http://home.entouch.net/dmd/transform.htm
Free Hit Counter
Visitors to these pages since 12-29-97
Back to DMD Publishing Home Page
I became a Christian in my sophomore
year of college. The people who had led me to the Lord immediately began
my discipleship. They taught me to evangelize and they taught me what they
felt a Christian should believe. But most importantly they were a loving
family of believers which was a welcome oasis for someone like me whose
home life had been less than familial. Thus, when I was told that Christians
must believe in a young-earth and a global flood, I went along willingly.
I believed. Being a physics major in college I had not taken any geology
courses. I knew there were physics problems, but I thought I could to solve
them.
When I graduated from college,
physicists were unemployable since NASA had just laid a bunch of them off.
I did graduate work in philosophy and then decided to leave school to support
my growing family. After six months, I found work as a geophysicist working
for a seismic company. Within a year, I was processing seismic data for
a major oil company.
This was where I first became exposed to the problems
geology presented to the idea of a global flood. I would see extremely
thick (30,000 feet) sedimentary layers and wonder how the flood could have
deposited all that sediment and still given time for footprints to be formed
if it was all deposited in one year. One could follow beds with footprints
from the surface down to those depths where they were covered by such thicknesses
of sediment that much time would have been required. I would see buried
mountains which had experienced more than 10 thousands of feet of erosion,
which required more time than a single year. Yet, my belief system required
that the sediments in those buried mountains had to have been deposited
by the flood. I would see karsts, (sinkholes due to limestone erosion)
and salt sandwiched in the middle of the geologic column (supposedly during
the middle of the flood). Yet the flood waters would have been saturated
with limestone and incapable of dissolving lime. And salt can only be removed
from the ocean waters by evaporation. It was inconceivable that salt could
be deposited during the Flood. It became clear that more time was needed
than the global flood would allow. But my faith in the young-earth interpretation
told me that the data wasn’t to be believed.
Over the next several years I
struggled to understand how the geologic data I worked with everyday could
be fit into a Biblical perspective. I published 20+ items in the Creation
Research Society Quarterly toward that goal. I would listen to ICR, have
discussions with people like Harold Slusher, Duane Gish, Steve Austin,
Tom Barnes and with some of their graduates that I had hired. Nothing
worked to explain what I saw.
In order to get closer to the
data and know it better, with the hope of finding a solution, I changed
subdivisions of my work in 1980. I left seismic processing and went into
seismic interpretation where I would work more closely with geologic data.
My horror only increased. The data I was seeing at work, was not agreeing
with what I had been taught as a Christian. Doubts about what I was writing
and teaching began to grow. No one could give me a model which allowed
me to unite into one cloth what I believed on Sunday and what I was forced
to believe by the data Monday through Friday.
Unfortunately, my fellow young
earth creationists were not willing to listen to the problems. In general
they were not interested in discussing the difficulties and they did not
want to read any material that contradicted their cherished position. But
then I too was often unwilling to face the data or read books like Kitchner’s
Abusing Science, which argued against young-earth creationism. I would
have eagerly isolated myself from geologic data, but my job would not allow
it. I preferred darkness of self-deception to the light of truth. Yet,
day after day, my job forced me to confront that awful data. And
to make matters worse, I was viewed by my fellow young-earth creationists
as less than pure for trying to discuss or solve the problems.
By 1986, the growing doubts about
the ability of the widely accepted creationist viewpoints to explain the
geologic data led to a nearly 10 year withdrawal from publication. My last
young-earth paper was entitled “Geologic Challenges to a Young-earth”,
which I presented as the first paper in the First International Conference
on Creationism. I showed the geologic and seismic data I was working with.
The talk was not well received. The reaction to the
pictures, seismic data, and the logic disgusted me. They were more interested
in what I sounded like than in the data! One person, claiming to have worked
in the oil industry, came to the stage to challenge me. His challenge was
insignificant and his claim of having worked in the industry was false.
I was bothered by a Christian making false claims.
It appeared that the more I questions
I raised, the more they questioned my Christianity. When telling one friend
of my difficulties with young-earth creationism and geology, he told me
that I had obviously been brain-washed by my geology professors. When I
told him that I had never taken a geology course, he then said I must be
saying this in order to hold my job. Never would he consider that I might
really believe the data. This attitude that the messenger of bad
news must be doubted amazed me. And it convinced me that too many of my
fellow Christians were not interested in truth but only that I should conform
to their theological position. To all intents and purposes I was through
with young-earth creationists (not ism yet) because I knew that they didn't
care about the data.
During the next 10 years I published
little of value for the creation/evolution area. I was still a young-earth
creationist but I didn’t know how to solve the problems. In the late 1980s
very long baseline interferometry measurements disproved most of my young-earth
articles by measuring the slow drift of the continents showing that much
time would be required to move the continents to their present position.
Eventually, by 1994 I was through
with young-earth creationISM. Nothing that young-earth creationists had
taught me about geology had turned out to be true. I took a poll of all
8 of the graduates from ICR’s school who had gone into the oil industry
and were working for various companies. I asked them one question.
"From your oil industry experience, did any fact that you were taught at ICR, which challenged current geological thinking, turn out in the long run to be true?"
That is a very simple question. One man, who worked for a major oil company, grew real silent on the phone, sighed and softly said 'No!' A very close friend that I had hired, after hearing the question, exclaimed, "Wait a minute. There has to be one!" But he could not name one. No one else could either.
Being through with creationism,
I was almost through with Christianity. I was thoroughly indoctrinated
to believe that if the earth were not young and the flood not global, then
the Bible was false. I was on the very verge of becoming an atheist.
During that time, I re-read a book I had reviewed prior to its publication.
It was Alan Hayward's Creation/Evolution (Triangle, 1985). Although I had
reviewed it prior to its publication in 1985, I hadn't been ready
for the views he expressed. He presented a wonderful “Days of Proclamation”
view which pulled me back from the edge of atheism. Although I believe
Alan applied it to the earth in an unworkable fashion, applied differently,
his view had the power to unite the data with the Scripture. That is what
I have done with my views. Without that I would now be an atheist.
There is much in Alan's book I agree with and disagree with, but his book
was very important in keeping me in the faith. While his book may not have
changed the debate totally, it did change my life.
It was my lack of knowledge that
allowed me to go along willingly and become a young-earth creationist.
It was isolation from contradictory data, a fear of contradictory data
and a strong belief in the young-earth interpretation that kept me
there for a long time. The biggest lesson I have learned in this journey
is to read the works of those with whom you disagree. God is not afraid
of the data.
Glenn R. Morton
glennmorton@entouch.net