Ken Ham’s Honorary Doctorate from Bryan College, and the Idolatrous Inability to Differentiate Between Philosophical Naturalism and Science

Back in 2010, Ken Ham criticized Bryan College for not taking a strong enough stand on a literal, YEC interpretation of Genesis 1-11. Three years ago, on the heels of the Nye/Ham debate, Ken Ham penned a blog post on March 4, 2014, entitled, “What is Happening at Bryan College?” in which he commented on…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 67): Israel is Not God’s People; the Middle East Problems are not all the United States’ Fault

In light of the previous two posts, in which I tried to sketch out a brief overview of both the Israeli-Palestinian conflict over the past hundred years, and what has transpired throughout the Middle East ever since the establishment of the State of Israel, I would like to now offer some of my thoughts regarding…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 66): The Complicated Mess that is the US Involvement in the Middle East

Most Americans know something about America’s involvement in the Middle East. Most Americans know vaguely, or have at least heard about, the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, the Iraq War, ISIS, Al-Qaeda, the Taliban in Afghanistan, and Iraq. Older Americans will remember the first Persian Gulf War, the Iran hostage crisis, the Ayatollah Khomeini, the Shah of Iran,…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 65): US Involvement in the Middle East–The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

One of the hot-button issues in America today that normally divides among political party lines is that of the United States military involvement throughout the world, particularly the Middle East. From the current crisis in Syria, the threat of ISIS, and the growing influence of Iran throughout the region, back to the Iraq war, to…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 64): 20th Century Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism (You’re going to learn a few things you didn’t know)

In the past few Worldview posts, we have taken a look at some of the most influential people and events in the first part of the 20th century: Vladimir Lenin, Margaret Sanger, Adolf Hitler, Sigmund Freud, Margaret Mead, and Alfred Kinsey. Lenin and Hitler, and their atrocious regimes, were so inhumane that it can explain…

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Bodie Hodge at Answers in Genesis and Bill Nye: Further Out to the Fringes of Sanity (In their own different ways, of course)

For the past two years, I have written quite a lot about the creation/evolution debate, and perhaps two of the main points I have emphasized time and time again have been (1) the young earth creationism (YECism) of Ken Ham is neither scientific nor biblical, and has never been considered a fundamental tenet of the…

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Hank Hanegraaff, The Orthodox Church, and Evangelicalism’s Tendency to Treat People Like Lepers

Two weeks ago, I happened to see that someone had posted an article that Hank Hanegraaff, “The Bible Answer Man,” had officially joined the Orthodox Church on Palm Sunday. Now, I remember hearing his show on the radio occasionally back in the early 90s, but I never listened much more than a few minutes—it just…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 63): Margaret Mead and Alfred Kinsey–Sex is on the Menu

In this post, I focus on two people from the first half of the 20th century who have had a rather profound effect on modern attitudes toward sex, although you might not realize it: Margaret Mead and Alfred Kinsey. Margaret Mead: Coming of Age in Samoa (1928) As the 1920’s moved along, the hits just…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 62): Sigmund Freud, and His Scientific Claims that Religion is an Illusion

Within a short span of ten years, not only did Lenin, Sanger, and Hitler all write their seminal works, but Sigmund Freud also contributed what was to be one of his most influential works, The Future of an Illusion. (It is interesting to note that the young Adolph Hitler grew up in Vienna, the very…

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The Ways of the Worldviews (Part 61): Adolf Hitler and National Socialism

One year after Vladimir Lenin died, and three years after Sanger wrote The Pivot of Civilization, Adolph Hitler wrote Mein Kampf from a German prison. Like Lenin and Sanger, Hitler’s worldview was in large part shaped by the fallout of the Enlightenment. We must remember that despite the rhetoric of liberty and democracy during the…

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