Here are some little gems for you:
One student recently told Thompson how she and her father reconciled evolution with the Genesis account. God created the sun and moon on the fourth day; before that, a “day,” the student reasoned, could have been millions of years long.
“How long was that week [described in Genesis]?” Lance wonders. “Until the seasons were established, we don’t know how time would have operated. If you believe in a superior being, he could manipulate time.”
“Yeah, I don’t believe in the Darwin deal,” he says. “The Bible says God created everything, you know.”
Astounding! Absolutely astounding! - Dallas
Tracking Creation in Glen Rose
In the beginning, God created dinosaurs and humans, and they walked together in Texas.
At least, according to many people in Glen Rose.
The small town about 40 miles southwest of Fort Worth is home to some of the best-preserved dinosaur tracks in the world; it’s also a heavily Christian community where many locals interpret the book of Genesis literally.
Their belief is bolstered by a phenomenon in the riverbed. Alongside the dinosaur tracks are what resident R.C. McFall and others call “man tracks”—tangible proof of biblical creation accounts and a refutation of the theory of evolution.
McFall walks along the Paluxy River, careful not to place his cowboy boot in a dinosaur track. Muddy water fills the fossilized footprints embedded in this rocky ledge.
“There’s a track right there,” he says in a deep Texas drawl, pointing. “That hole is where my dad dug one out.”
If the river weren’t up, McFall explains, we’d see man tracks just a few feet away, in the same strata of rock as the dinosaur tracks.
The 113-million-year-old dinosaur tracks, first discovered in 1909, are an important part of Glen Rose’s livelihood, bringing thousands of visitors a year to attractions like Dinosaur Valley State Park and Dinosaur World. The town’s tourist industry, accounting for $23 million in annual revenue, was built largely on the jaw-dropping fact that fossils this old are still present today. Visitors can park their trailers at the Jurassic RV Park (the tracks actually date to the Cretaceous period) or stay at the Glen Rose Inn & Suites, where the sign features a cartoon dinosaur.
“The dinosaurs are what drive us,” says Billy Huckaby, executive director of the Convention and Visitors Bureau of Glen Rose. “You can’t develop a town of 2,000 into this kind of tourism revenue unless you’ve got something really special to promote.”
Tourist literature describes the tracks as millions of years old, but not everyone buys the science.
“I believe in the Bible,” McFall says. “I don’t believe the world’s over 6,000 or 7,000 years old. Course, everybody’s got their own interpretation.” [continue]
Tags: Texas, biblical literalism, creationism, evolution, science, stubbornness, theology
What he said!
Permalink Reply by Joan Denoo on April 21, 2012 at 11:02pm I'm so glad you found that. I was going to search for that as well. I gotta share that. : )
Permalink Reply by Joan Denoo on April 22, 2012 at 12:12am Via Loren Miller
Dr. Allan H. Clark replied to Alexandra's discussion Need help with irreducible complexity
Ramon Rego MD replied to Sentient Biped's discussion Harvard Dissertation Claims. "Hispanic low IQ" / Immigration Policy in the group Race, Ethnicity, & Culture
Loren Miller replied to Loren Miller's discussion When Christians become a 'hated minority' (John Blake, CNN)
John Kauffman replied to Maia Rodriguez's discussion Tornado Survivor Did Not Thank God
Dr. Allan H. Clark replied to Loren Miller's discussion When Christians become a 'hated minority' (John Blake, CNN)
Ruth Anthony-Gardner replied to Dallas the Phallus's discussion 5 fascinating reasons cockroaches will outlive us all in the group Wildlife
Luara replied to Sentient Biped's discussion Harvard Dissertation Claims. "Hispanic low IQ" / Immigration Policy in the group Race, Ethnicity, & Culture© 2013 Atheist Nexus. All rights reserved. Admin: Richard Haynes.

