top of page

SHOP

The First Four Days of Creation (2019, PDF Download)

$7.95
1
Save this product for later
Share this product with your friends
The First Four Days of Creation (2019, PDF Download)
Product Details

The book, "The First Four Days of Creation" is a 86-page, illustrative book in full color, that explains how the first four days of Genesis 1 can be read in literal and chronological order and coincide with the known facts of modern science. There is no book like this on the market today. The images alone of how God put the universe together, piece by piece, is worth the price of the book. Robert explains in clear and concise language the scientific and historical details along the way. Hugh Owen, director of the Kolbe Center for the Study of Creation, wrote to Robert and said: "You have written the best book on the first four days of creation week that I have read." The book is recommended for Middle School and above, but can also be challenging and absorbing for college and professionals as well.

Recommended for Middle School and Above

Have you ever wondered how it all began? Where did it
come from? What came first? Who put it all together?
How long has it been here? How long will it last?
If you have tried to obtain the answers to these questions
from modern secular science you will get an assortment of
vague and ambiguous statements, many of them contradicting
each other. In fact, it could be said that today
secular science is more confused than it was in the Middle
Ages.

Why is this the case? Although it is true that modern
technology has provided us with a large amount of scientific
data, the most difficult step is giving that data the
proper interpretation. Not only is the data itself difficult
to understand, it is often influenced by the philosophical
beliefs of the interpreter. In a word, he often forces the
data to fit into his personal beliefs. Obviously, if one does
not have the proper foundation from which to interpret
the scientific data, the more data
one collects the more confused he
will become.

A good example of how philosophical
assumptions greatly influence how
one interprets the scientific data is
noted in the writings of atheist, Carl Sagan. For many decades
in the last century, Sagan ruled the world of cosmology
and led people to believe that there was no God and
that the Earth was just a “cosmic accident” with no rhyme
or reason for its existence.


bottom of page