Posted on 01/02/2005 12:20:11 PM PST by PatrickHenry
With its towering dinosaurs and a model of the Grand Canyon, America's newest tourist attraction might look like the ideal destination for fans of the film Jurassic Park.
The new multi-million-dollar Museum of Creation, which will open this spring in Kentucky, will, however, be aimed not at film buffs, but at the growing ranks of fundamentalist Christians in the United States.
It aims to promote the view that man was created in his present shape by God, as the Bible states, rather than by a Darwinian process of evolution, as scientists insist.
The centrepiece of the museum is a series of huge model dinosaurs, built by the former head of design at Universal Studios, which are portrayed as existing alongside man, contrary to received scientific opinion that they lived millions of years apart.
Other exhibits include images of Adam and Eve, a model of Noah's Ark and a planetarium demonstrating how God made the Earth in six days.
The museum, which has cost a mighty $25 million (£13 million) will be the world's first significant natural history collection devoted to creationist theory. It has been set up by Ken Ham, an Australian evangelist, who runs Answers in Genesis, one of America's most prominent creationist organisations. He said that his aim was to use tourism, and the theme park's striking exhibits, to convert more people to the view that the world and its creatures, including dinosaurs, were created by God 6,000 years ago.
"We want people to be confronted by the dinosaurs," said Mr Ham. "It's going to be a first class experience. Visitors are going to be hit by the professionalism of this place. It is not going to be done in an amateurish way. We are making a statement."
The museum's main building was completed recently, and work on the entrance exhibit starts this week. The first phase of the museum, which lies on a 47-acre site 10 miles from Cincinatti on the border of Kentucky and Ohio, will open in the spring.
Market research companies hired by the museum are predicting at least 300,000 visitors in the first year, who will pay $10 (£5.80) each.
Among the projects still to be finished is a reconstruction of the Grand Canyon, purportedly formed by the swirling waters of the Great Flood where visitors will "gape" at the bones of dinosaurs that "hint of a terrible catastrophe", according to the museum's publicity.
Mr Ham is particularly proud of a planned reconstruction of the interior of Noah's Ark. "You will hear the water lapping, feel the Ark rocking and perhaps even hear people outside screaming," he said.
More controversial exhibits deal with diseases and famine, which are portrayed not as random disasters, but as the result of mankind's sin. Mr Ham's Answers in Genesis movement blames the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado, in which two teenagers killed 12 classmates and a teacher before killing themselves, on evolutionist teaching, claiming that the perpetrators believed in Darwin's survival of the fittest.
Other exhibits in the museum will blame homosexuals for Aids. In a "Bible Authority Room" visitors are warned: "Everyone who rejects his history including six-day creation and Noah's flood is `wilfully' ignorant.''
Elsewhere, animated figures will be used to recreate the Garden of Eden, while in another room, visitors will see a tyrannosaurus rex pursuing Adam and Eve after their fall from grace. "That's the real terror that Adam's sin unleashed," visitors will be warned.
A display showing ancient Babylon will deal with the Tower of Babel and "unravel the origin of so-called races'', while the final section will show the life of Christ, as an animated angel proclaims the coming of the Saviour and a 3D depiction of the crucifixion.
In keeping with modern museum trends, there will also be a cafe with a terrace to "breathe in the fresh air of God's creation'', and a shop "crammed'' with creationist souvenirs, including T-shirts and books such as A is for Adam and Dinky Dinosaur: Creation Days.
The museum's opening will reinforce the burgeoning creationist movement and evangelical Christianity in the US, which gained further strength with the re-election of President Bush in November.
Followers of creationism have been pushing for their theories to be reintegrated into American schoolroom teaching ever since the celebrated 1925 "Scopes Monkey Trial", when US courts upheld the right of a teacher to use textbooks that included evolutionary theory.
In 1987, the US Supreme Court reinforced that position by banning the teaching of creationism in public schools on the grounds of laws that separate state and Church.
Since then, however, many schools particularly in America's religious Deep South have got around the ban by teaching the theory of "intelligent design", which claims that evolutionary ideas alone still leave large gaps in understanding.
"Since President Bush's re-election we have been getting more membership applications than we can handle,'' said Mr Ham, who expects not just the devout, but also the curious, to flock through the turnstiles. "The evolutionary elite will be getting a wake-up call."
"I believe God created life and that evolution was the process he used."
By these statements I take it that you define 'creationism' rather narrowly as believing that God created everything in 6 earth days about 6,000 years ago?
I would say there are probably a lot of people out there who don't believe exactly and only that but consider themselves creationists. (In fact, I'd consider you to be one.)
Perhaps you are a troll.
LOL Since I know it isn't going to happen, it's no threat to me.
Apostasy and heresy are not the same thing. Someone with your knowledge should no that. Wait a minute. What knowledge do you have?
Please share some facts with us.
Presuming, of course, that nothing changed over that period of time.
But wait, isn't that what evolutionary theory is all about - change over time?
"If day is millions of years, hardly any. If you are arguing for special creation or young earth, alleles falsify that argument. "
"IF" now look who is floundering. Peter says not to be ignorant of this one thing,
that one day is with the LORD as a thousand years, and a thousand years is as one day.
So you don't believe what Peter has to say?
Now again Christ was, is and will always be special, and to have a problem with God creating a specific man and woman to be the lineage for which Christ comes through is your point of contention. Our Heavenly Father was please with His creation, HE said it was good. Man is the one with the problem.
Now calling these people 'special' indicates you have a problem with what is written, and ignoring just how special these people turned out to be. We are all sinners, only ONE came through this flesh age and did not sin.
Now that is a gem worthy of the advanced degrees you claim to have! There is a difference between a PHD and a GED.
You seem to be stalking me and proof texting my posts.
You can make as good a case for that as you can for your advanced degrees.
I didn't see any reference to Shubi in the post I was responding to. I was responding to your characterization of someone named "PH".
Perhaps you were previously banned.
Yes, it is change over much longer than 5000 years. That is why you guys don't believe it. You have not sufficiently studied the biology to make the connections over the millions of years it has been changing.
Show me a dino and human fossil together in a strata and you win.
Then your response makes no sense whatsoever.
Perhaps you provoked me like you are trying to do now.
You know, calling someone a liar is a bannable offense. Also, mentioning another thread and carrying on a flame war over it is against policy here as well. But that probably doesn't bother your "ethics" as long as you can silence a formidable opponent.
Now, either get back to the subject at hand and stop this tactic of distracting from the real issues, or prepare to be shunned.
Post ignored
Incoherent
"Incoherent"
lol bye bye
Man and Woman, he created them -- THIS happens on the 6th DAY!
There is no reference cited on #87 either, but at least you wrote that one.
Why don't you just tell us what your reference is?
I would guess something written by Ken Ham or J. Wells.
It gets tiresome using and explaining the term YEC.
I don't know of anyone posting on these threads who would deny the possibility that creation was rigged to produce life. This, however, is not something that science can decide, unless we find something like a pretty picture embedded in some mathematical constant.
My guess is that you were asking a rhetorical question?
He is equating the darwin style teaching that life has no value, we are simply bacteria with legs, to the utter lack of respect for life some people display.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.