In my past life as a protestant, the preacher always said that the earth is only 6000 years old and only heathens believed otherwise. I just could not buy into that and my questions went unanswered. It is one in a long, long line of teachings that led me to the true Church. Can anyone explain how this can be taught with a straight face. The nearest answer I received was that when God made the earth, He made the triobites and cephalopods already formed in the rocks. So, such evidence means nothing.
I’m Catholic, ex-Protestant, and my own sympathies are with the Creationists, not because they’re fundamentalists, but because in the long run I think they’ll prove to be right. I’ll admit I became quite fanatical when I first became Christian, but I’m less so now. I’ll also concede some Creationists can be very un-Christian when they meet people with different viewpoints.
If I had to pin my hopes on any one feature, it would be the magnetic decay of the earth. Since it’s been measurable (which means we’ve had the technology to do so), it has been decaying, and appears to have a half life of about 1400 years. Extrapolate backwards at that rate, and earth could be no more than 20,000 years or it would be molten.
I think it’s about 10,000 years old.
However we’ll have to wait to see if the magnetic field does one of these flips, and if so, whether it regenerates its field strength.
The sun’s magnetic field flips about every 11 years, but it doesn’t show much sign of decay, due to the enormous energy source. The earth doesn’t have that luxury.
And I concur with the poster about the Protestant pastor’s qualifications. They are qualified, but it would be comparatively rare to find pastors with science degrees, in the same way we have Jesuits with science degrees, and with the leisure to continue study in their fields. On the other hand, there are plenty of Protestant lay people with science degrees.