Research associated with the Simos Foundation’s Collaboration of the Origins of Life offers a new answer to an old problem for getting a soup of chemicals to somehow turn into a living cell. Assuming that life arose spontaneously, how did the rarely available element phosphorus get concentrated into high enough amounts to supposedly incorporate itself into the many essential biochemicals that contain phosphorus? DNA a… More… …read more Source: icr.org
First there was dark matter, then came dark energy, then dark photons and now there is talk of dark stars, dark planets and even dark intelligent life, in a whole dark galaxy within our Milky Way galaxy. However, physicists actually know nothing about dark matter and dark energy. These terms and the nebulous concepts they represent were actually invented by astrophysicists because they assumed materialism (matter and energy is all there is). They then dogmatically insisted on rigorously applying this to the origin and structure of the universe. Read More
By Ken Ham What’s happening is so evil. It motivated us to come up with a plan to help reach more kids by allowing children 10 and under into our attractions for free. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Simon Turpin What are the seven attributes of religion, how does atheism mirror aspects of other world religions, and what does the Bible say about atheism. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Dr. Danny R. Faulkner A brief history of quantum mechanics from Newton to the “Theory of Everything” and what it means to Christians. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Ken Ham Today is recognized as National Sanctity of Life Day in the United States. It’s a day set aside to honor the sanctity of every human life and to remember the over 60 million children who have lost their lives to abortion since the horrific Roe v. Wade US Supreme Court decision of 1973. I thought I would take this opportunity to share a special video clip with you. Scripture tells us that each child is fearfully and wonderfully made by their Creator, right from fertilization. The psalmist knew that millennia before the ultrasound would be invented, but
[More]
A review of The Lost World of Adam and Eve by John H. Walton. …read more Source: creation.com
Whatever scenario evolutionists invoke, they can’t adequately explain the moon’s origin. …read more Source: creation.com
By Ken Ham USA Today is featuring a “10 Best” contest for their “Reader’s Choice 2020,” and one of the categories is “Best Religious Museum” in the US. Twenty religious attractions are featured, and two you will probably recognize: the Ark Encounter and the Creation Museum, of course. We’d love to see the Ark and the museum finish first and second on the list. We need your help to win! The “Reader’s Choice 2020” designations are decided by popular vote. As of the time of this blog posting, the Ark Encounter is sitting at number one and the Creation …read
[More]
By Jonathan Wells Today’s episode of ID the Future comes from a Berkeley, California symposium honoring the recently deceased Phillip Johnson. Biologist Jonathan Wells recalls how he met Johnson and the huge influence he had on Wells’ own research and writing. Then philosopher of biology Paul Nelson reminisces on Johnson’s keen intellect, his eye for hidden assumptions, his awareness that “we are not of our own devising,” and on the mountain range of new knowledge opening up to us in biology, one that scientists knew little about even 30 years ago and that Nelson says points strongly away from Darwin’s
[More]
By Stephen C. Meyer Today on ID the Future we hear the first of a series of podcasts in honor of the late Phillip E. Johnson, the pioneering thinker, networker, and organizer, who played such a crucial role in the development and growth of the Intelligent Design movement. These messages come mostly from a November 2019 symposium held in his honor in Berkeley, California. Today we hear Stephen C. Meyer, director of the Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture, as he opens the symposium and introduces speakers to come, and then the first of these speakers, Phillip Johnson himself,
[More]
By Ken Ham It’s not very often you can watch a movie together as a family and trust that what you’ll see will be safe for everyone to watch. But there are three films (and a bonus pay-per-view event!) premiering across the United States in the next few months that you’ll want to enjoy with the whole family. We’re thrilled to endorse them. Here are these upcoming releases: Patterns of Evidence: The Red Sea Miracle, Part 1 is coming to theaters for one day only, February 18, 2020. This film is the next installment of the exceptional Patterns of Evidence
[More]
By Ken Ham G’day to everyone Down Under, particularly those in the Tanah Merah area of Queensland! I just made the long trip back to my homeland and my home state, to present at Dunamis Church on Friday night, January 31, and Sunday morning and evening, February 2, 2020. I hope to see you there! These talks are for an Answers in Genesis–Australia Foundations Conference. All four of my presentations will be on a different topic, so I encourage you to make it out for all four. Here are the subjects I’ll be covering: Science Confirms the Bible Six Days
[More]
By Troy Lacey Uranium-lead radioisotope dating is now the preferred absolute dating method among geochronologists. But there are several problems with this particular radiometric dating method. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Ken Ham Each year, dictionaries select and announce a “word of the year.” It is an attempt to either summarize the “feeling” of the passing year or highlight a word that had a spike in usage or definition searches, or both. The three major dictionaries, Merriam-Webster, Dictionary.com, and Oxford, have each released its word choice and, while the three words are very different, they still follow a common theme. Here are the three “word of the year” choices: Merriam-Webster: they Dictionary.com: existential Oxford: climate emergency What do these three words have in common? They reflect the change and preoccupations
[More]
By Dr. Danny R. Faulkner Astronomers discovered another possible exoplanet transiting near the star TOI 700. But data is inconclusive on whether it’s a viable exoplanet. …read more Source: AIG Daily
By Dr. Danny R. Faulkner The Apophis asteroid is scheduled to pass near earth on April 13, 2029. But is it the ‘Wormwood’ star that will fall from heaven according to Revelation? …read more Source: AIG Daily
“Please remember, even though this screams out design, it all was developed by blind random chance processes, at least that what evolutionists want you to believe.” Admin By Thomas Perry Source: Trees Communicate in a Language We Can Learn, Ecologist Claims For more content like this visit REALfarmacy.com. A massive web of hair-like mushroom roots transmit secret messages between trees, triggering them to share nutrients and water with those in need. Like humans, trees are extremely social creatures, utterly dependent on each other for their survival. And, as it is with us, communication is key. After scientists discovered pine
[More]
Another example of a natural selection favouring an information-losing mutation, which is the opposite to that required for goo-to-you evolution. …read more Source: creation.com
By Michael Flannery On this episode of ID the Future, science historian Michael Flannery pays tribute to Gertrude Himmelfarb, the pioneering Darwin critic who passed away in late December 2019. Even as the world was praising Darwin at the 1959 centennial of The Origin of Species, she was writing of his rhetorical sleight of hand, by which “possibilities were promoted into probabilities, and probabilities into certainties, so ignorance was raised to a position only once removed from certain knowledge.” Gutsy, bold, and precise in her scholarship, she saw Darwin’s theory as offering convenient “scientific” support for the class-divided, untrammeled survival-of-the-fittest
[More]
Sorghum is an important food crop due, in part, to its extreme drought-tolerance. This characteristic makes it an ideal model for demonstrating how biological entities are able to continuously track environmental changes. A new study takes a big stride in revealing some mechanisms underlying drought tolerance. It shows that when water is scarce sorghum radically manipulates the expression of its photosynthesis-related genes and its relation… More… …read more Source: icr.org
Archaeology confirms the biblical account-Jerusalem’s deliverance and Sennacherib’s end. …read more Source: creation.com
By Ken Ham I always love hearing from supporters of Answers in Genesis, but I will admit, I have a soft spot for the many letters we get from kids. I love hearing from children of all ages who are being impacted by the AiG ministry. I know my readers will find these letters encouraging as well. So, I’d like to share a sampling of some of the recent messages that children, young people, and one parent have sent me.
If there was no pre-Fall animal death, would they have overrun the world if Adam hadn’t sinned? …read more Source: creation.com
By Ken Ham A scientific journal recently published a review of eighty-five reports of “organic remains in fossils.” These included “blood vessels, dried but intact skin, and connective tissues on or inside fossils like dinosaur bones . . . red blood cells and bone cells . . . [and] biochemicals specific to animals (not microbes), including proteins, collagen, elastin, ovalbumin, and keratin.” What was the big takeaway for them from this incredible report? You’ll have to read on to find out! The Institute for Creation Research wrote an excellent article on the above review. It states that the reports in
[More]
By Ken Ham New lessons from our Answers Bible Curriculum (ABC) are now available! ABC is our four-year unique and powerful Sunday school curriculum used in over 10,000 churches. We’ve upgraded to the second edition of ABC and have been rolling out lessons for all age groups (Pre-K–Adult) as they become available. Well, all the Old Testament lessons are finished and now New Testament lessons are available. You can try two lessons for free. These free New Testament sections also come with two free Old Testament lessons so you can get an idea of what to expect from both the
[More]
By Ken Ham A recent announcement was no big shock to anyone following the story of the United Methodist Church in America. The church denomination (the second-largest Protestant denomination in the US) recently announced that it is planning to split, with some churches leaving to form a “traditional Methodist” denomination, with the remainder of the churches carrying on the name of the United Methodist Church. What are they splitting over? Well, again, it’s no big shock what the issue is . . . gay “marriage” and LGBT individuals. At a general conference last year that was attended by Methodists worldwide,
[More]