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GUEST
ARTICLE
The Meaning of Fossils
Knowing this
first of all, that scoffers will come in the last days with
scoffing, following their own sinful desires. They will say,
Where is the promise of his coming? For ever since the fathers
fell asleep, all things are continuing as they were from
the beginning of creation. For they deliberately overlook
this fact, that the heavens existed long ago, and the earth
was formed out of water and through water by the word of
God, and that by means of these the world that then existed
was deluged with water and perished. But by the same word
the heavens and earth that now exist are stored up for fire,
being kept until the day of judgment and destruction of the
ungodly (2 Peter 3:3-7, ESV)
Would anyone have doubted the reality
of the Flood fifty years after it happened? How about 500
years after the Flood? In Post-Babel times certain people
groups lost the memory of the Global Flood, yet the rocks
cry out and point to the Deluge. Neanderthals put fossils
in their graves; could this be because they knew they were
relics from the Deluge? [1]
Martin Rudwick wrote The Meaning of Fossils:
Episodes in the History of Palaeontology which discusses
the history of how fossils came to be understood as once
living things. He also explains how fossils were interpreted
to represent extinction and evolution.
Xanthos of Sardis (c. 500 BC) understood
that fossils were the remains of once living organisms. [2]
Xenophanes (d. ca. 490 BC) discovered fossil fishes and shells
and thought that the land was underwater in the past. Herodotus
(d. 425 BC), the historian, concluded that Egypt was once
underwater because of the fossil shells there.
Lucretius (d. 45 BC), Roman poet and Epicurean,
held the Young Earth view:
Why have no poets
sung of feats before the Theban War and the tragedy of Troy[1200
BC?]. The answer, I believe, is that the world is newly made:
its origin is a recent event, not one of remote antiquity.
That is why even now some arts are being perfected… [3]
Human history only goes back a few thousand
years, so the earth is young. If the earth was made recently,
then the fossils must be due to the Global Flood.
Leonardo da Vinci (d. 1519) knew that
fossils were once living things, but suffered under the misapprehension
that the Flood would have left a blended deposit rather than
multiple layers. He held that fossils on the tops of mountains
were deposited before the mountains were raised which is
perfectly consistent with the Flood.
Tertullian pointed to fossils found on
mountains as evidence of the Flood. Augustine saw fossils
as the remains of creatures living before the Flood. Martin
Luther referred to fossils as being the result of the Deluge
in his commentary on Genesis. Agostino Scilla published a
work in 1670 on fossils which he illustrated himself which
pointed to the Flood as their cause. [4]
Colin Stearn and Robert Carroll, authors
of a mainstream paleontology text, freely admit that by the
middle of the eighteenth century, “Most [naturalists] attributed
them [the fossils] to animals destroyed in the Biblical flood…” [5]
Polystrate fossils, such as a trees passing
through multiple strata, clearly indicate rapid deposition.
One famous example Terry Mortenson highlights in his book
The Great Turning Point (p. 205):
This tree discovered
in 1826 is from a quarry in Craigleith, Scotland and is about
80 feet long and goes through about ten or twelve different
strata (the angle is about 40 degrees). [6]
Even Darwin himself toyed with catastrophism:
What, then, has
exterminated so many species and whole genera? The mind at
first is irresistibly hurried into the belief of some great
catastrophe; but thus to destroy animals, both large and
small, in Southern Patagonia, in Brazil, on the Cordillera
of Peru, in North America up to Behring's Straits, we must
shake the entire framework of the globe. [7]
Terry Mortenson notes the sad paradigm
shift away from Flood Geology:
Catastrophism
did not die out immediately, although by the late 1830s few
old-earth catastrophists in the United Kingdom, America,
or Europe believed in a geologically significant Noachian
deluge. [8]
Amazingly, as late as 1892 a Yale professor
(Military Science) defended the Deluge. Charles Totten wrote
The Flood: the Fact of History defending the feasibility
of the Ark. [5]
In addition to the geological indicators
of the Flood, there are hundreds of Flood traditions from
all around the world.
Notes:
1) Paleontology: The Record of Life by
Colin Stearn and Robert Carroll (John Wiley & Sons, New
York, NY, 1989), p. 5.
2) Ibid.
3) “Time and Ancient Records” by David
Watson, Creation Research Society Quarterly, Vol. 18, No.
1, June 1981, p. 34, emphasis added.
4) The Deluge Story in Stone by Byron
Nelson (Bethany Fellowship, Minneapolis, MN, 1968), pp. 9,
10, 18.
5) Stearn and Carroll, p. 6.
6) Nelson, p. 111.
7) The Voyage of the Beagle By Charles
Darwin, p. 110 (emphasis added).
8) The Great Turning Point by Terry Mortenson
(Master Books, Green Forest, AR 2004), p. 33.
9) Nelson, pp. 154-156.
Posted by Ned - the Origins Activist (NOA)
at 6:57 PM
adamslostdream.blogspot.com/
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