what you had to say. You did not disappoint and I'm glad to see you didn't just lash out toward him as is often the case with so many. I will say i agree with Ham in that MOST scientists start with a premise that is outside the Scripture. That is their starting point. Even "Christian scientists" and I've yet to see any OEC Christians who don't start with "science tells us". The is most clearly and apparently seen in WLC's discussions with you wrt his new "The Historical Adam" essay and others he's done. He CLEARLY starts from "science says". And I believe you showed yourself as starting somewhere outside of Scripture because at the 6min mark you say "My basic view is the Scripture just doesn't tells us how old the Universe is." THAT is by your own words your starting point. And, logically, if the Scripture doesn't tell us then something else must. And therefore Ham is correct. You are starting outside of Scripture. I would bet the farm that you have studied this subject MUCH more than I have. I can tell that just from some of the names you dropped. But I submit the Scripture DOES tell us how old the earth is. Not EXACTLY but within a few thousand years. NOT BILLIONS! I say that because I hold to a hermeneutic that it MUST be Scripture that interprets Scripture. And much, if not all, of the debate revolves around how the word "day" is defined and what a "day" was in the Genesis Creation account. I believe that question was answered while I was studying another controversial subject. The Sabbath. What is it. When is it. How and who is to observe it. Etc. It was while doing that study that I came across Exo 31:16-17. And there are other verses that say pretty much the same. I don't see how it could be any clearer that the Universe, the Earth and all of Creation was completed in six literal days.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 - You missed the point. Exo. 31:16-17 confirms the Genesis 6-day Creation Account and defines what a "day" is. Thus confirming YEC.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 - You missed the point AGAIN. Try a class in Hermeneutics 101. Or better yet ya might wanna start with a 3rd Grade Reading Comprehension Class. Or just try pulling your head outta your six. Context ONLY matters when trying to interpret a verse or passage or a word such as "DAY". And the CONTEXT there is that a DAY is the same as a DAY in Genesis 1. IOW, the CONTEXT in Exo. 31 interprets the CONTEXT of Genesis 1. That's Hermeneutics 101. “Answer a fool according to his foolishness, so that he may not be wise in his own eyes.” (Pro 26:5) “Like a dog that returns to its vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” (Pro. 26:11) “Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” (Pro. 26:12) Oh, and btw, the CONTEXT of Exo. 31:16-17 is NOT temple inauguration. it's about the Sabbath and keeping it. Now get the GIANT Sequoia Tree outta your eye socket, get outta the Flesh, get saved if need be, and then go practice what you preach.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 yes. //no. Context also matters with bara.// LOL I should just let that one sit there on it's own. Pretty sure that anyone with eyes to see and an ounce of discernment can know what we're dealing with now. You're a nut. //Context matters with scientific concordism.// Wrong again. //Context matters with ancient near east cosmology in Genesis. Etc...Genesis describes ancient near east cosmology, not modern science. // Wrong again. Genesis describes Universal History and the Word of God. Smh //That's the Bible in its context.// LOL Your OPINION is duly noted and summarily dismissed because, well, it's just that and MORE IMPORTANTLY God says otherwise. //Please educate yourself. // Now get the GIANT Sequoia Tree outta your eye socket, get outta the Flesh, get saved, and then go practice what you preach. “Like a dog that returns to its vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” (Pro. 26:11) “Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” (Pro. 26:12) “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not to your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths. Do not be wise in your own eyes; fear the LORD and depart from evil.” (Pro 3:5-7 AFV) "There is a way which seems right to a man, But its end is the way of death." (Pro. 14:12) Now that you've totally discredited yourself and exposed yourself for just what you are and your view of Scripture you can go away. You're dismissed.
Agreed. Neither did the person trying to answer his critiques of the Cessationist film. 😬 I tried watching both of those interviews and ended up complaining to my phone screen, "You didn't even respond to Gavin's point!!!" 😅
@@AndreaWhoGoesByAndrea Glad I wasn't the only one, Andrea. I kept waiting...and waiting... Also, I'm in neither camp on these issues that have nothing to do with my salvation. In fact, I lean more on the literal 24-hour creation days. The flood not being global makes sense. I also think Calvinism is non-Biblical, and very destructive. Uh-oh. Christ died for me. Calvinists are saved by Grace, through Christ. Does anything else matter?
@@thomasglass9491 Ah, another one that hasn't listened. 🙂 No - Ken Ham, as well as you it seems - were simply ignoring everything Gavin anticipated. They acted as if he made no mention of it. I just hope you lie out of ignorance, and not out of malice. Because lie you do.
Thank you so much for putting out these videos! Theistic evolutionists and anyone other than YEC haven’t done the best job getting this info out to the general public, and you and Michael Jones are changing that! It’s hard for me to find in-depth content online for theological issues brought up by YECs, such as the place of sin in God’s creation.
Thank you for addressing this. You are right, it becomes a stumbling block. I felt that way when I became a Christian. I felt "browbeaten" into believing this super-literal interpretation. It got me so mentally frustrated, and took away from other areas of my faith where I needed to grow.
The flood was global in the sense that all humans on the globe were drowned. But humans were in a localized area. Notice God has to intervene and scatter humans because of their rejection to go multiply and fill the earth.
One thing that disturbs me about this thinking regarding "Interpretation of Scriptures with no outward sources" is that it could prime us for becoming unable to validate scripture based on outside evidence. Science, philosophy, and archeology are just some feilds that can serve to offer a lot of evidence and validation for scripture. This is not to say that our faith is merely rooted in the latest archeological study. But, as you noted, Dr. Ortlund, we ultimately all Interpretate scripture through the outside source of our own perception on reality. Science and philosophy are disciplines which have alwsys been fueled because of thinkers wanting to interpret scripture, not in spite of them.
I've been praying for Gavin Ortland and Ken Ham to finally have the opportunity to debate each other in-person. I'm not picking sides, I just want to see what would come out of it.
I had a huge falling out at my previous job (teaching at a Christian high school) when my employers found out I didn’t believe in a literal Adam and Eve as historical individuals - they told me they had “never heard of a Christian who thought that.” They both went to Christian colleges. I was flabbergasted.
They were "flabbergasted" because it is hard to understand how someone can teach children to deny the plain reading of Scripture. They probably were relying on only "one book" of Creation, the True one.
@@DavidThigpen-yp7ko I teach every individual to the level I feel they are capable - the younger, the simpler. The older, the more complex and critical. My high schoolers were capable of critical thinking (especially in a supportive environment with trusted educators) where multiple perspectives could be weighed and compared. So when they asked about Genesis and creation, I encouraged them to think deeply instead of blindly accepting the “plain” reading they’d grown up with that was proving unsatisfactory when compared to the heavens, which declare the glory of God and make his invisible qualities known.
@@2wheelz3504 that’s an anemic understanding of original sin, and also an anemic understanding of the Gospel. But hey, I don’t work for you so I guess it doesn’t matter 🤷🏻♂️
@@2wheelz3504 But all you’ve done is referenced a different passage that is clearly using metaphor and literary devices to communicate a spiritual truth rather than a literal-historical one. By referencing Adam as a “type” of one to come, Paul is clearly not insisting that Jesus is somehow a clone or copy of Adam, but that he fulfills the role that Adam did - but that nowhere requires Adam be a literal historical individual. You’re referencing a metaphor to prove a historical figure existed. My Greek and Hebrew professors also recommend a “plain” reading, but that does not mean an unthoughtful or uncritical reading. “When I was a child, I thought like a child…”
@@2wheelz3504 I’m not “making” it a metaphor as though a literal reading is the default. And reading it literally absolutely does raise spiritual issues - namely, how does the Bible interact with general revelation? Can I trust my own senses if all the evidence suggests the Earth is very old but the Bible “says” it’s young? It’s nonsensical to say “God did things in an illogical order so that we would have to guess at the legitimacy of the text.” And frankly, I’m not being a smart ass ❤️ I’m being very serious in how I’ve used that passage, and I stand by it. You came and revived this thread to say you would have hypothetically fired me with the goal of what, exactly? You didn’t engage in good faith with what I said and try to have a meaningful discussion - you simply attacked. So… no smart-assery. Take it how it was said.
I appreciate your voice! You didn’t back down but speak in love. Blessings! I am standing with you in this. The struggle for the faith of our young people is real!
Ken Ham also starts outside the text , he brings in his western culture worldview understanding and has already determined how the text should be interpreted based on his understanding. Now that his interpretation is set ,everything else (other scripture,science)must revolve around his interpretation.
The word of God can either be understood or not. If not, then not only is it void, but language itself is impossible -- which is a clue to why your interpretive nihilism cannot be true.
There is so much irony in your comment. The "ancient near east cosmology" argument (which you are assuming in your comment) is an example of modernist snobbery trying to force western naturalistic worldview into both science and the Bible. One of the most important principles of biblical interpretation is its perspicuity.
@@l-cornelius-dol Not all, but the flood and creation are foundationally clear. "Ancient near east cosmology" interpretations are a way to muddy, not clear up.
I was an atheist who came to Christ in my twenties with a combination of Old Earth and Young Earth teachers. The young earth/universe theology was interesting to me at first, but when I realized that I would have to believe that God created a universe with a mere "appearance of age," I became very skeptical of young universe claims. The young universe answers for why God would create a universe that is not what it appears to be were completely unavailing. I also saw that young earth teachers like Ken Ham were often insulting and dismissive of those who disagreed with them. I saw the young earth creationist "arguments" were too often veiled or overt insults, mere rhetoric, or obvious informal fallacies. Once I heard a John MacArthur radio broadcast on Genesis in which he referred to Christians who do not believe in a 24-hour "day" in Genesis as "so-called Christians." I was deeply saddened. Why would anyone from the pulpit utter such a thing against someone he doesn't even know? I'm merely a "so-called Christian" because I think each creation day is a long period? I saw this more often from prominent young universe creationists who whose methods of preaching and teaching were rhetoric, insult, and dismissiveness to suppress those who disagree with them. I also saw that many in the young-universe community were emotionally tied to their commitments, so much so that they were unable to listen. And now those who do not listen teach their children to act the same way. I have seen it. I fear for our children at the hands of emotionally committed young earth parents who are passing their children into the hands of the Ken Hams of the world who think insult, rhetoric, and informal fallacies are acceptable methods of engaging fellow believers and their ideas. I hope the young universe parents who are still open-minded, gentle and respectful, will help others be the same way. As I studied more, I found that the old-earth teachers were like Gavin: open-minded, willing to listen, never attacking anyone. Other old universe creationists like Hugh Ross and John Lennox, never insulted anyone. They just present their cases logically and biblically, and where scientific matters were at issue, they were scientifically rigorous. The old universe scholars seemed much more like Christ than their young universe brethren. Believe the universe is young or old--you're my sister or brother in Christ no matter what. But please act like it. I promise if you and I speak on why I believe the universe is billions of years old and the six periods of creation in Genesis 1 are not 24-hour periods, I will listen to you and never insult or dismiss you. I will treat you respectfully, and I'll present what I know and learn what you may teach me. This is how we grow as disciples of Christ. We can do this. I'm thankful Gavin is so clear on his work of uniting us. We need it!
Excellent video! Starting with the text requires asking the questions of the text. The one thing that Ken Ham does not do is attempt to understand the text in context. He completely disregards ancient worldview as a grid to understand ancient Scripture.
I agree with Gavin. We should not fight over this issue, but I love friendly discussions. I wish Ken Ham were as generous as Gavin on this issue. But, as I see it, the most natural reading of Genesis 1 is a six-day creation account. Still, people like Dr. Hugh Ross make a fair case for an Old Earth Creation account for Genesis 1. Also, I believe the Ante-Nicene Fathers' view of Scripture was much more sound than Augustine's or Origin's. The Ante-Nicene Fathers took a more serious view of the Scriptures than Augustine or Origin, and while the allegorical method eventually took over, the more serious view still held influence among the later Church Fathers even after Augustine.
Exactly. Nobody engaged in this debate was actually there when it happened. Only God was. What he has given in scripture is sufficient for his salvific purposes. But he didn't give us everything. And how we read (interpret) the beginning chapters of Genesis are arguable, not settled. It's very possible that the interpretations of men are all wrong, not exactly the way that God accomplished these things. Our physical universe, space, and time are mysterious in themselves. The Divine is even more so. Now, we see as through a glass darkly.
You say nobody was there when creation happened. I disagree. You see God in His wisdom wanted us to see His "eternal power, being known by what was made, so that men are without excuse." When you see the sun, you see it as it was 8 minutes ago. It takes light 8 minutes to reach us on earth. You are looking at the past not the present. The deeper we look into space the further back in time or the past we see. We actually get to peer all the way back to the origin of space, time, and energy. This creation event demands a trancendant creator who all powerful, all knowing, has wisdom like a craftsman before he makes the first cut. He is also personable, to let us enjoy this earth He fashioned for us to live and experience Him. Everything is just right in our universe so we can experiance life and have this conversation.
@@jonpadilla4321 Men have looked at the universe. There is no beginning when they look, just more. God has curtained certain things off from us. Only He knows the beginnings and the ends. I agree, rejoice in what we have, and He will reveal what is for our good. Speculation leads only to men in dispute.
@@stephenbailey9969 you say men see no begining when they look. I agree that we can not peer behind the curtain at the exact mombet of creation. Our physics do not work, at it all becomes speculation at this point. But a fraction of a second before this moment he lets us look behind the cutain and see the birth of creation. He gives us a a baby picture of the universe. The heavens declare the glory of God. He knew we would study and observe his creation and he built physical laws and order it so we would could see his handiwork. For all practical purposes he does let us see the begining even though we are confined to the dimensions of space and time.
Day is not the same as 24 hours, not in the past and not today. The earth is not about 6,000 years old and the Bible does not teach this. Hebrews 4:9-10: "There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his." This tells us that the 7th day Each believer are to enter into day 7. Also there no "evening and morning" for the 7th day. As day 7 as not ended. Biblical Hebrew has a limited vocabulary, with fewer words compared to other languages, such as English or Spanish. This means words often have multiple meanings determined by context. Day - yom is commonly rendered as day in English translations, but the word yom can be used in different ways to refer to different time spans thus literally is: Sunrise to sunset Sunset to next sunset Time period of unspecified length. (long time span ). We use the word day the same today: In my grandfather’s day cars did not go very fast. I work the day shift. (Both are not 24 hours) Deuteronomy 33:15 and Habakkuk 3:6 "ancient mountains". Gen 2:4 “in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens” referring to the whole time of the six days, The events of day 6 can not have happened in 24 hours. Creationism does not equal young Earth. There are many Old Earth creationists.
I generally lean toward a young earth interpretation and find their scientific arguments very convincing, but biblically I do think it’s vague enough to leave mystery and can not be said definitively one way or the other from just scripture and I think that is an important point to make. Great video.
prior atheist and evolution advocate, i don't think anything will sway my opinion on being a young earth creationist, i'm glad you don't push it to say its a necessary belief, but i'm not convinced of natural evolution.
This discussion here isn’t about theistic evolution, which I believe is a huge error. This is a discussion of the age of the earth, which isn’t as great of an issue. So you can believe old-earth and we don’t need to be so divisive about it as ppl like Ken Ham are. With theistic evolution, I think we can and should be more dogmatic about.
Ken Ham needs to read Romans 14, and put it into practice. He's a mad dog running around biting all those of his own household. Just angry and ineffective.
I appreciate this video. I wpas almost expelled grom an independent congregation for a belief in the Gap theory and restoration when it wlasl discovered. I belief in the Inerrancy of scripture but one can hold a high view of scripture and not hold a youg earth creationist and be equally opposed to evolution and liberalism. Christians whetherMachem or even a Torrey, or Schofield among other disagreed. As a student of historical theology actually a belief in a young earth os a relatively recent
There is nothing wrong with your statement about people just being ignorant and never studying these topics, because it's true. I fit into this category for many years on many topics. Your also right about some believers acting as if their views hold as much authority as scripture and is part of it. I witnessed this for most of my life being raised in pentecostal churches and schools on the topic of dispensationalism. They would act as if any other view was new age heresy. Once I started studying and learning on my own and stopped being ignorant excepting everything, I changed several of my views on creation, and eschatology. I still hold to the gifts of the spirit, tongues, miracles, etc, but rebuke and hurt when people use these things to take advantage of people and make a mockery out of it. Thank you Dr. Ortlund for all you do, I enjoy your videos so much!
Yeah I think it shouldn't be ignored that the ages of people when down drastically after the flood. And I kind of wish Christian scientists would address the expanding earth model, since our science overlords who expect us to appeal to authority wont look into it. I do not think it is a coincidence that the continental crusts form a perfect sphere if you make the earth shrink at oceanic boundaries. That is too many coincidences to ignore for me.
"These are not trivial points but major 'deconversion' talking points." Yes, and it's made much worse that the church is having trouble even dialoguing on these points. Plenty of people don't want to be part of a group where you can't question things without being attacked.
@@PreciousMeddler I think with a thorough honest dialogue Christians could actually resolve 85% of the mysteries presented by Genesis and modern geology and anthropology.
Day is not the same as 24 hours, not in the past and not today. The earth is not about 6,000 years old and the Bible does not teach this. Hebrews 4:9-10: "There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his." This tells us that the 7th day Each believer are to enter into day 7. Also there no "evening and morning" for the 7th day. As day 7 as not ended. Biblical Hebrew has a limited vocabulary, with fewer words compared to other languages, such as English or Spanish. This means words often have multiple meanings determined by context. Day - yom is commonly rendered as day in English translations, but the word yom can be used in different ways to refer to different time spans thus literally is: Sunrise to sunset Sunset to next sunset Time period of unspecified length. (long time span ). We use the word day the same today: In my grandfather’s day cars did not go very fast. I work the day shift. (Both are not 24 hours) Deuteronomy 33:15 and Habakkuk 3:6 "ancient mountains". Gen 2:4 “in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens” referring to the whole time of the six days, The events of day 6 can not have happened in 24 hours. Creationism does not equal young Earth. There are many Old Earth creationists.
Thank you for a this video on the Genesis debate. I have studied and researched various interpretations. You used the word “browbeaten.” That is exactly how I feel in the church pew with respect to this issue. Any teaching is reduced to YEC and evolution, extremely simplistic. Thank you for putting into words how I experience this issue in the church.
Ken Ham has painted himself into a corner... And it's a corner that he likes. His entire reputation and status revolve around his being 'right' about 24hr days. Look at the huge amounts of money that have been invested in his organisations! He has a big fan club. He will always hammer his views because thinking outside his self imposed box would undermine his status.
As you say "huge amounts of money that have been invested in his organisations"..........totally agree ! As they say in the classics.....Just follow the money ! He has too much to lose.
After listening to the whole video I find that you have made a good point . I’m on AIG side of things but point well noted and I think that we are indeed guilty of what yiu say
Citing church authorities who don’t agree with a literal reading doesn’t demonstrate that the literal reading is incorrect, or that you aren’t doing eisegesis. Also, where the light came from is rather plain from the rest of the Bible. God is the one who is light, who wraps himself in unapproachable light, etc. - God was the source of light. When visible light was created, God’s glory became visible. As with Day 6, when God delegates ruling authority to humanity, on Day 4 God delegated light bringing to creatures made to carry on the task. Further, comparing genesis 2 to 1 with regard to plants - it’s different plants that had not yet come up. God creates grain and fruit trees in 1, but the small plants of the field were to wait because “God had not yet caused it to rain and there was no man to work the ground.” It’s an indication that aspects of the creation come about in and through human involvement in the work, as God gives the growth. Yes, Augustine was wrong, Athanasius, Machen, et. al. were wrong. Why do we work six days and rest on the seventh each week? Because God did. And that logic carries forth everywhere the days are referenced in the Bible. That the text isn’t immediately easy to grasp in how it worked doesn’t mean that it’s unclear with regard to the time frame.
I was going to share the same thought about God's primordial light. He said "let there be light" as He brought light into our time space continuum. He was creating the beginning of space/time.
When trying to understand Genesis 1, why is God's explanation always seemingly neglected. In the giving the 10 Commandments in Exodus 20, God said, "SIX DAYS you shall labor, and do all your work,” then He said, “For in SIX DAYS the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.” How were the Israelites to understand the meaning of SIX DAYS as it relates to labor and creation, which seem to be connected? If "six days" meant one thing in verse 9 and another thing in verse 11, how could they make sense of this? They could not wait thousands of years for the "church fathers" to weigh in on this.
Amen. Also the sabbath being celebrated every week. God's word is clear. The serpent comes in and asks questions that beguile minds and suddenly it's a "confusing" issue. Nothing new under the sun.
Genesis 1 is Lucifer and the fallen angels. They made man in their image. Man is an idol, a trap for angels. Only one Gospel: The Gospel of Reconciliation. Jesus Christ came into THEIR kingdom to reconcile fallen angels unto Himself. We are the fallen angels (ELOHIM) kept in DNA chains of darkness. If you do not confess being a fallen angel in Lucifer's kingdom, then you are an unbeliever. Unbeliever = those that claim to be made in the image of ELOHIM(gods). REPENT FALLEN ANGELS.
Im so happy to have so many gifted biblical scholars available to me im my life time. I cant wait to talk about God forever in heaven with both Gavin and Ken my brothers in Christ! Im a young earth creationist just because I dont think God would make earth and let it sit for no reason to then make humans. The only thing that matters is how we can reinterpret our views if there is solid proof, without denying our faith in God and his promises and his Word.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. It was very helpful and encouraging, and I do hope you will continue talking about this. Christians need to hear about these things and about the church fathers you mentioned. I want to get your book on Augustine Side note: I came across a UA-cam video with Ken Hamm, Josh McDowell, Ray Comfort, Hugh Ross, and I can’t remember who else. But Ken Hamm was attacking Hugh Ross’s beliefs and criticizing his book on Genesis. It was very clear that Ken has a problem with pride. I pray that God will humble him and all the other church leaders who are accusing their brothers and sisters in Christ of being heretics for believing in an old earth rather than a young earth; that the six days of creation were long periods of time rather than 24 hours. There is no reason to attack people for something that is not a salvation issue, or a different gospel. I appreciate your insights, and your humble response. Btw when I was a little girl I recall my grandmother listening to your grandfather’s radio program, Haven of Rest…I think it was called.
Ken has a problem with wrong teaching. Ross's book denies the flood and I'm pretty sure he believes in evolution too. the Bible does not teach these things.
@BillMurrey Hugh Ross does not deny the flood! He believes it destroyed all of mankind and a huge area of land - most of the Middle East, but not the whole planet. And Ross doesn't believe in Darwinian Evolution. Please check facts before commenting...
@@BillMurreyHugh Ross does NOT believe in evolution. He believes in 6 long periods of time, rather than 6 literal 24 hour days. And I did not come across anything that alludes to him denying the flood. If any fault in in his beliefs, it would be relying on science to explain everything rather allowing God room to operate outside of science.
The Church Militant United with the Church Triumphant, under the Father, in the Son, united by the Love of the Holy Spirit. That is true unity. Welcome! ❤
I admire and love your charitable nature, Dr. O! Your example of St Augustine grappling with the very text itself is the perfect response to, er... that person who imposes his own novel interpretation on Genesis while accusing you of doing the same.
It may seem to many a completely different topic, but it would be interesting to see the corollary between eschatology and the hermeneutic people use for Daniel 7, Matthew 24 and The Book of Revelation and see how much they reads into the texts using the newspaper. It’s amazing how many claim to read Genesis 1 “literally” and read into these other texts their own modern interpretations.
That is one of the biggest things that bugs me about Dispensationalism and modern interpreters of Scripture. They often shout loud how they interpret the text literally but then as you stated when it comes to Eschatology, they often force modern current events into the text. I have even heard/read some interpret horses to be tanks, arrows to be missiles, locusts to be helicopters, the new heavens as a space station etc… It is quite absurd.
@@J.F.331 Ironically Ancient Alien Astronaut theorist Erich von Däniken (mis)interprets scripture in the EXACT same method as Hal Lindsey and the rest of dispensationalists. They ignore historical and literary elements of the text, as well as time indicators, and pour into it their wild imaginations that tell to sell a lot of books and make great content for Science Fiction. There is a literary parallelism in Genesis 1 & 2 that is similar to that in The Book of Revelation. William Hendriksen details the pattern in his book "More Than Conquerors."
I agree, it is very inconsistent. The most consistent way to read the Bible would be to follow the genre principle--Genesis 1 should be read as history, since it is a historical narrative, and Revelation/Daniel should be read as a figurative prophecy, since they are prophetic books.
The way you engage with those who disagree with you is an example to all of us. Well done. Honest question about local flood... How does God's promise in Genesis 9.15, make sense with a local flood?
Hi Gavin, awesome video! Could you interact with the genealogies in Genesis? In the Creation Museum, there's a display lining up the biblical genealogies like James Ussher did, showing how they go back to 4004 BC.
Just wanted to maybe give you some hope! 😆 so I actually disagree with a local flood… but I hold zero resentment towards your opinion and I still love you and your channel!! I agree with your point on the division around it. Unfortunately I definitely used to “die on this hill” as I did many. The spirit can change people! Thank you for this conversation!
Excellent and thoughtful video. KH seems to rhink his interpretation is infallible- a dangerous assumption re the Holy Scriptures. KH dismiises other great Christian theologians throughout Church history. Sad !
Thank you, Gavin, for the way you’ve addressed this issue. I still hold to a young earth view, but as a mother, especially a homeschooling mother, Ive been burdened about the way my kids understand these issues, especially in light of the deconstruction movement. I want my kids to understand that the truth of God’s Word doesn’t rise or fall depending on how you understand these secondary issues.
Beautifully said
I’m in the same position, Amy!
I'm glad disagreements on this important topic can be discussed affably!
Well done, mom!
Very nicely stated! May God grant you wisdom as you educate your children.
One of the many things I appreciate about Gavin is that it is so obvious that he genuinely cares about people with whom he disagrees. He values how he comes across to his opponents just as much as he values his arguments against them.
A beautiful display of imaging Christ. I'm very thankful for this example
He's still wrong though....
@@ameliacoburn4787 about?
I couldn’t agree more! Such evidence of a heart that is more concerned with following Jesus and loving others than “owning” his opponents.
@@jessestone117 apparently about nothing, considering she hasn't replied at all.
Dr. Ortlund, you're really an excellent example of how to dialogue. I'm still not convinced of evolution or old-earth creationism, but I don't see how Ken Ham's attitude towards others are helping the YEC's case. Keep up the good work sir!
Evolution is the mechanism through which God created complex life. Denying reality only makes Christians look silly and uneducated. God bless
Ken Ham has a lot at stake if he’s wrong in his interpretation so he’s going to double down on his position. Quite frankly he has to.
Refreshing to see young earth creationists in the comments that are comfortable to "agree to disagree"! I think this is very healthy for the body of Christ, at least in these secondary matters.
You nailed it! Ken Ham has always come off to me as a name-caller!
Ken Ham has the superior argument, playing by run-of-the-mill Protestant rules. I'm a devout Protestant, but, I'm not wholly onboard with "each day of creation being truly 24 hours", though perhaps its true. And I think this particular issue should just be argued in Christian charity. This is not about the historicity of God Himself, salvation, or good and evil. I do think that using this argument primarily to shove in Evolution is wrong. Don't pretend to care about this argument, if what you really care about is peddling Evolution. With that said, I don't think Ken Ham has to act like hyperbole isn't anywhere in his Bible; I also don't think Ham just has to act conceited against Ortlund, since Ham's argument is better. Its hard to imagine Ortlund is some kind of dishonest actor, or heretic.
This is the best response I've heard to Ken Ham's assertion that everyone who disagrees with him "reinterprets" Scripture. This loving presentation is a great example.
To be perfectly honest, this is my favorite title of any of your videos
😂
You are such a breath of fresh air and your gentle spirit is truly reflective of the One you serve. Thank you Sir.
Thank you for how humbly and graciously you continue to interact with this issue, and also how you are standing firm on your position and not backing away under pressure. These videos have all been so incredibly helpful and insightful
Always so thankful for the gracious and yet informed way that you handle such topics. You model Christ-likeness well Gavin.
One thing I've learned from Gavin over the time I've listened to him is how we should humble ourselves before scripture and over issues like these. A lot of Christians and even pastors are prepared to die on certain theological hills rather than accepting some of the ambiguity in scripture. I don't think we will ever fully understand the creation of the world here on earth and do not need to become divisive over these topics. Thank you Gavin!
I have been a big fan of AIG and Ken Ham. I have been following your channel for about 4 months now and you have given me some things to think about on a variety of topics. I will add this one to the list. I appreciate your humble and grace approach as you interact with people. It is a great example of how we should dialogue with those we don't agree with.
Great response Gavin. I have your book on Augustine’s view of creation and it has been such a blessing. I struggled for years from elementary to the end of high school in regards to science “vs” the Bible, but your channel, Augustine’s work, as well as the channel Inspiring Philosophy has helped me so much. Thank you! And I agree that the stories of people leaving the faith over science need to end.
Unfortunately, people don't leave the church over faith vs. science. It is abandoning the authority of the Word of God. Abandoning the clear teaching of Genesis 1-11 only feeds that exact problem. God moves in peoples hearts. Never compromise his word. God says give the "truth in love." Love without truth is powerless and quite unloving.
It is so cool to me that one day you are extending a charitable hand to Rhett and Link and then the next day you are extending a charitble hand to Ken Ham and other YEC proponents. As I've said before, you are a pastor's pastor. Thank you for mentoring me from afar.
I totally agree with your position, but had always been taught the world-wide flood position growing up. I love how you bring light to these subjects in such a thoughtful and gracious way.
It is the Bible that teaches a world-wide flood. Take heart Kathleen! The world won't accept you anyway even if you compromise.
It grieves me that this kind of black/white, overly-simplistic, and schismatic thinking has obtained such influence in the evangelical world. Thank you, Dr. Ortlund for speaking up on this!
Yes, it is a stain in the Body of Christ, a modern slam of others brought about in the 1960s and fed too often today.
Evolution = buncha death before fall, orthodoxy theology for centuries= death after fall. Nothing thats not black and white about it. It’s impossible for you to even find a sound exegesis that harmonizes evolution and Genesis, no one’s buying it.
The problem isn’t that there’s black-and-white thinking. The problem is the choice of issues to which to apply that kind of thinking. There are issues that require such thinking, particularly the nature of God and how we must approach Him.
Great comment!
As a yec, the agonizing part is how accusatory and paranoid many of my fellow yec brothers are. I’ve come to really appreciate the careful study many oec do and humility it takes to just admit we don’t know. I for one advocate for this approach. Grace and Christian discussion rather than yelling compromise at the first hint of disagreement
"Trying to 'Hammer' home" I see what you did there! ;)
Sorry about the cheesy dad joke. Loved the response video and I am learning a lot from these video, Dr. Ortlund.
Really encouraged by your response. I personally adhere to literal days in Genesis 1, but I appreciate that you've shown that other interpretations aren't heretical (though we can't both be right). And I appreciate you showing that a lot of the arguments against your position are historically ignorant and attributing motive.
I could listen to these "debates" non stop. Thank Gavin for posting!
Ken Ham will never change. He’s staked way too much money on museums and lectures. That’s the only thing people look to him for, and he’s not even particularly good when it comes to his debates.
It is against every instinct in his flesh to humbly admit he might be wrong about this.
Ken believes his interpretation is infallible .
Both of you are dead on right.
His entire ministry is built on 24 hour days and a global flood not worldwide.
Gavin, your videos have given such clarity to my own thoughts on these issues. I have been deconstructing in a sense my upbringing of “young earth creation or else”. There’s so much humility needed on this topic and I think your work is pointing that out. Recently I have experience such relief by acknowledging I don’t thing Genesis intends to be a scientific historical account. Honestly I think coming to Genesis with that understanding helps me see the greater theological truths that are revealed in it. All this to say, thank you, Gavin. Please keep up the good work.
Well done. Well communicated. A picture of grace, You serve us all well. THANK YOU!
Talk about picking the wrong hill to die on, Ken Ham’s insistence on attacking fellow christians like Gavin and William Lane Craig who I would argue are doing way more to propagate the Gospel on todays intellectual battlefield than he is, is outstanding. I cringed so hard throughout Ken Ham’s debate with Bill Nye, if I wasn’t already a believer I would think christians didn’t really have a foot to stand in the modern scientific world and leave fully convinced science has debunked Christianity.
Ya. We can only hope he sees real science a day the lord convicts him to belive the truth. Becuase yec and flat earth have made christians out to be bulling fools... sad thing he fooled me around last christmas as I got fired and was depressed.
Went to bed one night remembering wat I wanted to be. (A geologist)
I gave the dream up. Life happened. And he scared me with u ain't christian unless u think this
I have often said that Ken Ham has had a tendency to die on the wrong hill. Calling everyone who disagrees with you on non-primary doctrines a false teacher is the quintessential marker of “bad fundamentalism.”
You are incredibly kind and respectful to someone who is never kind and respectful. Ham has done a great deal of harm to the body of Christ as well as harming our witness. Keep up the fantastic work in your ministry.
Thanks for respectfully keeping your ground on this issue.
Thanks for your comments. I wholeheartedly agree. I particularly appreciate your thoughts on opposing the "...everybody who doesn't agree with this way..." mentality.
The same attitude is present across a wide range of issues. Perhaps we should all take time to examine our own "hard lines" that we have drawn so large as to obscure Jesus.
Hi Gavin, I'm an Orthodox Christian married to a protestant. My (also protestant) family as well as my wife's family all believe in young earth creationism. These videos have been really beneficial. I've believed in an old earth view for a while. I greatly appreciate especially your discussion of the development of this idea, as well as how many notable Protestants didn't believe in 19th century-style young earth creationism.
I am wondering if you have any book recommendations on Augustine's favorable reception in the east? As I am sure you are aware, Orthodoxy is split on St. Augustine's theology, and have been at least since the mid-20th century. I'd be very interested to learn more about how other Eastern fathers viewed his work especially!
Yes I was also curious about that because from what I’ve heard St. Augustine has had a major West influence but the East not so much.
Reading how others interpret the Scriptures can be very helpful, but at the end of the day they are not infallible like the Bible.
I think a lot of people are missing something when they read the first part of Genesis. It states that ‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth’. A point in time? Or a point before time? Who knows? Then we have the curious statement that the ‘earth was without form and void’! Why? Why didn’t God create the earth perfectly at this time? Mystery! And had a vast time passed between the first creation of the heavens and the earth, and this ‘forming and fashioning’ of the earth as a home for mankind which the Bible says God then took 6 days to do? Who knows? But something is definitely going on here, that is why we need to be humble. When we consider the ‘ages’ of rocks etc, we need even more humility, for in creating the earth originally, everything was of the same age wasn’t it, or was it? And if scientists talk of the ‘age’ of certain rocks etc, aren’t they made up of particles of other substances of perhaps varying ‘ages’? A rock is only a conglomeration of sand, in the case of sandstone isn’t it? And other types, igneous for instance, didn’t start out ready made, but formed from the melting of other rocks and materials. So ‘ages’ surely are a bit of of a puzzle. I for one do not understand how science can ‘age’ rocks when they are formed this way. I am not arguing against rocks being millions of years old, for in the original creation they are mature ‘rocks’ aren’t they? So much mystery! And we shall perhaps never be able to reconcile all the puzzling facts. So science can show its findings and the Bible have the infallible explanation for our existence. Either one does not have to exclude the other!
Praise God for filling you with His Spirit Gavin! You are a gift to us all.
Thank you so much for speaking up and speaking out. As a pastor who has been grappling with Genesis 1-11 for the last 20 years, it has painful to see so few conservative pastors or theologians going public and speaking up about these important but not 1st order matters. Thank you for your gracious and thoughtful responses to quick judgments and over simplistic exegesis.
Anti-intellectualism is a strong component of many ministries and denominations. It was a huge contributor to the theological bondage that held sway over me for several years at the beginning of my walk. Keep educating yourselves folks. Reading can seriously damage your ignorance. Thank you Gavin for taking the time to address this and please continue to suggest reading material.
My heart is IFB, but my education and intellect always put me at odds with those around me. Outside that movement, there’s too much tolerance for heterodox teaching. I look forward to heaven because I can’t feel at home in any of the churches in my area.
Is it "anti-intellectualism" that is a strong component of many ministries and denominations, or a rejection of the secular humanist worldview which dominates the public academy and from which its scholarship and conclusions are directly derived?
@@williamjpellas0314 Both. Calling a fundamentalist pastor an intellectual will get you either a dirty look or a laugh with a request not to insult him. For example, look at the faith-based arguments of the KJV-Onlyists who think the KJV corrects the Hebrew and Greek. Outside fundamentalism, look at the deplorable hermeneutics of Progressives and of Pentecostal variants such as Word-Faith and NAR.
I would say that rejecting an idea just because you can link it to another religion (such as Secular Humanism) motivates anti-intellectualism, rather than being an alternative to it. Attacking the source rather than responding to the idea itself commits ad hominem and genetic fallacies, which is an anti-intellectual practice.
Apologetics teaches you that you have more tools available than Bible quotes that some people refuse to even consider.
@@ricksonora6656 No. I attack the secular humanist worldview and the epistemic assumptions and a priori conclusions inherent in that worldview, and how that affects how people think and do their scholarship in the first place.
@@williamjpellas0314 I am speaking of the folks who believe reading anything other than the Bible is wrong. It is strong and straight up anti-intellectualism. I am not commenting on the fact that other factors are at play.
My first Truth Unites video and I enjoyed it greatly. I think you adhered well to not reviling in return.
As one who would currently agree with a literal six-day creation and global flood, Ken Ham’s comments are uncharitable and makes me sad.
I’m a new follower after seeing you on The Remnant Radio. As a homeschool mom I have so many thoughts here. Briefly:
- thank you!
- Ken Ham has a huge corner of the HS/Christian market. Probably more than a corner. Any resources for families, kids, curriculum that teaches differently?
- I have no doubt this is how Ken Ham has gained so much traction in this conversation (via homeschool/family curriculum). If we don’t have other resources we can’t easily teach anything different. I see a beautiful opportunity for someone. 😊
- Lastly, your humility and humble approach is so refreshing! I believe the gospel is steeped in mystery from beginning to end. It's important we all learn to say "I dont know." Thank you for leading by example!
thanks so much, and glad to be connected! :)
I wonder if Reasons to Believe has any curriculum? They are a great ministry. God bless.
Thank you for taking the time to answer! I will check it out. My son is very science minded and I have always been hesitant to teach Young Earth straight but it's everywhere. This is helpful! @@TruthUnites
@@ME-hsmomof4 I'm a homeschool dad, though my wife has done most of the research for curriculum. I've wondered the same thing recently as I'm an OEC.
I always figured I would just tell my kids when they're older that some people think the Bible is saying YEC and some, like me, OEC and leave it at that unless they have more questions.
@@telleroftheone my kids are elementary age and home schooled. I’m YEC but am very open that there are many interpretations of Genesis. My main concern is they retain their faith in Christ and the resurrection. If they decided the flood was not global, it wouldn’t be the end of the world.
Wonderful video, Dr. Ortlund. Thank you for your patient, informed responses on these issues.
I've seen how the attitude and statements of those like Ken Ham's remarks have been damaging to the body of Christ. This kind of response is not only helpful, but necessary.
Your humble heart, consistent demeanor, and lack of accusatory tone along with your desire to seek clarification and help explain is something this world needs a lot more of, especially in the body.
You are an exemplary teacher that resembles the teachings of our Lord. Thank you for what you do.
As a yec I’ve had to distance myself from Ken Ham. His back bitting and name calling are unchristian and unhelpful to the discussion
He's not a good teacher if he doesn't teach the truth. So explain to me how Ken's remarks have done harm to the body of Christ, and please provide examples. Because I don't think you have a clue of what you're talking about.
@@BillMurrey Ken Ham's remarks cause damage to the body of Christ by throwing accusations against other Christians of not being 'true' Christians by questioning their commitment to the scriptures.
When Ken Ham says that you must agree with his interpretation of the Bible, he equates it with the Bible itself. This kind of conflation elevates his interpretation to infallible status not unlike God Himself.
My friend, we as human beings are not infallible. Can you see why suggesting that your interpretation is infallible saying it is on par with the Bible itself could be damaging to the body of Christ?
@@Narikku If the 'other christians' are not teaching the Bible correctly then they need to be confronted with that. You agree? Why is Genesis the first book of the Bible? Just happen to write it first? Or is it because it lays the groundwork and foundation for everything else in the Bible? You think God would've thought of that? Do you believe that God's word is the ultimate authority on the earth? We are talking about God's authority here. Does He have absolute authority over you? If He told you to do something you thought was wrong would you do it? If God promised you a son that He was going to make a great nation from and then He told you to take your promised son and sacrifice him on an altar, would you do it? Abraham did. He respected God's authority and knew that He could do what He had promised. You think God could do the things mentioned in Genesis? Or has a group of self-worshipping scientists, who are known for making mistakes, proven God to be a liar? You believe that? I'm sorry for you if you do. Ken NEVER says "This is MY interpretation, you must obey it!" He always says "God has told us..., God says this....God has written..." He knows it's not his Bible, it's God's Bible. Most of what he teaches is about the Authority of God, not young earth, you got a problem with the authority of God? He stands on the authority of God and preaches what it says in the Bible. Show me where he doesn't preach from the Bible! Genesis is plain reading, a child can understand it, but if you want to go clipping verses from it, because you don't like what it says, go ahead. But don't be surprised if God does a little clipping Himself. As far as I can see you are being willingly ignorant regarding God's word.
@@BillMurrey> If 'other christians' are not teaching the Bible correctly then they need to be confronted with that. You agree?
Yes, my friend. This is precisely why discussion about this topic is warranted: because Ken Ham is teaching the Bible wrongly in many ways. This is one example.
> Why is Genesis the first book of the Bible?
Because that is the way that we, as a people, organized it. There is nothing in scripture that says that Genesis has to be the first Book of the Bible. There is nothing in scripture that says Revelation has to be the last. To illustrate what I mean, why is Proverbs after Psalms?
> Or is it because it lays the groundwork and foundation for everything else in the Bible?
Is Christ your foundation, or your personal view of creation?
> Do you believe that God's word is the ultimate authority on the earth.
Yes. That's why I don't trust Ken Ham at his word, and I examine every word he says with scripture. And I don't find Ken Ham's interpretations to fit well with scripture.
> Ken never says "This is my interpretation, you must obey it." He always says, "God has told us... God has written... God has says..."
Then promptly after saying these things, Ken Ham gives his interpretation of what those mean. Are you trying to tell me Ken Ham doesn't have a preferred interpretation of the Bible? That he understands it 100% correctly? Every single meaning of every single word?
There are so many questions here, my friend. I cannot answer them all. Hopefully this suffices to get my point across.
I appreciate the videos. My background is being influenced primarily by the young earth creation focus. I think we all agree on Genesis 1:1. As I read and listen I agree that we should be able to have discussions and disagreements about the specific details and time frame and still maintain respect.
Exactly, YEC and OEC both agree God made the heavens and the earth. We just disagree about *how and when.* It’s really not an issue to disfellowship over imo
We are all united in the spirit, we shouldnt disfellowship over sth like that
@jncon8013
I'd argue most things aren't worth disfellowing over. The theif on the cross is our fellow and yet he probably had a very limited theology. That said, we should absolutely stand for truth when it presents itself absolutely, like for instance, now we have the full revelation of scripture and we know there will be new heavens and new earth so we should stand for that 100% but we shouldn't disfellow someone that may disagree if they haven't been exposed to that knowledge yet or are extremely young in the faith
Only if they present bad fruit, i.e. they start rejecting clear evidence
But the yec oec debate doesn't have clear evidence so while we can discuss it I strongly think polemics should be avoided :)
Just my personal opinion
Ultimately this will all pan out how God wants, what matters is that we are faithful to him in spirit even with limited knowledge of the faith (like the thief on the cross or like cornelius) or the OT saints as well!
We have varying responsibilities (based on the knowledge each of us has) (some are mentally disabled and so I strongly believe God has nuance for them on judgement day) God is all knowing, reveals all hidden secrets on day of judgment, is all just!
And, ofcourse, Jesus is the way the truth the life and no one will reach the father but by him. It's just how the mechanics of that pan out that we have to entrust to God
Realizing that early church fathers didn't believe in literal 24 hour days and young earth creationism only becoming popular in the early 20th century helped me get out of this mentality you're talking about. Thanks for bringing this issue up, a lot of people need to hear it.
If that's the case then you believed a lie.
@@heather602 In what way? I said a lot of stuff and I am sure at least a good chunk of it is true.
@@emryswilliams9190 The early church absolutely believed in literal days. There is no indication in scripture that they did not.
@@heather602 St. Augustine. I think that's all I need to say.
And you're using a logical fallacy, an argument from silence, to say that the Early Church did not disagree on creation.
@@emryswilliams9190 Augustine was one of the first to introduce such ideas. He also believed in purgatory.
I don’t agree with you on this topic but I truly appreciate the way you respond and handle situations.
The church will be far better off and stronger when we finally learn to stop looking to Ken Ham as though he is an actual leader or reliable source concerning these important issues. How he ever came to have the influence he has genuinely boggles my mind.
Ham has influence because he correctly diagnoses the fulcrum of the problem. Origins. He's right when he says that Genesis 1:1 is everything. But he then insists that the only solution is a literal reading of the creation account combined with a hypercalvinist reading of Romans 5. Nuance is the enemy.
Naturalistic science overplayed its hand, creating mistrust. I have read "scientific" accounts of origins and evolution that read like fairy tales.
Wow! Some who is bringing biblical answer should be disregard? Gavin's arguments are not biblical and contradicts Sola Scriptura. Imposing his beliefs onto Scripture.
I'll go with the Bible and observable science. Death before sin in evolution. Evidence of a world wide flood across the Earth. Creationists are also PhD. from the same universities as Gavin. Amazing how you people believe in the virgin birth of Jesus and His resurrection and annonment of sins, but young Earth and God doing it all in 6 days as said in Genesis is just too much. All of God's word is truth.
I couldn’t agree more.
@@thomasglass9491How does "sola scriptura" play into your argument here?
We are just starting our verse by verse on Genesis and just came to a similar conclusion but without your valuable quotes of church fathers. Thanks for this clear perspective.
So beautiful, Gavin. Thank you for speaking out in love and kindness. I am an old earth creationist and totally agree that we miss so much when we limit the conversation to just one aspect. Genesis 1 is so rich and I am learning Hebrew just to understand it better - and then that opens up so many more truths. God bless you brother. I hope that Ken Ham will also listen to your approach and will be praying for that.
Excellent point -- anyone's interpretation of a text is not, cannot be infallible, but Scripture is. I think you're right that many times people get these two things tangled up. And they defend their interpretation with an intensity that's too much, don't allow anyone to disagree as if that negates the authority of Scripture. But it's not called for.
“Every act of interpretation involves our fallible brains.”
Then you can’t _know_ that Christ the God-man died for the sins of the world and rose again for the justification of His sheep; you can’t know _anything._ Your interpretation could be wrong.
Your post-modernist view of the truth of God’s word relegates Christians to a life of “always learning and never arriving at a knowledge of the truth.”
@@matthewdyer2926
Sticks and stones
Some topics (like Jesus Son of God came save us from death and sin) get a lot more development than others (like rapture or age of the earth).
And so somethings are more reliably understood. If an idea has less to support it, interpretation is more needed. And we shouldn't be more certain than is called for in Scripture.
@@matthewdyer2926
And NT Scriptures tell us that we are given the Holy Spirit after salvation as a guarantee, a down payment, of our place in heaven. This is an added confirmation of salvation, outside the realm of interpretation.
There is nothing comparable for lesser doctrines, as mentioned earlier. We must do our best to study to arrive at a true understanding, but it's not the same degree of confidence. There should be humility, acceptance that error is possible. And kindness to those who disagree in non-essentials -- signs the HS is present in a person's heart. Traits Gavin shows in his videos.
@@Joan-ph2es
This…
“And the waters prevailed so mightily on the earth that *all* the high mountains under *the whole heaven* were covered. The waters prevailed above the mountains, covering them fifteen cubits deep. And *all flesh* died that moved on the earth, birds, livestock, beasts, all swarming creatures that swarm on the earth, and *all mankind.* *Everything* on the dry land in whose nostrils was the breath of life died. He blotted out *every living thing* that was on the face of the ground, man and animals and creeping things and birds of the heavens. They were blotted out from the earth.”
Is no less clear than this-
“And we apostles are witnesses of all he did throughout Judea and in Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a cross, but God raised him on the third day and made him to appear.”
Or this-
“For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep.”
“Humility” is _believing what is plain and obvious in God’s word._ Syncretizing scientism with Scripture is the height of arrogance in the guise of “humility”. The only reason you and Ortland don’t, is because of cowardice, syncretism, and capitulation to the pressures of modernity.
@@matthewdyer2926
Still with the ad hominem? Rhetoric unreliable?
Even in English, "all" and "every" don't have to carry a global-wide meaning.
-- I lost my keys! I searched everywhere, all over!
1 Kings 10:23-24 "So King Solomon exceeded all.... And all the earth sought to Solomon, to hear his wisdom, which God had put in his heart."
"All the earth" -- it's not syncrynistic (or even cowardly) to think that the Kings of Tahiti, Incas, or Australian aborigines never made to Jerusalem. Because "all" can cover just the Levant or even the Middle East, and still be an absolutely true statement according to all rules of grammar.
You're doing your interpretation in a hyper-literal manner, and leaving regular text meaning and word sense behind. Sometimes "all" is a smaller set of possibles. To anybody speaking a language. Context matters.
Well done Gavin! Your words are filled with grace, mercy and TRUTH!
God is using your ministry to restore faith. Thank you so much
We throw terms like “false teacher” and “heretic” at each other so easily these days. Whether you’re right or wrong on this issue, that type of accusation is uncalled for.
My approach is to read Genesis and accept its message whilst acknowledging today's scientific claims without having to resolve the two. Paradox can be quite comforting.
I do something similar.
“Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth?
Tell me, if you have understanding.
O Lord, my heart is not lifted up; my eyes are not raised too high; I do not occupy myself with things too great and too marvelous for me.
Yep, very helpful sometimes.
Genesis is a revelation of Jesus, look for him you will see.
I’ll take the Bible as it says and the theory of evolution as what scientists say…neither are compatible or intertwinable, why cant we just accept what the Bible says, why cant we be proud of Scripture and Tradition, why must we appease secularists that dont care for us. We witness to them, not appease them.
I think you mean, being able to say “I don’t know” is comforting. Paradox is discomforting because it requires God to be either illogical or dishonest. But having the humility to admit one’s limitations and trusting the solution to God is what brings comfort.
100% I stand with you on your final points here. I tend to lean young-earth (but not with a great degree of confidence, and I'm certainly open to many possibilities in this area). However, I am definitely opposed to the enemy's attempts to divide and weaken the church through unnecessary insistence on this issue. I know many dear brothers and sisters in Christ who disagree about it, and are able to get past that disagreement to remain in fellowship with one another. That should be the case for all of us.
Two things to consider: Did death enter the world before or after sin? (Is sin the cause of death?) and Hebrews 11:1-3 11 Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen. 2 For by it the people of old received their commendation. 3 By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible. Did it really take billions of years for God's Word to effect the earth and universe (along with death piling up throughout the world before the first sin)?
Well done Gavin. Very useful to restate your points several times, building upon them- just like Ken Ham does. I also confess I used to teach AIG material as though it was essential gospel truth. Also also you remind me of my mere infantile exposure to church fathers.
Please keep up the good work, Gavin. It's a blessing to the church.
Pastorally, I have found that most people want plain, simple, and easy answers. Few desire to wrestle for the truth. It easier to accept a simple solution and just fight for it than it is to think deeply and humbly. Those who seek find... only few seek and therefore few find.
I think you hit it right on the head. I believe most Christians are content with the fortune cookie version of their beliefs and it is rare to find those who are willing to wrestle with the Scriptures. I see Ken Ham as being the one who provides the bare minimum to these much deeper theological discussions while Gavin Ortlund and others are providing deep theological study on these matters. The question we must always ask ourselves is, are we content with the quick google search or are we the one’s who will sometimes have multiple commentaries open along with several translations of the Scriptures in order to get to the bottom of subject? I know for me, the latter describes my studying.
... Didymus the Blind... was... Clear on his view.... that made me chuckle, Gavin I feel like you should have said "no pun intended" there.
thanks for the video, I love the effort you put into your videos, I know it's not easy packing so much into short form videos.
I think it would be very interesting if you responded to Christian Combatives 20 minutevideo about your flood concerns. His focus is on the theological issues a local vs global flood raises and I think interacting with his points would be a great way to move the conversation forward since his objections are some of the strongest and best thought out of any that I've seen so far.
thanks for the suggestion -- are his arguments different from those I already addressed in my follow-up video? I went through 6 common responses there.
@@TruthUnites yes. His main concerns are things like the new testament references to it, the extent of the flood corresponding to the extent of the covenant (small flood, small covenant) and what the connections between the flood and baptism can tell us about it. His response video is about 20 mins long as opposed to the initial video(s) you might have seen which were watching through your video. The shorter response has much more condensed arguments and points.
I discovered Christian Combatives because of the Truth Unites local flood video and thought his response was literally moving the conversation forward….he is or recently was a military chaplain so he can be a little different the way military folks can be…but he walked the conversation forward a few steps. Example: if the flood was local, was God’s promise afterwards just for that local area. Why did God cause the flood? Wouldn’t it have been easier to just move Noah and the family and the animals to safe ground rather than move them all to the ark? What about tectonic plate shifting to explain those pesky lemurs and koalas?
@@onepingonlyplease Yeah I really appreciated that he was genuinely focusing on what he thought the central theological issues are, not speculating about motive, or mudslinging in any way. I really hope Gavin can maybe do a discussion with him, or a response video because I think the two of them are both intelligent, charitable, and genuinely Christian. Their discussion of these questions would be very fruitful and insightful.
I hope they do a video! I’m certain that the first thing Christian Combatives (Paladin Actual) will ask Dr Ortlund will be “what in the text leads you to believe it was a local flood?” Not if the text allows for a local flood. I want to hear Dr Ortlund respond and keep moving this train forward!!
very helpful---prayers for you and your family
Great video. I recently did a study on the Hebrew translation based on the work of David Instone Brewer, and I came away thinking that in the original language, the global flood view is much less certain than most of us realize. It was surprising to see how much more open the Hebrew is to the local flood interpretation compared to the English translations.
i clicked on this because I saw this in the sidebar and I saw the recent FB post by Ham about you, Gavin, and I was curious as to what you had to say. You did not disappoint and I'm glad to see you didn't just lash out toward him as is often the case with so many.
I will say i agree with Ham in that MOST scientists start with a premise that is outside the Scripture. That is their starting point. Even "Christian scientists" and I've yet to see any OEC Christians who don't start with "science tells us". The is most clearly and apparently seen in WLC's discussions with you wrt his new "The Historical Adam" essay and others he's done. He CLEARLY starts from "science says".
And I believe you showed yourself as starting somewhere outside of Scripture because at the 6min mark you say "My basic view is the Scripture just doesn't tells us how old the Universe is." THAT is by your own words your starting point. And, logically, if the Scripture doesn't tell us then something else must. And therefore Ham is correct. You are starting outside of Scripture.
I would bet the farm that you have studied this subject MUCH more than I have. I can tell that just from some of the names you dropped. But I submit the Scripture DOES tell us how old the earth is. Not EXACTLY but within a few thousand years. NOT BILLIONS! I say that because I hold to a hermeneutic that it MUST be Scripture that interprets Scripture. And much, if not all, of the debate revolves around how the word "day" is defined and what a "day" was in the Genesis Creation account.
I believe that question was answered while I was studying another controversial subject. The Sabbath. What is it. When is it. How and who is to observe it. Etc. It was while doing that study that I came across Exo 31:16-17. And there are other verses that say pretty much the same. I don't see how it could be any clearer that the Universe, the Earth and all of Creation was completed in six literal days.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 - You missed the point. Exo. 31:16-17 confirms the Genesis 6-day Creation Account and defines what a "day" is. Thus confirming YEC.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 - You missed the point AGAIN. Try a class in Hermeneutics 101. Or better yet ya might wanna start with a 3rd Grade Reading Comprehension Class. Or just try pulling your head outta your six.
Context ONLY matters when trying to interpret a verse or passage or a word such as "DAY". And the CONTEXT there is that a DAY is the same as a DAY in Genesis 1. IOW, the CONTEXT in Exo. 31 interprets the CONTEXT of Genesis 1. That's Hermeneutics 101.
“Answer a fool according to his foolishness, so that he may not be wise in his own eyes.” (Pro 26:5)
“Like a dog that returns to its vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” (Pro. 26:11)
“Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” (Pro. 26:12)
Oh, and btw, the CONTEXT of Exo. 31:16-17 is NOT temple inauguration. it's about the Sabbath and keeping it. Now get the GIANT Sequoia Tree outta your eye socket, get outta the Flesh, get saved if need be, and then go practice what you preach.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 yes.
//no. Context also matters with bara.//
LOL I should just let that one sit there on it's own. Pretty sure that anyone with eyes to see and an ounce of discernment can know what we're dealing with now. You're a nut.
//Context matters with scientific concordism.//
Wrong again.
//Context matters with ancient near east cosmology in Genesis. Etc...Genesis describes ancient near east cosmology, not modern science. //
Wrong again. Genesis describes Universal History and the Word of God. Smh
//That's the Bible in its context.//
LOL Your OPINION is duly noted and summarily dismissed because, well, it's just that and MORE IMPORTANTLY God says otherwise.
//Please educate yourself. //
Now get the GIANT Sequoia Tree outta your eye socket, get outta the Flesh, get saved, and then go practice what you preach.
“Like a dog that returns to its vomit is a fool who repeats his folly.” (Pro. 26:11)
“Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him.” (Pro. 26:12)
“Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not to your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths. Do not be wise in your own eyes; fear the LORD and depart from evil.” (Pro 3:5-7 AFV)
"There is a way which seems right to a man, But its end is the way of death." (Pro. 14:12)
Now that you've totally discredited yourself and exposed yourself for just what you are and your view of Scripture you can go away. You're dismissed.
Honestly, his "dedication piece" on Justin Peter's channel seemed as if he hasn't listened to your arguments at all.
Agreed. Neither did the person trying to answer his critiques of the Cessationist film. 😬 I tried watching both of those interviews and ended up complaining to my phone screen, "You didn't even respond to Gavin's point!!!" 😅
@@AndreaWhoGoesByAndrea Glad I wasn't the only one, Andrea. I kept waiting...and waiting...
Also, I'm in neither camp on these issues that have nothing to do with my salvation. In fact, I lean more on the literal 24-hour creation days. The flood not being global makes sense.
I also think Calvinism is non-Biblical, and very destructive. Uh-oh.
Christ died for me. Calvinists are saved by Grace, through Christ.
Does anything else matter?
Because Gavin's arguments have been debunked a long time ago.
@@thomasglass9491 Ah, another one that hasn't listened. 🙂
No - Ken Ham, as well as you it seems - were simply ignoring everything Gavin anticipated. They acted as if he made no mention of it.
I just hope you lie out of ignorance, and not out of malice. Because lie you do.
@szilardfineascovasa6144 honest question. Is it actually lying if it’s out of ignorance?
Thank you so much for putting out these videos! Theistic evolutionists and anyone other than YEC haven’t done the best job getting this info out to the general public, and you and Michael Jones are changing that! It’s hard for me to find in-depth content online for theological issues brought up by YECs, such as the place of sin in God’s creation.
Thank you for addressing this. You are right, it becomes a stumbling block. I felt that way when I became a Christian. I felt "browbeaten" into believing this super-literal interpretation. It got me so mentally frustrated, and took away from other areas of my faith where I needed to grow.
The flood was global in the sense that all humans on the globe were drowned. But humans were in a localized area. Notice God has to intervene and scatter humans because of their rejection to go multiply and fill the earth.
One thing that disturbs me about this thinking regarding "Interpretation of Scriptures with no outward sources" is that it could prime us for becoming unable to validate scripture based on outside evidence. Science, philosophy, and archeology are just some feilds that can serve to offer a lot of evidence and validation for scripture. This is not to say that our faith is merely rooted in the latest archeological study. But, as you noted, Dr. Ortlund, we ultimately all Interpretate scripture through the outside source of our own perception on reality. Science and philosophy are disciplines which have alwsys been fueled because of thinkers wanting to interpret scripture, not in spite of them.
Ham has always given me Nuda Scriptura vibes, which is not the same as Sola Scriptura.
This is a very important video. Thank you Gavin.
I've been praying for Gavin Ortland and Ken Ham to finally have the opportunity to debate each other in-person. I'm not picking sides, I just want to see what would come out of it.
Thank you for your thoughtful and humble approach to such a popularizing issue; it is a breath of fresh air.
Happy you picked this title lol
It sounds like a Dr. Seuss book title. =D
I had a huge falling out at my previous job (teaching at a Christian high school) when my employers found out I didn’t believe in a literal Adam and Eve as historical individuals - they told me they had “never heard of a Christian who thought that.” They both went to Christian colleges. I was flabbergasted.
They were "flabbergasted" because it is hard to understand how someone can teach children to deny the plain reading of Scripture. They probably were relying on only "one book" of Creation, the True one.
@@DavidThigpen-yp7ko I teach every individual to the level I feel they are capable - the younger, the simpler. The older, the more complex and critical. My high schoolers were capable of critical thinking (especially in a supportive environment with trusted educators) where multiple perspectives could be weighed and compared. So when they asked about Genesis and creation, I encouraged them to think deeply instead of blindly accepting the “plain” reading they’d grown up with that was proving unsatisfactory when compared to the heavens, which declare the glory of God and make his invisible qualities known.
@@2wheelz3504 that’s an anemic understanding of original sin, and also an anemic understanding of the Gospel. But hey, I don’t work for you so I guess it doesn’t matter 🤷🏻♂️
@@2wheelz3504 But all you’ve done is referenced a different passage that is clearly using metaphor and literary devices to communicate a spiritual truth rather than a literal-historical one. By referencing Adam as a “type” of one to come, Paul is clearly not insisting that Jesus is somehow a clone or copy of Adam, but that he fulfills the role that Adam did - but that nowhere requires Adam be a literal historical individual. You’re referencing a metaphor to prove a historical figure existed.
My Greek and Hebrew professors also recommend a “plain” reading, but that does not mean an unthoughtful or uncritical reading. “When I was a child, I thought like a child…”
@@2wheelz3504 I’m not “making” it a metaphor as though a literal reading is the default. And reading it literally absolutely does raise spiritual issues - namely, how does the Bible interact with general revelation? Can I trust my own senses if all the evidence suggests the Earth is very old but the Bible “says” it’s young? It’s nonsensical to say “God did things in an illogical order so that we would have to guess at the legitimacy of the text.”
And frankly, I’m not being a smart ass ❤️ I’m being very serious in how I’ve used that passage, and I stand by it. You came and revived this thread to say you would have hypothetically fired me with the goal of what, exactly? You didn’t engage in good faith with what I said and try to have a meaningful discussion - you simply attacked. So… no smart-assery. Take it how it was said.
I appreciate your voice! You didn’t back down but speak in love. Blessings! I am standing with you in this. The struggle for the faith of our young people is real!
Love your videos, brother!
I very much like Ken Ham, but Gavin definitely makes some great points. Definitely has made me reconsider my view on Genesis
Did death enter into the world before or after sin?
Ken Ham also starts outside the text , he brings in his western culture worldview understanding and has already determined how the text should be interpreted based on his understanding. Now that his interpretation is set ,everything else (other scripture,science)must revolve around his interpretation.
Well stated.
The word of God can either be understood or not. If not, then not only is it void, but language itself is impossible -- which is a clue to why your interpretive nihilism cannot be true.
There is so much irony in your comment. The "ancient near east cosmology" argument (which you are assuming in your comment) is an example of modernist snobbery trying to force western naturalistic worldview into both science and the Bible. One of the most important principles of biblical interpretation is its perspicuity.
@@davidrachelthigpen6498 : So, on your view, then, all scripture is equally perspicuous, and easily understood?
@@l-cornelius-dol Not all, but the flood and creation are foundationally clear. "Ancient near east cosmology" interpretations are a way to muddy, not clear up.
Occording to Ken Ham's own logic he ought to be a flat earther aswell?
I was an atheist who came to Christ in my twenties with a combination of Old Earth and Young Earth teachers. The young earth/universe theology was interesting to me at first, but when I realized that I would have to believe that God created a universe with a mere "appearance of age," I became very skeptical of young universe claims. The young universe answers for why God would create a universe that is not what it appears to be were completely unavailing.
I also saw that young earth teachers like Ken Ham were often insulting and dismissive of those who disagreed with them. I saw the young earth creationist "arguments" were too often veiled or overt insults, mere rhetoric, or obvious informal fallacies. Once I heard a John MacArthur radio broadcast on Genesis in which he referred to Christians who do not believe in a 24-hour "day" in Genesis as "so-called Christians." I was deeply saddened. Why would anyone from the pulpit utter such a thing against someone he doesn't even know? I'm merely a "so-called Christian" because I think each creation day is a long period? I saw this more often from prominent young universe creationists who whose methods of preaching and teaching were rhetoric, insult, and dismissiveness to suppress those who disagree with them.
I also saw that many in the young-universe community were emotionally tied to their commitments, so much so that they were unable to listen. And now those who do not listen teach their children to act the same way. I have seen it. I fear for our children at the hands of emotionally committed young earth parents who are passing their children into the hands of the Ken Hams of the world who think insult, rhetoric, and informal fallacies are acceptable methods of engaging fellow believers and their ideas. I hope the young universe parents who are still open-minded, gentle and respectful, will help others be the same way.
As I studied more, I found that the old-earth teachers were like Gavin: open-minded, willing to listen, never attacking anyone. Other old universe creationists like Hugh Ross and John Lennox, never insulted anyone. They just present their cases logically and biblically, and where scientific matters were at issue, they were scientifically rigorous. The old universe scholars seemed much more like Christ than their young universe brethren.
Believe the universe is young or old--you're my sister or brother in Christ no matter what. But please act like it.
I promise if you and I speak on why I believe the universe is billions of years old and the six periods of creation in Genesis 1 are not 24-hour periods, I will listen to you and never insult or dismiss you. I will treat you respectfully, and I'll present what I know and learn what you may teach me. This is how we grow as disciples of Christ. We can do this.
I'm thankful Gavin is so clear on his work of uniting us. We need it!
The light was always a problem for me…
This is wow
Congrats. ..You've made it to prime time :)
Excellent video! Starting with the text requires asking the questions of the text. The one thing that Ken Ham does not do is attempt to understand the text in context. He completely disregards ancient worldview as a grid to understand ancient Scripture.
I agree with Gavin. We should not fight over this issue, but I love friendly discussions. I wish Ken Ham were as generous as Gavin on this issue. But, as I see it, the most natural reading of Genesis 1 is a six-day creation account. Still, people like Dr. Hugh Ross make a fair case for an Old Earth Creation account for Genesis 1.
Also, I believe the Ante-Nicene Fathers' view of Scripture was much more sound than Augustine's or Origin's. The Ante-Nicene Fathers took a more serious view of the Scriptures than Augustine or Origin, and while the allegorical method eventually took over, the more serious view still held influence among the later Church Fathers even after Augustine.
In 200 years from now we will think of this issue just like how we think about the geocentricism debate now
We hope and pray this is true.
I really do love this channel
It's not about winning a rhetoric battle. It's about taking God at His word.
Exactly. Nobody engaged in this debate was actually there when it happened.
Only God was.
What he has given in scripture is sufficient for his salvific purposes. But he didn't give us everything. And how we read (interpret) the beginning chapters of Genesis are arguable, not settled.
It's very possible that the interpretations of men are all wrong, not exactly the way that God accomplished these things. Our physical universe, space, and time are mysterious in themselves. The Divine is even more so. Now, we see as through a glass darkly.
As Dr. Heiser said, "The Bible is not a history or science textbook."
You say nobody was there when creation happened. I disagree. You see God in His wisdom wanted us to see His "eternal power, being known by what was made, so that men are without excuse." When you see the sun, you see it as it was 8 minutes ago. It takes light 8 minutes to reach us on earth. You are looking at the past not the present. The deeper we look into space the further back in time or the past we see. We actually get to peer all the way back to the origin of space, time, and energy. This creation event demands a trancendant creator who all powerful, all knowing, has wisdom like a craftsman before he makes the first cut. He is also personable, to let us enjoy this earth He fashioned for us to live and experience Him. Everything is just right in our universe so we can experiance life and have this conversation.
@@jonpadilla4321 Men have looked at the universe. There is no beginning when they look, just more.
God has curtained certain things off from us.
Only He knows the beginnings and the ends.
I agree, rejoice in what we have, and He will reveal what is for our good. Speculation leads only to men in dispute.
@@stephenbailey9969 you say men see no begining when they look. I agree that we can not peer behind the curtain at the exact mombet of creation. Our physics do not work, at it all becomes speculation at this point. But a fraction of a second before this moment he lets us look behind the cutain and see the birth of creation. He gives us a a baby picture of the universe. The heavens declare the glory of God. He knew we would study and observe his creation and he built physical laws and order it so we would could see his handiwork. For all practical purposes he does let us see the begining even though we are confined to the dimensions of space and time.
Day is not the same as 24 hours, not in the past and not today.
The earth is not about 6,000 years old and the Bible does not teach this. Hebrews 4:9-10: "There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his." This tells us that the 7th day Each believer are to enter into day 7. Also there no "evening and morning" for the 7th day. As day 7 as not ended. Biblical Hebrew has a limited vocabulary, with fewer words compared to other languages, such as English or Spanish. This means words often have multiple meanings determined by context. Day - yom is commonly rendered as day in English translations, but the word yom can be used in different ways to refer to different time spans thus literally is:
Sunrise to sunset
Sunset to next sunset
Time period of unspecified length. (long time span ).
We use the word day the same today: In my grandfather’s day cars did not go very fast. I work the day shift. (Both are not 24 hours)
Deuteronomy 33:15 and Habakkuk 3:6 "ancient mountains".
Gen 2:4 “in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens” referring to the whole time of the six days,
The events of day 6 can not have happened in 24 hours.
Creationism does not equal young Earth. There are many Old Earth creationists.
I generally lean toward a young earth interpretation and find their scientific arguments very convincing, but biblically I do think it’s vague enough to leave mystery and can not be said definitively one way or the other from just scripture and I think that is an important point to make. Great video.
prior atheist and evolution advocate, i don't think anything will sway my opinion on being a young earth creationist, i'm glad you don't push it to say its a necessary belief, but i'm not convinced of natural evolution.
This discussion here isn’t about theistic evolution, which I believe is a huge error. This is a discussion of the age of the earth, which isn’t as great of an issue. So you can believe old-earth and we don’t need to be so divisive about it as ppl like Ken Ham are. With theistic evolution, I think we can and should be more dogmatic about.
Btw, praise God he took you out of darkness into the light of the gospel of Christ. I praise God for that brother! 🙌
Ken Ham needs to read Romans 14, and put it into practice. He's a mad dog running around biting all those of his own household. Just angry and ineffective.
I appreciate this video. I wpas almost expelled grom an independent congregation for a belief in the Gap theory and restoration when it wlasl discovered. I belief in the Inerrancy of scripture but one can hold a high view of scripture and not hold a youg earth creationist and be equally opposed to evolution and liberalism. Christians whetherMachem or even a Torrey, or Schofield among other disagreed. As a student of historical theology actually a belief in a young earth os a relatively recent
There is nothing wrong with your statement about people just being ignorant and never studying these topics, because it's true. I fit into this category for many years on many topics. Your also right about some believers acting as if their views hold as much authority as scripture and is part of it. I witnessed this for most of my life being raised in pentecostal churches and schools on the topic of dispensationalism. They would act as if any other view was new age heresy. Once I started studying and learning on my own and stopped being ignorant excepting everything, I changed several of my views on creation, and eschatology. I still hold to the gifts of the spirit, tongues, miracles, etc, but rebuke and hurt when people use these things to take advantage of people and make a mockery out of it. Thank you Dr. Ortlund for all you do, I enjoy your videos so much!
I never get tired of this topic. The ages of the patriarchs too. These are not trivial points but major "deconversion" talking points.
Yeah I think it shouldn't be ignored that the ages of people when down drastically after the flood.
And I kind of wish Christian scientists would address the expanding earth model, since our science overlords who expect us to appeal to authority wont look into it. I do not think it is a coincidence that the continental crusts form a perfect sphere if you make the earth shrink at oceanic boundaries. That is too many coincidences to ignore for me.
"These are not trivial points but major 'deconversion' talking points." Yes, and it's made much worse that the church is having trouble even dialoguing on these points. Plenty of people don't want to be part of a group where you can't question things without being attacked.
@@PreciousMeddler I think with a thorough honest dialogue Christians could actually resolve 85% of the mysteries presented by Genesis and modern geology and anthropology.
Day is not the same as 24 hours, not in the past and not today.
The earth is not about 6,000 years old and the Bible does not teach this. Hebrews 4:9-10: "There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his." This tells us that the 7th day Each believer are to enter into day 7. Also there no "evening and morning" for the 7th day. As day 7 as not ended. Biblical Hebrew has a limited vocabulary, with fewer words compared to other languages, such as English or Spanish. This means words often have multiple meanings determined by context. Day - yom is commonly rendered as day in English translations, but the word yom can be used in different ways to refer to different time spans thus literally is:
Sunrise to sunset
Sunset to next sunset
Time period of unspecified length. (long time span ).
We use the word day the same today: In my grandfather’s day cars did not go very fast. I work the day shift. (Both are not 24 hours)
Deuteronomy 33:15 and Habakkuk 3:6 "ancient mountains".
Gen 2:4 “in the day that the Lord God made the earth and the heavens” referring to the whole time of the six days,
The events of day 6 can not have happened in 24 hours.
Creationism does not equal young Earth. There are many Old Earth creationists.
Thank you for a this video on the Genesis debate. I have studied and researched various interpretations. You used the word “browbeaten.” That is exactly how I feel in the church pew with respect to this issue. Any teaching is reduced to YEC and evolution, extremely simplistic. Thank you for putting into words how I experience this issue in the church.
Ken Ham has painted himself into a corner... And it's a corner that he likes. His entire reputation and status revolve around his being 'right' about 24hr days. Look at the huge amounts of money that have been invested in his organisations! He has a big fan club. He will always hammer his views because thinking outside his self imposed box would undermine his status.
His entire ministry is built on 24 hour days and a global flood. And he believes HIS interpretation of Genesis is infallible.
As you say "huge amounts of money that have been invested in his organisations"..........totally agree ! As they say in the classics.....Just follow the money ! He has too much to lose.
After listening to the whole video I find that you have made a good point .
I’m on AIG side of things but point well noted and I think that we are indeed guilty of what yiu say
Citing church authorities who don’t agree with a literal reading doesn’t demonstrate that the literal reading is incorrect, or that you aren’t doing eisegesis.
Also, where the light came from is rather plain from the rest of the Bible. God is the one who is light, who wraps himself in unapproachable light, etc. - God was the source of light. When visible light was created, God’s glory became visible.
As with Day 6, when God delegates ruling authority to humanity, on Day 4 God delegated light bringing to creatures made to carry on the task.
Further, comparing genesis 2 to 1 with regard to plants - it’s different plants that had not yet come up. God creates grain and fruit trees in 1, but the small plants of the field were to wait because “God had not yet caused it to rain and there was no man to work the ground.” It’s an indication that aspects of the creation come about in and through human involvement in the work, as God gives the growth.
Yes, Augustine was wrong, Athanasius, Machen, et. al. were wrong. Why do we work six days and rest on the seventh each week? Because God did. And that logic carries forth everywhere the days are referenced in the Bible.
That the text isn’t immediately easy to grasp in how it worked doesn’t mean that it’s unclear with regard to the time frame.
I was going to share the same thought about God's primordial light. He said "let there be light" as He brought light into our time space continuum. He was creating the beginning of space/time.
Initial thought, you should never trust any prior creed, theology, exegesis, etc without going to the text 1st
When trying to understand Genesis 1, why is God's explanation always seemingly neglected. In the giving the 10 Commandments in Exodus 20, God said, "SIX DAYS you shall labor, and do all your work,” then He said, “For in SIX DAYS the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested on the seventh day. Therefore the Lord blessed the Sabbath day and made it holy.”
How were the Israelites to understand the meaning of SIX DAYS as it relates to labor and creation, which seem to be connected? If "six days" meant one thing in verse 9 and another thing in verse 11, how could they make sense of this? They could not wait thousands of years for the "church fathers" to weigh in on this.
Amen. Also the sabbath being celebrated every week. God's word is clear. The serpent comes in and asks questions that beguile minds and suddenly it's a "confusing" issue. Nothing new under the sun.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 No it doesn't. You're trying to make an excuse.
Excellant scripture!
Genesis 1 is Lucifer and the fallen angels. They made man in their image. Man is an idol, a trap for angels.
Only one Gospel:
The Gospel of Reconciliation.
Jesus Christ came into THEIR kingdom
to reconcile fallen angels unto Himself.
We are the fallen angels (ELOHIM) kept in DNA chains of darkness.
If you do not confess being a fallen angel in Lucifer's kingdom, then you are an unbeliever.
Unbeliever = those that claim to be made in the image of ELOHIM(gods).
REPENT FALLEN ANGELS.
@bettyblowtorthing3950 But YOU can't explain what it is. No more from you. BYE!
Im so happy to have so many gifted biblical scholars available to me im my life time. I cant wait to talk about God forever in heaven with both Gavin and Ken my brothers in Christ! Im a young earth creationist just because I dont think God would make earth and let it sit for no reason to then make humans. The only thing that matters is how we can reinterpret our views if there is solid proof, without denying our faith in God and his promises and his Word.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. It was very helpful and encouraging, and I do hope you will continue talking about this. Christians need to hear about these things and about the church fathers you mentioned. I want to get your book on Augustine
Side note: I came across a UA-cam video with Ken Hamm, Josh McDowell, Ray Comfort, Hugh Ross, and I can’t remember who else. But Ken Hamm was attacking Hugh Ross’s beliefs and criticizing his book on Genesis. It was very clear that Ken has a problem with pride. I pray that God will humble him and all the other church leaders who are accusing their brothers and sisters in Christ of being heretics for believing in an old earth rather than a young earth; that the six days of creation were long periods of time rather than 24 hours. There is no reason to attack people for something that is not a salvation issue, or a different gospel.
I appreciate your insights, and your humble response.
Btw when I was a little girl I recall my grandmother listening to your grandfather’s radio program, Haven of Rest…I think it was called.
Ken has a problem with wrong teaching. Ross's book denies the flood and I'm pretty sure he believes in evolution too. the Bible does not teach these things.
@BillMurrey Hugh Ross does not deny the flood! He believes it destroyed all of mankind and a huge area of land - most of the Middle East, but not the whole planet. And Ross doesn't believe in Darwinian Evolution. Please check facts before commenting...
@@BillMurreyHugh Ross does NOT believe in evolution. He believes in 6 long periods of time, rather than 6 literal 24 hour days.
And I did not come across anything that alludes to him denying the flood.
If any fault in in his beliefs, it would be relying on science to explain everything rather allowing God room to operate outside of science.
The Church Militant United with the Church Triumphant, under the Father, in the Son, united by the Love of the Holy Spirit. That is true unity. Welcome! ❤
Ham starts with presuppositions about the nature of the text; he never considers what genre of text he's reading.
Not as many Christian thinkers as there should be, welcome to the club.
I admire and love your charitable nature, Dr. O!
Your example of St Augustine grappling with the very text itself is the perfect response to, er... that person who imposes his own novel interpretation on Genesis while accusing you of doing the same.
It may seem to many a completely different topic, but it would be interesting to see the corollary between eschatology and the hermeneutic people use for Daniel 7, Matthew 24 and The Book of Revelation and see how much they reads into the texts using the newspaper. It’s amazing how many claim to read Genesis 1 “literally” and read into these other texts their own modern interpretations.
That is one of the biggest things that bugs me about Dispensationalism and modern interpreters of Scripture. They often shout loud how they interpret the text literally but then as you stated when it comes to Eschatology, they often force modern current events into the text. I have even heard/read some interpret horses to be tanks, arrows to be missiles, locusts to be helicopters, the new heavens as a space station etc… It is quite absurd.
@@J.F.331 Ironically Ancient Alien Astronaut theorist Erich von Däniken (mis)interprets scripture in the EXACT same method as Hal Lindsey and the rest of dispensationalists. They ignore historical and literary elements of the text, as well as time indicators, and pour into it their wild imaginations that tell to sell a lot of books and make great content for Science Fiction. There is a literary parallelism in Genesis 1 & 2 that is similar to that in The Book of Revelation. William Hendriksen details the pattern in his book "More Than Conquerors."
I agree, it is very inconsistent. The most consistent way to read the Bible would be to follow the genre principle--Genesis 1 should be read as history, since it is a historical narrative, and Revelation/Daniel should be read as a figurative prophecy, since they are prophetic books.
Good job brother.
The way you engage with those who disagree with you is an example to all of us. Well done.
Honest question about local flood...
How does God's promise in Genesis 9.15, make sense with a local flood?
Hi Gavin, awesome video! Could you interact with the genealogies in Genesis? In the Creation Museum, there's a display lining up the biblical genealogies like James Ussher did, showing how they go back to 4004 BC.
Just wanted to maybe give you some hope! 😆 so I actually disagree with a local flood… but I hold zero resentment towards your opinion and I still love you and your channel!! I agree with your point on the division around it. Unfortunately I definitely used to “die on this hill” as I did many. The spirit can change people! Thank you for this conversation!
Excellent and thoughtful video. KH seems to rhink his interpretation is infallible- a dangerous assumption re the Holy Scriptures. KH dismiises other great Christian theologians throughout Church history. Sad !
As always, well said