Reading it felt like opening a time capsule.
I love the opening quote-
"Science gives us the full accord of facts- It costs the church a severe struggle to give up one interpretation and adopt another- but no evil need to be apprehended- The Bible still stands in the presence of the whole scientific community, unshaken”
Charles Hodge- Princeton 1829
Some parts made me laugh. Some parts made me cringe a little. Some parts still sound exactly like me. I could still see that sixth-grade kid sitting in Robinson Elementary instinctively resisting the idea that life was merely the result of blind accidents over vast periods of time. I could still feel the emotional charge behind those old debates.
What struck me most, though, was not merely the content of the arguments, but the certainty surrounding them. Everyone seemed so sure. Young earthers. Old earthers. Atheists. Fundamentalists. Scientists. Apologists.
Fifteen years later, I am less certain about simplistic systems and more convinced that reality is far more layered, mysterious, and beautiful than any of us fully grasp.
Some things have not changed for me at all.
I still believe the universe screams transcendence.
Ironically, the Big Bang itself never weakened my faith. In many ways, it strengthened it. An eternal, self-existing universe always seemed easier for materialism to explain. But a universe with a beginning — ordered, intelligible, mathematically elegant, and fine-tuned in astonishing ways — raises enormous questions. Science may describe processes beautifully, but description is not the same thing as ultimate explanation.
Why is there something instead of nothing? Why does mathematics map onto reality with such precision? Why does consciousness exist? Why do beauty, morality, love, meaning, and rationality feel so deeply woven into the fabric of existence?
I have no real issue anymore with adaptation and change within living organisms. The evidence for that is substantial and observable. Species adapt. Selection occurs. Biology is dynamic. None of that particularly threatens me.
What I remain unconvinced by is the philosophical leap that says mechanism alone explains everything — that blind material processes fully account for life, consciousness, morality, beauty, rationality, and the human longing for transcendence.
That still feels like a leap of faith of its own.
But my biggest shift over the last fifteen years may not actually be scientific. It may be hermeneutical.
I increasingly suspect that Genesis was doing something far more profound than giving modern readers a scientific timeline.
The more I study the ancient world, the more I think Genesis is deeply connected to the cultures surrounding Israel — particularly Egypt and the ancient Near East. It reads less and less to me like a modern lab report and more like a theological declaration of war against paganism, chaos, and false gods.
In a world where the sun, moon, sea, animals, rulers, and fertility were worshipped, Genesis calmly demotes them all. The lights in the heavens are not gods. The sea is not divine chaos. Humanity is not slave labor for the gods. Men and women bear the image of God Himself.
I now think we sometimes force Genesis to answer questions Moses may not have even been attempting to address. We bring modern scientific expectations into an ancient theological text and then become shocked when tensions emerge.
That does not mean Genesis is false. It means we may misunderstand its purpose.
And honestly, the older I get, the more comfortable I am admitting how much we simply do not know.
Time itself is mysterious. Physics is strange. Human perception is limited. Scientific models change. Theological systems sometimes overreach. We are finite creatures attempting to explain origins from inside the system itself.
That should produce at least a little humility in all of us.
One thing I still appreciate about my younger self was that I never wanted this debate to become a test of Christian fellowship. Even then I knew faithful believers existed across these views. I still believe that today. I never felt that questions regarding the meaning of Genesis automatically meant a person abandoned a 'high view of Scripture'.
I have watched some Christians act as though accepting an old universe destroys the gospel. I have also watched some skeptics speak as though evolutionary theory eliminated the need for God altogether. After years of listening to both camps, I find myself skeptical of both forms of certainty.
What concerns me more in 2026 is not whether every Christian lands in exactly the same place on Genesis, but whether we have lost the ability to wrestle honestly, humbly, and charitably with difficult questions.
The internet has not helped us there.
Everything now gets flattened into tribes, outrage, and slogans. But reality is usually more complicated than our systems. Scripture is deeper than our talking points. And God is certainly bigger than our categories.
I still believe God created.
I still believe creation declares His glory.
I still believe Scripture is inspired and trustworthy.
I still believe Jesus Christ is the center of history.
and yes, I believe the universe is YOUNGER than we espouse constantly in society.
and for 2026 trends- I do not believe there is life outside us... however, there IS a spiritual realm that is very real and more observable than we could imagine!
And I still think the most important battle is the identity of Jesus, the reality of truth, and whether this universe is fundamentally meaningful or merely accidental.
Fifteen years ago I ended my article with the words:
“Should be a fun run!”
Oddly enough, after all the reading, wrestling, questions, and conversations… I still feel that way.











