City Heights Church
946 Main St, Dartmouth, NS, B2W 3V3
Ph: (902) 462-6099     Fax: (902) 462-3183
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Sunday Morning Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Kidz Club and Nursery provided

Top 10 Questions

  1. Where did Cain find his wife?
  2. Are dinosaurs mentioned in the Bible?
  3. Where did God come from?
  4. Why couldn't God have used evolutionary processes?
  5. Was Noah's Flood global or local?
  6. What's the best 'proof' of creation?
  7. How can we see distant stars in a young universe?
  8. What about the big bang?
  9. How long were the days of Genesis 1?
  10. How accurate is the Carbon-14 dating method?

Noah’s Flood covered the whole earth

Many Christians today think the Flood of Noah’s time was only a local flood, confined to somewhere around Mesopotamia. This idea comes not from Scripture, but from the notion of ‘billions of years’ of Earth history.

But look at the problems this concept involves:

Belief in a world-wide Flood, as Scripture clearly indicates, has the backing of common sense, science and Christ Himself.

References and notes

  1. Jonathan Sarfati, ‘How did all the animals fit on Noah’s Ark?’, Creation 19(2):16–19, 1997. See also John Woodmorappe, Noah’s Ark—a Feasibility Study, Institute for Creation Research, Santee, California, 1995. Return to text.
  2. Note that the Bible talks about mountains rising (in connection with God’s rainbow promise, so after the Flood): see CEN Technical Journal 12(3):312–313, 1998. Everest has marine fossils at its peak. Therefore, the mountains before the Flood are not those of today. There is enough water in the oceans so that, if all the surface features of the earth were evened out, water would cover the earth to a depth of 2.7 km (1.7 miles). This is not enough to cover mountains the height of Everest, but it shows that the pre-Flood mountains could have been several kilometers high and still be covered. Return to text.
  3. Some ‘progressive creationists’, who cannot accept a global Flood because of their commitment to millions of years for the ages of fossils, try to promote belief in a ‘universal’ Flood. This leads many unsuspecting evangelicals to think they believe in a world-wide Flood, but what they mean by this is that even though it was a local flood, all humanity outside of the Ark perished in it. However, it boggles the mind to believe that after all those centuries, no one would have migrated to other parts. Or that people living on the periphery of such a local Flood would not have moved to the adjoining high ground rather than be drowned. Return to text.