Updated 05:14 pm.EST, Tue February 09, 2010

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Opinion|Wed, May. 23 2007 11:35 AM CP_TIM

Interview: Creation Museum Founder on Evolution Clash

By Jeremiah Gregier|Christian Post Correspondent

Protests have been planned, petitions have been signed, and people have voiced their opposition to the new $27 million dollar Creation Museum that will open next week in Petersburg, Ky., just outside Cincinnati. Ken Ham, the president and CEO of Answers in Genesis and founder of the museum, has not been dismayed, however. He has a message to tell, and he thinks it’s more than worth hearing.

  • Ken Ham Answers in Genesis Creation Museum
    (Photo: A. Larry Ross Communications)
    The Creation Museum, which depicts the Bible's description of the world being created in six days, will be opening on Memorial Day. It's founder Ken Ham, president and CEO of Answers in Genesis, is speaking to the media about the validity of this view compared to other creation models.

With less than a week away until the museum opens to the public, Ham was able to take some time away from his slew of interviews and other projects to speak with The Christian Post. During his time, Ham explained how his ministry’s view of creation is more than valid when put up against other models such as evolution, and that it is biblical as well. Through the Creation Museum, he hopes to change some mindsets that people hold onto so strongly.

CP: First off, your ministry’s biggest endeavor that is coming up, the Creation Museum, is about to open its doors on May 28, Memorial Day. How is the process right now? I’m assuming things are pretty hectic.

Ham: Things are very hectic. The infrastructure is done; the quality of the exhibits is finished. We actually have a number of our supporters coming in this week for sort of a sneak preview, and it’s also enabling us to work out ‘teething problems’ and things like that. We’ll go on modifying and adding some things, providing things, putting in a few new exhibits in the next few months as well. But the bottom line is that we’ll be ready for opening on May 28.

CP: Relating to the Creation Museum, there has obviously been a lot of controversy of late from both non-Christians and some Christians. Many of them say that, for instance, your museum will falsely persuade people, notably children, into believing something that is completely false. How do you handle that kind of criticism?

Ham: First of all, people who are saying that haven’t been to the museum yet, so how do they know what we’re saying? It’s just that they know we teach the Bible is true and that we read the Bible, and they say they’re against the Bible and that’s the bottom line.

The public schools tend to teach little kids from when they are very young about the whole universe without God and that God cannot be in science. They are indoctrinating children in an atheistic religious view of things. What we want to do is to teach children that you can believe the Bible and through scientific research, support the Bible’s view of history.

Everybody teaches children, atheists among them. The Bible tells us and compliments that Timothy was taught the things of the Lord from a child. We need to take our children and teach them the things of truth from when they are a child. This museum is open to all ages: children, adults, everybody. What I’ve found is that when children get this information when they are young, when the evolutionists try to teach them or persuade them, they know the right questions to ask and sort out the problems with it, because they’ve been taught how to think.

What we do at our museum, by the way, is that we actually get both sides in one sense, because we teach what evolutionists teach. But we teach [visitors] how to correctly think about science whereas evolutionists only teach one side and teach them incorrectly about science. They are the ones leading children astray, not us. Continue »

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