Monday, March 03, 2014

Bryan College Officially Supports Young Earth Creation Model

The Chattanooga Times-Free Press is reporting that, following what is considered to be an unhealthy drift toward naturalism, the college administration has revised their faculty pledge statement.  According to the story:
The board of trustees is requiring professors and staff to sign a statement saying that they believe Adam and Eve were created in an instant by God and that humans shared no ancestry with other life forms. If they don’t sign, they fear that jobs could be on the line.
General consensus is that this statement is unnecessary and divisive. Since the ruling, almost 300 students (37% of the total student body) have signed a petition requesting that the requirement be overturned. I suspect that is not likely to happen anytime soon.  This is a matter of faith, not science, and the fact that it further marginalizes Bryan in terms of science education will probably carry no weight.  President Steven Livesay, who formulated the statement was quoted as saying: “Scripture always rises above anything else. Scripture rises above science. ... Science at some point will catch up with the scripture.” What if it doesn't? What if your understanding of scripture and science continue to diverge, as they have for the last two hundred years? What then?

As time goes on, the evidence for the young earth model gets worse, not better. President Livesay, are you so sure that, despite the fact that there is no extrabiblical evidence to support it, your hermeneutic is correct?  Are you willing to injure the reputation of your college and put your faculty on edge for it?

As one of my friends at work (and a graduate of Bryan) put it: “Appalling.”

5 comments:

  1. They are living in the past.

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  2. http://blogs.answersingenesis.org/blogs/ken-ham/2014/03/04/what-is-happening-at-bryan-college/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+KenHam+%28Around+the+World+with+Ken+Ham%29
    For what it's worth.

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  3. Anonymous8:31 PM

    Jim, you ask "what if it doesn't?". But the beauty of the YEC position, as far as that goes, is that there's no actual point of decisive judgment on the matter. YEC has thrived quite well in spite of the evidence against it, and YECs can claim in perpetuity that science will catch up with the Bible someday. Someday is always in the future, after all!

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  4. I sort of think that is what is going on with Todd Wood. He is clearly aware that the evidence for evolution is compelling but hopes that bariminology will pan out in the future because he can't accept the consequences of evolution.

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