Creationist museum in Idaho takes different approach to presenting exhibits

 Photo: Facebook/Northwest Science Museum

A new creationist museum in Idaho is taking on a different approach in presenting creationist science to visitors.

According to the Northwest Science Museum's Executive Director Douglas J. Bennett, the museum will present both an evolutionary explanation and a Biblical commentary on natural history exhibits. This, Bennett said in the Los Angeles Times, is intended to show visitors that creationist science is a better explanation for the natural events around us.

"If we put both out there, a person that's actually seeking the truth will look and say, 'Ah, the biblical explanation fits what I see in the world around us a lot better than evolution,' " Bennett explained to the LA Times.

The museum, which is located in a light industrial park by Boise's auto row, hosts exhibits of fossils including slices of petrified wood and nautilus shells, dinosaur eggs, the imprints of ancient leaves and a replica of the Lone Star Mastodon's skull.

The Lone Star Mastodon was discovered in a tar pit in La Grange, Texas in 2004.

Bennett says that the fossils in the exhibits are about 4,500 years old. The museum director explained that these "were buried during the (Great Flood) and fossilised at that time."

The Great Flood refers to the flood in the Bible that wiped out humanity, except Noah and his family who built an ark that took in survivors of different animals. Noah's family and the animals they cared for eventually repopulated the world.

Bennett said that the sauropod egg in the museum's exhibit is of importance.

He said people who supported evolution will say that there was no room in the Ark for a dinosaur, in the belief that dinosaurs pre-dated humans by millions of years.

Sauropods are large, four-legged dinosaurs with long necks. One species, the Brachiosaurus, could grow up to 40 to 50 feet high.

"Well, if you take a young one that's small on the ark, you've got plenty of room," Bennett said. "You wouldn't want to take an old, fully grown adult, because, after the flood, their purpose was to reproduce and populate the earth again."

News
At least 19 Christians arrested in Sudan amid false accusations of rebel ties
At least 19 Christians arrested in Sudan amid false accusations of rebel ties

Christian rights organisations have described the arrests as part of a broader campaign to suppress Christianity in Sudan

Iranian Christian allegedly beaten for requesting medical help
Iranian Christian allegedly beaten for requesting medical help

An Iranian Christian convert with a heart condition was allegedly beaten for requesting a cardiologist

Gender-critical Canadian dad fined ahead of 'litmus test' free speech hearing in Australia
Gender-critical Canadian dad fined ahead of 'litmus test' free speech hearing in Australia

"This is a serious issue with real world implications for families across the globe and we need to be able to discuss it," said internet sensation Billboard Chris, who is being backed by Elon Musk's X.

Proposed conversion therapy ban is unworkable
Proposed conversion therapy ban is unworkable

Conversion therapy ban would mean criminalising simple acts like prayer and having a conversation