Thursday, October 2, 2025

Humans And Dinosaurs Cohabitation Conflict?

Humans And Dinosaurs Cohabitation Conflict?

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, October 2, 2025 (Donate) 

Letter unedited:

You assumptions are quite inaccurate. We should have human remains with dinosaur remains, but you reject this illogically. We have human remains in the fossile recirds whenever there were other beasts with us at the time. To call out some immacualte exception to this with respect to dinosaurs is incredulous, at best.

M.D., U.S.

Response:

You assumptions are quite inaccurate. We should have human remains with dinosaur remains, but you reject this illogically.

Thank you for reaching out. I deny the assertion that humans and dinosaurs should be buried and fossilized together. This is actually a fallacy of denying the antecedent. It goes like:

If humans and dinosaurs lived together, they should be found buried together, we don’t find them buried together so therefore they didn’t live together.

But there are other reasons that humans and dinosaurs may not be buried together. 

Sauropods (Brachiosaurus, Diplodocus, and Apatosaurus) are part of the same biblical kind; (Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

For the sake of understanding, let’s think about this logically for a moment. If there were a worldwide flood today (that is, a marine catastrophe that overtakes the land), what are the odds of the few Emperor penguins that would get fossilized in Antarctica being buried with the few humans that would get fossilized around the rest of the world? Pretty slim.

If the two aren’t buried together, this in no way indicates that humans and penguins didn’t live at the same time. There are many possible reasons for humans and dinosaurs not to be buried together:

(1) We know that both dinosaurs and humans were vegetarian in the beginning. However, after the Fall, behaviors changed. Some dinosaurs may have developed carnivorous diets (as evidenced in the fossil record by fossilized dinosaurs found with other animals in their stomachs), and therefore humans may have not have lived near them. Of course, there could be other reasons they didn’t live near each other. But the odds would be low of being buried together if they didn’t live near each other.

(2) Humans are very resourceful and may have been able to survive by hanging on floating debris, swimming or other means to keep from being buried as easily as animals, which would keep their burial separate.

(3) Most people today live within about 100 miles of a coast. If the bulk of the pre-Flood population was living near coasts, then initial tsunamis would destroy and drag people out to sea. Hence, they would not be candidates for fossilization. They would be more apt to rot and decay instead of being buried and fossilized. These initial tsunamis would be one of the mechanisms to churn up the waters to more sediment rich for later burial and fossilization

(4) Lower population would naturally reduce the possibility of humans even being found, let alone buried with dinosaurs.

(5) Given the amount of sedimentary rock, we still have a great deal to explore before we could say with any confidence that the two aren't found together.

(6) Reptiles tend to sink and humans (as well as animals with mammalian physiology) tend to float during a watery catastrophe. So the natural sorting power of water would reduce this to a certain degree as well.

Not finding the two co-fossilized doesn't support or detract from either biblical or evolutionary viewpoints—it is not “proof” of much of anything—it only proves that at that specific time, in that specific place, under those specific conditions, that the two weren't together.

We have human remains in the fossile recirds whenever there were other beasts with us at the time.

Perhaps some, but coelacanths, ginkgo trees, Laotian rock rat, and so on, aren’t buried with humans, and yet we live together today and in the past.

The problem is the way you are looking at the fossil layers. Don’t be afraid to question that what you’ve been told to believe (e.g., in school, media, museums, textbooks, etc.) about the fossil record: that there are no other possible (and, we would submit, more plausible) explanations.

In light of the biblical account of a worldwide Flood about 4,400 years ago, we can offer another interpretation of the physical evidence. The bulk of the fossiliferous layers are really an order of burial, not a record of millions of years.

So the fossil layers often called the Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Triassic that contain dinosaur fossils were laid down over the course of a year about 4,400 years ago, during the lifetime of Noah.  

Noah looking over plans of the Ark; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (Grok)
 
Human fossils have been found in the layers often called the lower Pleistocene and Pliocene (which most creationists consider post-Flood probably during the dispersion from Babel less than 4,200 years ago)![1] So looking at the layers from a biblical perspective, fossils of man and dinosaurs were formed within 200–500 years of each other!

To call out some immacualte exception to this with respect to dinosaurs is incredulous, at best. 

I have a chapter that dives into this topic in more detail in the New Answers Book 1 form 2006.[2] I want to encourage you to get a copy and read it. I also want to encourage you to read and trust what God says in His Word. The history in the Bible is true and explains the world and because its history is true the message of the gospel is also true.

In kindness,

Bodie 

Recommended Resources

Dinosaurs, Dragons, and the Bible



 

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist since 1998 helping out in various churches and running an apologetics website. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.   

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.  

Originally at Answers in Genesis; Edited; Republished by permission.

 



[1] Marvin Lubenow, Bones of Contention, Baker Books, 1992, chapters 12 and 13.

[2] New Answers Book 1, Ken Ham, Gen. Ed., Master Books, Green Forest, AK, 2006.

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

The Doctrines of Faith, Hope, and Love

The Doctrines of Faith, Hope, and Love

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, October 1, 2025 (Donate)

And now abide faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love. (1 Corinthians 13:13, NKJV)

Faith, hope, and love are core doctrines of Christianity. In other words, they are very important. They are often spoken of and explained individually but they are coalesced together because of their unified connection (e.g., 1 Thessalonians 1:3, 5:8).

How important are they? Consider for a brief moment that if someone doesn’t have faith in the Jesus Christ of Scripture and His death, burial, and resurrection, then that person is not saved. See the importance yet? And yet, love is greater than faith!

Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

Let’s dive into these important doctrines.

Faith

Scripturally, the doctrine of faith is the “substance of things hoped for” and the “evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1), producing obedience (obey what God says), perseverance (not swayed to walk away), and spiritual fruit (growing spiritually the knowledge of God and sharing it with others).

Faith is more than a mere nod or approval to revealed truth in the Bible. It means that you cling to that truth in Scripture and live by it. You don’t just say “I agree” and then go and live your life as if you don’t agree—that would be a false faith—or technically “a lack of faith”. Faith, true faith, changes the way you live your life.

Faith is a divine principle planted in the soul by the Spirit of God. Yes, faith comes from God and His Word—which is the Holy Spirit speaking (Romans 10:17; Ephesians 2:8-9). Thus, true faith connects the believer to Christ and rests on Him for justification (from our sins), sanctification (growing in holiness), and eternal life.

Faith has both (1) a doctrinal and (2) a practical side: one must believe what God has spoken, and also rely personally upon Christ for salvation. 

Furthermore, the Christian faith is not a blind faith. Instead, it is a logical, defensible faith unlike all other worldviews and religions that fall short due to inconsistencies, arbitrariness, and cannot account for truth, logic, morality, and knowledge in the first place. Those who deny the Christian faith outlined in Scripture are doing so via a blind faith in relying on man’s fallible and sinful opinions to lead them astray into false, inconsistent faiths.  

There is also a difference between saving faith from historical or temporary faith.  Saving faith trusts God’s promises through Christ alone, and bears fruit and endures. Temporary faith (also called temporal faith) may only acknowledge facts or feel stirred for a season. Temporary faith is superficial and lacks genuine conversion power, lack of personal commitment, and doesn’t persevere.  

Hope

The doctrine of hope is the gracious expectation of promised blessings. Hope is connected to faith. It is because of our faith in what God has said that we look forward to promises extended by God that have not yet happened. Of course, many of these are eternal blessings with eternal life.

Hope rests not on uncertain desires but on the sure word of God, anchored in Christ’s resurrection and the fact that He now intercedes for us to the God the Father.  

Hope purifies the believer, strengthens in trials, and directs the heart toward heaven. This is how hope helps us live a life that is godly, thinking on and doing the things of God. Although, it differs from faith in that faith receives what God has spoken, while hope anticipates what He has yet to fulfill. 

Nevertheless there is an overlapping relationship between faith and hope. Consider the faith of Abraham who looked forward to promises in hope and never saw them realized, but he knew his descendants would. That is a powerful faith. 

Christian hope looks beyond temporary good things in this life to eternal glory, guarding against despair and worldly entanglement. Hope must be grounded in God, not man; otherwise it is but a vain confidence. In Scripture, hope is portrayed as “an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast” (Hebrews 6:19).

Love

There are various forms of love. In short, we love because God loves us and fills us with His love.

The doctrine of love, which includes charity, is the highest grace. It is the fulfilling of the law, and the bond of Christian perfection through Christ. It springs from God’s own nature—“for God is love”—and flows into the believer’s heart by the Holy Spirit.

This love embraces God as supreme and extends to mankind universally, even to enemies. Recall Christ said that we are to love our enemies.

 “But I say to you who hear: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you. (Luke 6:27, NKJV)

Without love, other gifts or duties are empty (1 Corinthians 13). Love shows itself in our patience, humility, forgiveness, and self-sacrifice, making the Christian resemble Christ.

While faith receives and hope anticipates, love endures forever, being the essence of eternal life in Christ. So, Scripture exalts love as “the greatest of these” (1 Corinthians 13:13), the crowning virtue that harmonizes faith and hope in godliness.

The four main types of love  (in the Greek New Testament) commonly discussed are agapē, philia, storgē, and eros.

Agape (ἀγάπη)

It is the highest and most selfless form of love, often called “divine love.” It seeks the good of others regardless of merit, feelings, or reciprocity. This type of love is also demonstrated by God’s love for man through Christ’s sacrifice on the Cross (John 3:16; Romans 5:8).

Christ loving sacrifice; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (Chat GPT)

Agape is different from the other types of love in that it is unconditional, sacrificial, and rooted in God’s character rather than human emotion.

Philia / Philadelphia (φιλέω / φιλαδελφία)

Often called Philadelphia is brotherly love which is the affection shared among friends and within the family of faith. This is why the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania’s motto is the “city of brotherly love”!

Philadelphia is the friendship type of love that has a kind warmth, companionship, and mutual delight. It is found in passages like Romans 12:10 (“be kindly affectionate to one another with brotherly love”). It obviously has distinctions from agape in that it emphasizes friendship affection based on relationship, not a pure selfless sacrifice.

Storge (στοργή)

This love is the natural, familial love—affection between parents and children or among close relatives. It is evident throughout Scripture through examples of parents, children, siblings, and so on.

Even so, it is rarely named in Scripture directly, but appears in compound form (e.g., “astorgos” which means “without natural affection,” Romans 1:31, see also 2 Timothy 3:3) which condemns the breakdown of family love in a sinful world.

It differs from agape and philia by being instinctive and rooted in family bonds rather than choice or covenant.

Eros (ἔρως)

This is the love that many think of and want to watch romance movies about! Eros is romantic or sexual love between a husband and wife. Although the word itself does not appear in the New Testament.

Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

The concept of this love, however, is acknowledged in Scripture in the context of marital intimacy (Song of Solomon; 1 Corinthians 7). We also find something like this love in ancient Roman culture called Ludus. It is a Latin word meaning playful or flirtatious love that could lead to Eros.

Eros is unique because it is passion-driven and physical, whereas agape is spiritual and sacrificial, and philia is relational friendship.

Scripture also mentions philautia (self-love, usually negative) and commends xenia (hospitality). These next three are not discussed as often but are worth mentioning and delineating.

Philautia (φιλαυτία) – “love of self”

It is found in 2 Timothy 3:2, describing the state of sinful men at a particular time: “men will be lovers of themselves.” Philautia disintegrated into a self-centered love. Sadly, it is quite common in our culture today.

Uniquely about this love is that is typically negative in Scripture, referring to selfishness or self-centeredness, rather than healthy self-respect. It is what happens when sinful minds take love and distort it. It is inwardly focused, whereas biblical love (agapē, philia) is outward and self-giving.

Xenia (ξενία) – “hospitality” or “love for strangers”

Although not specifically named in Scripture this love was conceptually in Scripture. It is a strong cultural type of love representing your community. It refers to kindness toward outsiders as you represent your nation, tribe, city, etc. 

A good test of this in the modern sense would be sports. This love would be displayed when a home team hosts a visiting sports teams and their fans to their stadium, field, or arena! Do you welcome them in Christ's love or taunt them in an unchristian-like fashion? 

Rival teams and fans (like Cardinals and Cubs) should still respect and welcome one another. This is a type of Xenia love; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

In the Old Testament, sojourners visiting and staying in your area were to be treated well and laws were lovingly in place to prevent them from being mistreated, harassed, and cheated.

Xenia, or hospitality love, is also commanded in the New Testament as well (e.g., Hebrews 13:2; Romans 12:13; 1 Peter 4:9).

Conclusion

Faith, hope, and love are core doctrines. Faith comes under attack with false and blind faiths in sinful cultures. And love also comes under attack in our broken and wicked culture. Even though there are a lot of forms of love, they can still be corrupted by sinful minds and we need to be aware of it.

Although not discussed above, eros in today’s sexualized culture has become a problem leading to lust, adultery, and other sexual deviancies instead of its intended bond between a husband-wife. Philautia can easily become a self-centered warped love. Philadelphia has been sinfully warped in to homosexual lusts in our secular-influenced society.

True forms of love must be guarded based on what God says in His Word. When love is distorted, sin abounds. Love needs to be modelled after Scripture and what God clearly says. Love is patient and love is kind. And God exhibited that love perfectly in His example to us through His Son Jesus Christ and His sacrificial love on the Cross.

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist since 1998 helping out in various churches and running an apologetics website. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.  

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children. 

 

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Uniformitarianism And Its Religious Undertones

Uniformitarianism And Its Religious Undertones

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, September 30, 2025 (Donate)

What do big bang, millions of years, an ice age that goes back over 10,000 years have in common? They are all build on a concept. Not just any concept, but a religious concept called “uniformitarianism”.

Land features scraped from the Ice Age in Kungshamn, Sweden; Photo by Bodie Hodge

You can’t see uniformitarianism and can’t hear it or touch it or taste it—like I mentioned, it is conceptual. But this concept shapes so much of how the secular world thinks—particularly origins. Because the world uses this concept so much, it pervades our culture and sadly, many of us have been influenced by it one way or another.

What Is Uniformitarianism?

Uniformitarianism is the belief that the geological processes we observe today—like erosion and sedimentation—have occurred at the same rates and in the same ways throughout earth’s history. In other words, it assumes the process we see today have been “uniform” throughout the past.

Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

Thus, it is a belief system about the past that is not observed and therefore not scientific. Instead, it is religious. And you may not realize this but it is a common religious view within the secular humanistic families of religion (e.g., materialism, naturalism, secularism, etc.).

This religious idea or concept is often summarized by the phrase: “The present is the key to the past.” This is in opposition to the biblical concept of the past is the key to the present (e.g., why do we wear clothes, a past event in Genesis 3; why are there massive rock layers with fossils, a global Flood in the past; etc.).

Uniformitarianism also goes hand in hand with certain naturalistic assumptions. Naturalism (nature is all that exists) and uniformitarianism (that naturals processes are uniform) are like sisters in secular-based religions. As examples:

  • Earth’s features (like canyons, rock layers, and mountains) were formed slowly over millions of years.
  • Catastrophic events (like local or regional floods, tsunamis and earthquakes, or volcanic eruptions) are generally excluded as major shaping forces in earth’s past.
  • Time, not extraordinary events like the global Flood of Noah’s day and its aftermath which led to the post-Flood Ice Age, is the primary driver of geological change.

This philosophy was spearheaded in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, especially by people like James Hutton and Charles Lyell, and strongly influenced Charles Darwin’s thinking on biological evolution whose prominence rose from the 1850s-1870s.

Why Is Uniformitarianism Considered Bad From A Biblical Perspective?

Uniformitarianism is a philosophy (i.e., conceptual idea that is technically religious) that stands in contradiction with God’s Word.

For example, the adherents of the religion of uniformitarianism denies the biblical narrative of the global Flood. The Bible, particularly in Genesis 6-8, describes the global Flood in Noah’s day that catastrophically reshaped the earth’s surface (see also Psalm 104:8-9). Leaders of uniformitarianism, thinking in light of their religious perspective, dismiss such events as myths or regional incidents, contradicting Scripture.

Also, this secular religion inherently has old-earth assumptions. Uniformitarianism requires a belief in millions and billions of years of earth history. This contradicts the biblical creation timeline that is exegeted from biblical genealogies, and puts the earth's age at around 6,000 years from today.

Uniformitarianism also undermines biblical authority. By adopting naturalistic explanations for the origin of geological formations, the religion of uniformitarianism is being used to replace the Bible’s historical account with autonomous human reasoning. This shift can cause Christians to compromise on scriptural truth if they start buying to uniformitarian thinking.

Uniformitarianists largely ignores observable catastrophes when it comes to ancient origins. Even observable events like the rapid formation of canyons (e.g., at Mount St. Helens) show that massive geological changes can occur quickly, not slowly over eons.

Nevertheless, these modern catastrophes are a confirmation of the possibility that past geological features may also be the result of rapid, catastrophic events—especially the global Flood. Yet these are usually overlooked by uniformitarians when trying to discuss or understand geology from ages past.

As A Caveat: Uniformitarianism Vs. Uniformity

Some hear about the problems with uniformitarianism and falsely make the assumption that this means that uniformity of nature is equally bad. But one needs to be careful here.

Uniformitarianism and uniformity of nature are two distinct concepts that are often confused but must be clearly delineated—especially in the context of biblical creation and science. Let me explain.

Uniformitarianism

Uniformitarianism is a philosophical and religious assumption about the past, particularly in geology. Adherents of this view asserts that natural processes (like erosion or sedimentation) have always occurred in the same way and at the same rate as observed today (on a normal day, not a flood day for instance).

This idea (“the present is the key to the past”) leads to interpretations of earth’s features as having formed over long ages slowly over millions of years. Recall, it excludes the possibility of past global catastrophes like the Flood of Noah’s day described in Scripture. Uniformity of nature is much different.

Uniformity Of Nature

Uniformity of nature, on the other hand, is a biblical concept that refers to the regularity and reliability of natural laws in the present. Laws of nature can be summed up as the way that God upholds His creation—and we can test these laws and describe them.

This regularity allows scientists to conduct repeatable experiments and make predictions—because the physical laws of the universe operate consistently. Most fields of science were developed by Bible-believing Christians who understood this biblical concept.

Uniformity is rooted in the faithfulness of God as Creator and Sustainer (Colossians 1:17, Genesis 8:22), not in random chance or blind processes as in secular religions where laws changed in the past (e.g., no laws, then laws at the big bang; and they will change again in the future at a big crunch/heat death).

So key differences can be summed up as:

  • Uniformitarianism deals with unobserved past events while assuming a religiously naturalistic framework that denies biblical history.
  • Uniformity of nature deals with the observable present and is essential for operational (observable, repeatable, and testable) science (e.g., chemistry, biology, physics, engineering) which is in line with biblical teachings.

Conclusion

In short, uniformity of nature is good and uniformitarianism, due to its false assumptions and naturalistic religious concepts, is problematic. Uniformitarianism is a flawed from its onset and thus, it is self-refuting.

Uniformitarianism is engrained with secular religious philosophy that distorts true history and undermines the biblical worldview. This religious concept should be questioned by serious scientists who work in fields like geology.

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist since 1998 helping out in various churches and running an apologetics website. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council. 

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.

Monday, September 29, 2025

Feedback Teaching By Example

Feedback: Teaching By Example 

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, September 29, 2025 (Donate) 

To start off, I wanted to do something different: to show you how I break down a hostile letter and how to look at it biblically. Hopefully, this will give you some pointers as to how to respond to such inquiries in the future, whether in person, email, or on forums, before we jump into the bulk of the responses. 

One of the first things I do is pray for wisdom and discernment in responding. My prayer is that each response I do will honor and glorify God. Then I read the letter and try to discern what the person believes while pointing them to Christ. 

Christ work on the Cross and His Subsequent Resurrection is sufficient for salvation; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

When reading R.B.’s email (see below, unedited), he is very hostile toward the Bible, appearing to be a non-Christian. He is likely an atheist (or unaware of being a variant form of atheist called a “humanist,” who, perhaps inadvertently, sees humans as the ultimate authority—for instance, on a subject like morality as opposed to God being the authority). 

He has obviously encountered Christians who were not well versed in apologetics—or he is basing his claims on common caricatures of creationists from skeptics. 

This gives us a head start as to how to handle the response: use the Word of God, but also show why we use it. We may also have to use some philosophy to show that the view the inquirer is using is not well grounded. 

Remember that each hostile email is an opportunity to share the truth. Here is RB’s letter exactly as it arrived. 

Letter, Unedited: 

i would just like to comment that the only proof of creationism is the bible. the bible was written by men. men can lie. man is capable of the most horribly attrocities on the planet. you ask us not to believe in the word of God, but the word of men who claim that they are speaking for God. most people pick ad choose what they want to believe in the bible. if you believe one part of the bible, you have to believe every single word. you can't take parts word-for-word, and change the rest of it through your own interpritation. all i hear is that science is all wrong because it disputes the bible, but the bible itself is the only evidence of any creationist claims. dinosaur bones were burried by the devil to test our faith. you can just discredit any scientific evidence by saying "it doesn't say that in the bible." it doesn't say anything about chemistry in the bible. does that mean that all chemists are wrong because their explanation is not in the bible?

R.B., U.S. 

Response: 

Thanks for the inquiry. I am responding below with both sincerity and respect. 

[Note: I like to start many letters like this to show the author that I am not trying to be harsh by any means. It is difficult to read the tone of a letter or email, so be up front and say (and mean!) that it is written with kindness. Even though someone may send a hostile email, we should not treat them as an enemy. The false philosophy and false principalities are the enemy (Ephesians 6:12). 

We need to keep in mind that all Christians were once enemies of God who were saved by grace through faith in Jesus Christ (Romans 5:10; Ephesians 2:8). God first loved us, setting the example for us to pass along love and respect for others created in His image (1 John 4:9; John 15:17). In fact, we are commanded to use gentleness and respect (1 Peter 3:15)]; this response will also be done in a point-by-point style.  

i would just like to comment that the only proof of creationism is the bible. the bible was written by men. 

Of course, the Bible was written by men, but his claim here is that God was NOT involved. He has no way of substantiating the validity of his claim (no God involved in the production of the Bible) except by blind faith which is arbitrary. For someone to truly make this statement, he would have to be transcendent and omnipresent. 

He would have to be able to “see” into the spiritual realm and verify that God did not influence the writers of the Bible many years ago. Such attributes that this person is inadvertently claiming are attributes of God. So, in essence, R.B. is claiming to be God, or just repeating what he has heard from others, who claim to know more than God. 

This is a worldview issue right from the start. One can believe R.B., or any human, is “god” (i.e., humans seen as the ultimate authority), or one can place his faith in the true Creator God and His eyewitness account in His Word, seeing Him as authoritative. One can respond by pointing out that he is claiming to be God with this statement. 

men can lie. 

This is true, but not because R.B. is saying it. It is true because God says it (Romans 3:4). And R.B. apparently believes that lying is morally wrong. In a response, one can point out that for R.B. to say this; he is borrowing morality from the Bible by at least admitting to the concept of moral truth. 

But interestingly, one could ask R.B., “Were you lying when you claimed the Bible was written merely by men?” What this shows is that, logically, by the writer’s own standards, he could be lying. Of course, this should be done with gentleness and respect (1 Peter 3:15). 

man is capable of the most horribly attrocities on the planet. 

Again, this is true, but not because R.B. said it. In fact, I am glad that he recognizes this, because it gives us two ways to respond. 

1. Originally, God made the world perfect, and there were no atrocities. But because of man’s sin, the world is now subject to such things. It serves as a reminder that we need a Savior from sin and this sin-cursed world.[1] 

2. Many people often try to blame God for such atrocities, yet the reader rightly recognizes that man is involved. Man’s sin, again, is why such things exist. 

Both of these answers lead into the gospel message.[2] 

Another thing that is useful is to show that R.B. is borrowing Christian morality to argue against it. Consider the illustration below: 

Biblical Morality

 Image in original article

He is borrowing from the Bible’s morality to say such things are wrong. 

you ask us not to believe in the word of God, but the word of men who claim that they are speaking for God. 

Note the fallacy here. He is assuming that his statement above (that leads to a human claiming to be God) is true; hence, he is building on it. We need to point out the fallacy and then show what this philosophy leads to (the “don’t answer, answer” strategy from Proverbs 26:4–5). One could say: 

I don’t accept your proposition that God had nothing to do with His Word, but let’s assume for a moment that you are correct. How do you propose to save yourself from sin and death if salvation has not come through Jesus Christ? 

Also, why would you be upset with horrible atrocities and lies? By saying lies and horrible atrocities are wrong, you are borrowing from a biblical worldview. In a worldview that does not acknowledge the God of the Bible, why are such things wrong? Such things would be governed by chemical reactions in the brain. Why would anyone be upset about titanium reacting with boron? 

most people pick ad choose what they want to believe in the bible. 

Sadly, this is true, and it reveals how much humanism has influenced Christians. In essence, what happens is that people (even Christians) use their own ideas to pick and choose what they want to believe from the Bible. 

So, Christians, take note of what the real authority is in this situation: a person’s own ideas, not God’s Word. The real authority to those who “pick and choose” is a human, not God, i.e., humanism. Sadly, many Christians in today’s culture are mixing Christianity with humanism (recall Exodus 20:3). As Christians, we should always use God’s Word as the authority, not our own sinful, fallible reasoning. 

In response to R.B., one could point out that R.B. is doing the same thing. He is opting to believe that lying and horrible atrocities are wrong. He is picking and choosing these things from the Bible to believe, whether he realizes it or not, yet rejecting the rest—including its authority statements. 

if you believe one part of the bible, you have to believe every single word. 

If R.B. really believed this, then why doesn’t he believe the whole Bible, since he already borrowed from its morality and concept of truth? 

you can't take parts word-for-word, and change the rest of it through your own interpritation. 

Take note of R.B.’s assumption here. He assumes that the entire Bible is written in the same literary style. A remedial look at the Bile reveals poetry, metaphors, literal history, prayers, genealogical data, etc. So, he gives a false assumption and tries to build on it, so his entire argument breaks down. 

The issue is letting God interpret His own Word (Scripture interprets Scripture). This is why understanding the context and the complementary nature of Scripture is so important. It has nothing to do with human interpretation. Many, such as R.B., may be assuming “no God,” and therefore that God cannot interpret so people must. But this is not the case. 

Proverbs 8:8–9 and 2 Corinthians 4:2 reveal that the Scriptures are to be taken plainly or straightforwardly. I like to put this in simple terms: Metaphors are metaphors; poetry is poetry; literal history is literal history; and so on. So, there should be no reason for outlandish interpretations, unless one does it of their own mind (e.g., mixing it with humanism). 

all i hear is that science is all wrong because it disputes the bible, 

I wanted to cut this phrase off here and explain two things. First, science is not all wrong. It is a methodology that actually confirms the Bible and most fields of science were developed Bible believers. 

And second, R.B. is confusing the term “science” with secular interpretations of science and evolution. 

but the bible itself is the only evidence of any creationist claims. 

In reality, the Bible is the foundation for creationists’ claims. But all facts can be used by creationists as evidence. For example, dinosaurs are often taught as evidence for evolution and millions of years, but they are used by creationists to teach that God created them on Day 6 and that the bulk of the dinosaurs died in the Flood of Noah's day leaving their fossils behind (that is those that were not on the Ark).[3] 

dinosaur bones were burried by the devil to test our faith. 

If this is intended as a caricature of our position (or a general creationist position), it’s just a plain straw man argument. As just stated, dinosaurs existed and their bones were buried in the Flood. Interesting that for someone who is arguing against the Bible, R.B. seems to adhere to biblical teaching that the devil exists! 

you can just discredit any scientific evidence by saying “it doesn’t say that in the bible.” 

Again, take note that R.B. is equating interpretations with “scientific evidence.” We do not dispute dinosaur bones, we dispute the dates given for them, and we have reasonable doubt for those dates.[4] Scientific models and interpretations offer great support for the Bible. However, at the ministry we like to point out that scientific models can change with new information, but the Bible is still the inerrant framework within which to interpret scientific facts. 

it doesn’t say anything about chemistry in the bible. 

When there are absolutes (i.e., “doesn’t say anything”) in a statement, it is good to re-read it and see if that absolute is true. As a side note, in an atheistic worldview, in which absolutes do not exist, it is interesting that absolutes are used quite often! 

Regardless, the Bible does touch on chemistry, but the Bible isn’t a chemistry textbook. Consider passages about iron, bronze, and copper. To purify such items and mix alloys requires some chemistry. In fact, materials processing requires considerable amounts of chemistry. Naturally there are some subjects not mentioned in Scripture, but that is not a problem. For example, the Bible doesn't say that using a club (or gun, or rope, etc.) to kill someone is wrong; it says murder is wrong. The framework is in place. 

does that mean that all chemists are wrong because their explanation is not in the bible? 

Note another absolute (all) that tries to set up that creationists think all chemists are wrong. Of course, there are creationists who are chemists, and because of God’s attributes that we know from the Bible (logical, non-contradictory), we know that chemistry is possible. So, it has little to do with this, even though R.B. claims that it does. 

Now that we have answered the inquirer, it is good to sum up with the gospel—whether a few lines or even more in-depth. It is always good to close with some encouraging words about what to do next and even an invitation to learn more about Jesus Christ and the Bible. Remember the great commission at the end of Matthew. We want to see people saved. Perhaps something like: 

I can see that you have a strong moral conscious (lying is wrong, atrocities by man are horrible, etc.), and this is good, since it comes from the Bible. R.B., I hope that this response has challenged you to consider the truth of the Bible, which seems to be your biggest stumbling block. I want to encourage you to study this further and consider the claims of Christ. 

Then perhaps link to an article or chapter that explains the Gospel to make it a little easier for them and close with: 

With kindness in Christ, 

Bodie Hodge, a sinner saved by grace. 

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist since 1998 helping out in various churches and running an apologetics website. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.   

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.  

Originally at Answers in Genesis; Edited; Republished by permission.

 



[2] For more on this please see: The Gospel of Jesus Christ, Biblical Authority Ministries: Being Saved.

[3] Bodie Hodge, Dinosaurs, Dragons, and the Bible, Master Books, Green Forest, AK, 2023

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