He said that his son refused to accept Jesus Christ and just told him he was an atheist and would never trust the Bible. Yet he insisted that he taught his son about Christ and has taken him to church for years.
My name is Raul and I’m a pharmacy student from Texas (Pharm D candidate 2006). I can’t express enough gratitude to God for your ministry. As pharmacists (health care professionals) we’re taught that every decision especially when it comes to the care of patients must have evidence—something to back up the rational behind the decision made. I can truly say that your ministry is truly scientific in that you do your “homework,” get your references in order and present the information knowing that the information is backed up. Well done!!
I also would like to thank you on your assertions that bacterial resistance to antibiotics does not support evolution as some of my colleagues would like to believe. Bacterial resistance is a major issue when it comes to prescribing and filling prescriptions and it’s something that (along with many other things) I’m glad to see you have addressed since it’s an issue that directly relates to my profession (or future profession).
Again my hats off to your ministry. God bless you and keep up the work. Real scientists need your ministry!!
Raul Rendon, USA
Then I asked if the church taught Genesis as literal history or as allegory/metaphor. He promptly said that both he and the church agree that it was not literal history and was not meant to be taken as it was written and they wouldn’t dare teach their children anything else.
I said, “So you taught your son that the Bible wasn’t really trustworthy when it speaks in Genesis but you also told him that it is trustworthy when it speaks about Christ?”
He sounded like he was “squirming” on the phone. I said, “You realize that your son is actually a pretty smart kid.” I continued, “Since you made it clear to him that one part of the Bible wasn’t worth trusting, then he applied this to the rest of the Bible.”
At this point, the man I spoke with realized where I was coming from. I continued with a mini-relevance talk to explain the problem of death before sin and interpretation of Genesis.
Though he still didn’t agree with us, he understood that he was partly to blame for his son not accepting what the Bible teaches about Christ, and I encouraged him to re-evaluate Genesis’ plain reading, and then speak with his son. We discussed this a bit further and ended the conversation in a kind, Christ-like manner.
We have been clear that one can still be a Christian and be an evolutionist; however, this stance is inconsistent. This is one reason the church is losing its children to atheism.
As long as the church or parents tell their children not to believe what God says in Genesis, the children—logically—apply that stance to the whole Bible, including the gospel. And these children refuse to believe in Christ because they don’t trust the Bible in Genesis.
If parents want their children to take the gospel message seriously, then they need to set an example that the Bible can be trusted in all areas that it addresses, rather than teaching that only parts of the Bible can be trusted. Children are perceptive and this explains why they see many Christian role models, many times their own parents, as hypocritical.
The point, then, is yes, one can be compromised to the point of accepting evolution and it won’t affect their salvation, but it does affect the next generation and those who are witnessed to. Please pray that the church as a whole will return to the plain reading of the Bible and get properly rooted in Genesis, the foundation of the gospel.
Bodie Hodge, AiG–USA
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2006/03/10/why-is-my-son-atheist