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Dinosaurs—were they masters of the world?The problem is not with dinosaurs, those real creatures whose bones have been found over most of the world. It is with the worldview in which dinosaurs are invariably presented, even to the very young. A major feature of the current Jurassic Park—inspired wave of dinosaur mania is the continual repetition that dinosaurs existed millions of years ago, dominated the earth, and died long before there were any people. This is opposed to the biblical world view, in which all things were created ‘very good’, with no death, disharmony, suffering, bloodshed or animals ripping each other apart before Adam’s sin brought death and bloodshed into the world. Exodus 20:11 states that all things were created in six days (the same days as our ordinary working week, as the passage makes clear—which must include dinosaurs. So if dinosaurs died out millions of years before man, then obviously Exodus 20:11 would be wrong. But this passage forms part of one of the Commandments … so if dinosaurs mean that six-day creation is a campfire story, maybe they mean the whole Law was a campfire story, too? The bottom line is: if the Bible can’t be trusted on such obvious things as dinosaurs when it comes to origins, how can it be trusted about the origin of sin? And, if the origin of sin is a myth (if sin is somehow our left-over animal ancestry), then the reason Jesus died is a myth too. First Corinthians 15:21–22 tells us, ‘For since by [a] man came death, by [a] man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive’. What about the future restoration? If there was an ‘age of the dinosaurs’ before man, then that’s all myth too. Scripturally, God promises to restore things to a sinless, deathless paradise—not to a world of dinosaurs eating each other. The stakes are high for Christians; the validity of the whole historic Creation/Fall/Redemption view is on the table. That explains:
Actually, if you strip away the evolutionary hype, there is nothing fantastic or eerie about dinosaurs. There is no reason to see them as something so startlingly different from the present world that it should be hard to conceive of them living on the planet at the same time as people or giraffes. Size? The largest dinosaur was probably smaller than today’s blue whale. The average size was probably that of the great red kangaroo. Big teeth? There are flesh-eating and plant-eating creatures alive which, proportionate to their body size, also have massive teeth. Whether we look at horns, scales, armor-plating, reptilian eggs or whatever, it is hard to see anything mysterious or radically different from what we see today. In fact, Jurassic Park may have done us a favour by helping us to visualize people and dinosaurs living at the same time, which in the biblical view of history is necessarily true. Steven Spielberg’s Jurassic Park tries to make this coexistence appear wrong and unnatural. A theme running throughout is that nature/evolution is an immensely powerful, god-like force and should not be tampered with. (One of the film’s characters, a ‘chaos theorist’, referred to ‘God’, but this was more in the context of a pantheistic, New Age type of evolutionary god-force.) A clear message of the film is that man has no inherent Genesis dominion/stewardship over the earth.1 People have no right to ‘mess with evolution’. The evolution-god has decreed that the dinosaurs should die out, so don’t revive them unless you want to pay the penalty. That this reflects Spielberg’s own philosophy was revealed in a recent TV interview. He said that it would be wrong and immoral to make a dinosaur from DNA (if it were possible). Why? Because they had had their chance, their shot, at evolution. In other words, evolution, not God, becomes the absolute standard for what is right or wrong. Watching Sam Neill gaze lovingly into the eyes of a plant-eating brachiosaur, or Laura Dern stroke a dying Triceratops is one thing, but can one conceive of people inhabiting the same planet as the film’s fierce, cunning Velociraptors? In fact, most of their fossils stand only about 1.2 metres (four feet) high, and there is no way of knowing their behaviour or intelligence for certain.
We know from Genesis, moreover, that pre-Flood man was no ignorant savage. With metal forging from the earliest times (Genesis 4:22), there would have been ample technological scope for man to comfortably exercise dominion over these raptors. And over Tyrannosaurus rex—even if it was the savage hunter the film portrays.2 In fact, with people in rebellion against the pre-Flood prohibition of meat-eating, T. rex may have been wise to avoid being in the same parts of the earth as man, so as not to be trapped and feasted upon.3 All of us, especially parents, should be concerned at the subtle anti-biblical messages accompanying ‘dinosaurmania’. Rather than avoiding the issue, parents should seize the opportunity to talk it through carefully, and should ensure their children are exposed to a healthy dose of biblically sound, quality dinosaur materials. It doesn’t take a ‘chaos theorist’ to tell us that our society is slipping more and more into chaos, as evolutionary thought undermines the Bible’s authority. Death and violence are glorified as evolutionary might, rather than being seen as the serious consequences of sin. Sin is ever more trivialized, and the Gospel is seen as more and more meaningless to modern man’s culture—except as Christians are ‘waking up’ to the enormous relevance of the creation/evolution issue in our time. Technologically superb it may be, but by distorting the biblical truth about dinosaurs and earth history, Steven Spielberg’s cinema spectacular serves to speed up society’s slide. Further ReadingFootnotes
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