OK, here is the email. It is long. For those that don't like to read long posts, I have highlighted portions that stand out to me.Dear Shane,
Thank you for your question. The Geoscience Research Institute supports the belief of the Seventh-day Adventist Church that the creation account of Genesis is historically true, and describes a sequence of supernatural events that occurred within a week of time.
Each member of the GRI recognizes the discordance between this belief and the majority view of the scientific community. We have not attempted to develop “official” positions with respect to questions that come up, such as age of the earth, length of the ice age, whether dinosaurs were preserved on the ark or destroyed by the flood, etc. However, to the best of my knowledge, each member of the Institute is well acquainted with the data, and has accepted the Biblical creation story as historical and reliable, with the realization that this is a choice based on faith in the revelation of Scripture, knowing that many scientists disagree, and also knowing that such questions of history cannot be empirically demonstrated.
From my own perspective, I believe all of Genesis to be true, but not all details are of equal significance. The importance of the age of life on the earth is that it should fit with the points emphasized in Scripture. Scripture makes sense in a short chronology (thousands of years) but not in a long geological time scale (millions or billions of years) with eons of death and suffering before humans appeared. The most significant points, in my view, are those that are repeated in other parts of Scripture. I see a few critical issues that seem to be emphasized in other parts of Scripture. Here is my list:
1. God is the Creator. This point is emphasized throughout the Bible. John says “All things were made by Him.” Paul affirms that even the pagan can understand that there must be an eternal, powerful God, even though men may refuse to believe in Him. However, even creation involves faith, according to Hebrews 11:3. This point is significant for the story of redemption, and it is also significant for the historical sciences. Any scientific effort that contradicts the creatorship of God is in contradiction to Scripture. Scientists often state that science cannot make a statement about this point; nevertheless, they disallow any reference to God or supernatural activity in science, while at the same time constructing a materialist approach to origins. To the extent this is done (it is the dominant approach, although not universal), it is an implicit rejection of God’s creatorship, and is equivalent to taking a position against the creatorship of God.
2. The universe had a beginning. We accept this without much controversy, since science points to the same conclusion. In this case, science and Scripture agree. However, this fact does have important implications. If there was a beginning, and if God created voluntarily, then the universe has no existence or laws of its own, but has only those properties that God continuously provides. Thus, experimental science is the effort to identify the manner in which God continually upholds the universe “by His word of power” (Hebrews 1:3; cf Colossians 1:17). Experimental science rarely encounters conflict with Scripture.
3. Living creatures and the environment which supports them were created in six days, with the first week ending with the Sabbath rest of the seventh day. This point is affirmed in the ten commandments, and the significance of Sabbath is affirmed in many Biblical passages. Every New Testament writer refers, with implicit agreement, to some aspect of the Genesis creation account. Hebrews 4:4 refers explicitly to God’s resting on the seventh day. Scientists reject this view, so there is significant conflict here.
4. A diversity of living organisms was created from the very first. God fills different habitats with diverse organisms in different acts of creation: land plants on day 3, marine habitats on day 5, flying creatures on day 5, and land animals on day 6. Multiple lines of diversity are also mentioned with respect to the ark story. The significance is not so much in the specific details as in the point that God actively and supernaturally created diversity. This becomes important when dealing with theories that living creatures formed through natural processes, a theory proposed not only by Charles Darwin, but by the ancient Greeks, at least as far back as the epicureans. This view is not consistent with Scripture.
5. Humans were created separately, and with special characteristics not shared with the animals. This view is held throughout Scripture, that God holds humans in special esteem, “more than many sparrows.” The scientific community recognizes distinctive human qualities, but is divided over whether they are merely extensions of animal characteristics or whether they are truly uniquely human. In combination with the other points listed above, this point brings significance to the question of origins, the nature of humans, whether there is any solution to the problem of evil, etc. I would guess that this point, more than any other, provides much of the passion in the debate over origins.
There are a few other crucial elements in a Biblical understanding of our world, and that are closely related to the creation story. Although not part of the actual creation account, they are intimately related to it.
6. Humans were created better than they are now, but fell away from God through distrust of God’s words. Even the evidence of their senses was not a safe excuse for disbelieving God.
7. The earth was cursed because of sin. Much of what we now observe is not original with the creation, but has developed as a result of sin. This includes suffering, violence, disease and death.
8. Death is the result of human sin. Death is not original to the creation, but an unwelcome intruder that will eventually be eliminated in a new creation.
I think I can state without reservation that the members of GRI all believe the points I listed above.
But what about the age of life on the earth? Ancient life spanning hundreds of millions of years does not fit with the above points. Since death came in with humans, the entire record of death had to be produced after the entrance of sin. Thus we accept that the history of life is a rather short history, measured in thousands, but not millions of years. I do not see any explicit Biblical teaching about an exact age for the earth, and I do not have enough information to know the exact age. It could be 6,000 years, as many believe. But if it is a few thousand years more, it doesn’t matter to me, as long as it is consistent with what the Bible teachers. I think the important points are the relationship of God, man and nature, and the Biblical data on this point do not fit into the long chronology of geological time. Thus, I reject geological time of long ages, even without knowing how to answer many questions about radioisotope dating and the geological record.
Regarding the use of geological terms in publications of members of the Institute, I can offer a word of explanation. Terms such as Eocene or Pliocene or Cambrian refer to specific parts of the geological column.
If one wishes to communicate with others regarding findings in the geological column, it is necessary to use terms that can be understood. We do not endorse the age interpretations applied to these terms by the general scientific community; we need to use them to give the data and interpretations a geological context.If we wish to deal with questions of age, we are limited to writing in creationist publications, because ordinary secular journals would not publish material that attacks the assumptions of the secular scientific endeavor. Steven Mayer got a paper published in the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington in which he reviewed the Cambrian Explosion and concluded that naturalistic processes were insufficient to explain it, and that intelligent design was a better explanation. As a result, the journal’s editor was fired. Guillermo Gonzales is a renowned and well-published astronomer, but his support for intelligent design was sufficient for him to be denied tenure at his university. Forrest Mims was a science editor at Scientific American some years ago. When it was discovered that he did not accept Darwinism, he was fired. As far as I know, none of these men believes in a six-day creation, and I understand Mayer believes in an ancient history of life; their crime is that they believe God is active in nature, and this is enough to exclude them from advancement in science. Therefore, to claim that creationists are not doing science because they do not publish explicitly creationist conclusions in scientific journals reflects a profound misunderstanding of the situation.Geoscience publishes a little journal, entitled Origins, in which
the main article is always peer-reviewed. In addition, each entire issue is read and approved by the editorial board. The articles are all posted on our websited,
http://www.grisda.org, and are available free.
Some other creationist journals are also utilizing peer review, and the quality of creationist publications has improved substantially as a result.We sometimes hear the comment that GRI scientists are not doing science. This is untrue; most members of the Institute publish in secular, peer-reviewed journals. This point is sometimes met with the complaint that these are not creationist publications, just general scientific papers. I have already explained why this is the case.
This is why creationists need their own, peer-reviewed journals, where creation theory can be explored, criticized, and improved.Another question might be why GRI even bothers with science if we are going to place the authority of the Bible over that of science. There is more than one answer to that question. First, we share the curiosity of those who study science and who would like to know how things work. Therefore, we study science. When we find a conflict with the Bible and science, we wonder about how to find harmony, and we see opportunity for further study.
It is not unprecedented for someone to believe that science will eventually improve its understanding, so that former conflicts are resolved. It is well known that general relativity and quantum mechanics are in conflict, and nobody has the resolution, yet scientists do not stop studying them. They believe that eventually a resolution will be found. Second, we study science because we want our witness about Jesus Christ to be informed on the issues that challenge those we try to reach. We want to know the very best, more accurate and most dependable positions to present to those who have questions. We want to be able to provide the best information to those who struggle with the issues of science and faith, and to model a life of informed faith.
I hope these few comments are helpful. Many books have been written, and many more will be written on these issues.
Best wishes,
Jim Gibson
Director