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Creation gains in Brazil. Will that help it spread worldwide?

Temlakos~POTL~PWCM~JLA~☆ 2012/07/02 23:27:16
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The population of Brazil grows while those of other countries
shrinks. And higher proportions of those people now believe in creation.
That is, they believe that God created human beings and the world. More
to the point, they believe that this happened 10,000 years ago, or more
recently. This trend has run for at least seven years, while Brazil as a
country grows richer, not poorer. These facts suggest that Brazil will
be a powerful force in promoting creation, and specifically young-earth creation, worldwide.


Christianity in Brazil today

Yesterday, Andrea Madambashi of The Christian Post wrote that Brazil today has more evangelical Christians, and fewer Roman Catholics.
She compared numbers of evangelicals and Catholics ten years apart. She
also noticed one thing that suggests that the trend will only get
stronger. Evangelical Christianity in Brazil is clearly a movement of
the young. The Roman Catholic Church is the church of the old.


At first glance, one might take little from this article other than
“out with the old, in with the new.” But the Question Evolution campaign
points out one thing that Madambashi missed. That is: evangelical Christians are more likely to believe in creation than are Roman Catholics. This should surprise no one. Five years ago, Pope Benedict XVI denounced as “absurd” the clash between creation and evolution.


On one hand there is much scientific proof in favor of
evolution[. This] appears as a reality that we must see and which
enriches our understanding of life and being as such.


On the other hand, said His Holiness, evolution cannot say where
everything came from, nor to what end. (Of course not. Evolution
advocates frown at anyone who dares ask questions like that.)


This is where the Roman Catholic Church stands. Yet the RCC is
yielding to the evangelical movement. And that movement is not so quick
to believe the “scientific proofs” that so impressed His Holiness.


Creation in Brazil seven years ago
Rosinha Garotinho, who introduced creation into public schools in Rio

Rosinha Garotinho, Governor of Rio de Janeiro. Photo: Marcello Casal Jr/Agência Brasil, CC BY 3.0 Brazilian License


In 2004, Governor Rosinha Garotinho (a/k/a Rosinha Mateus) of Rio de Janeiro did something wild. She ordered that public schools in Rio would start teaching creation science as well as evolution. A year later, the Brazilian magazine Época surveyed the general public.


The results probably shocked them. Only nine percent of their sample accepted the strict naturalistic view of human origin.
Fifty-four percent accepted old-earth creation, the idea that man
appears millions of years ago but changed only as God said he would
change. Thirty-one percent accepted young-earth creation.


Furthermore, 89 percent of the sample agreed with what Governor
Garotinho did. 75 percent of the sample even said that creation should replace evolution in the schools.


Detractors of creation were quick to excuse the results. A government
official blamed the wording of the survey. The head of the Brazilian
Association for the Advancement of Science called the results a sign of
poor-quality science education. But if that were true, then fewer people
with advanced degrees should believe in creation than people without.
(God forbid they should simply be wrong and the people finally getting
wise to them!)


The survey results did not bear this out. Only ten percent of advanced degree holders accepted the naturalistic view, and six percent of non-holders.


Creation in Brazil and elsewhere moving forward

Consider, then, the trends. A politician in Brazil introduces creation into public schools. And the people say, in effect,


Go for it!


Seven years later comes evidence that young people in Brazil are
embracing a new church movement that welcomes young-earth creation
thought. And no one can, with justice, lay this to poor education.


Brazil is not even a poor country. It is rich, and getting richer. And some of them are spending their money to promote creation and “question evolution.”

Eric Kaufman (see video in original article) recently told a secular audience that “the religious [shall] inherit the earth.” The reason: secular countries are not even having enough children to replace those who die every year. Their populations are shrinking, while populations in highly religious countries, like Brazil, are growing.

Creation advocates in Brazil are cooperating with creation advocates in the United States and elsewhere. The Question Evolution campaign is not the only example. The Northwest Creation Network’s “Encyclopedia of Creation Science” (CreationWiki) opened a Portuguese site three years ago. A Brazilian émigrée to the United States was its first contributor. This year, a Brazilian resident took that site over and started to expand it. This might or might not be significant: he was born in Rio, the same State where Rosinha Garotinho now governs.

OK. What say you? Will this help spread belief in creation to the rest of the world?

Read More: http://www.conservativenewsandviews.com/2012/07/02...

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Top Opinion

  • Pat 2012/07/03 01:41:46 (edited)
    No.
    Pat
    +9
    All this means is that the rest of the world is becoming as bat s--t crazy as the evangelicals in the U. S.


    creationism

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Opinions

  • Michelle Radical Ed 2012/07/03 18:08:05
    Michelle
    So do I. :)
  • abycinnamon BN-1 2012/07/03 01:50:44
    Undecided
    abycinnamon BN-1
    +3
    it doesn't mean anything. stupid, gullable people are everywhere.
  • JohnT 2012/07/03 01:50:38
    Yes.
    JohnT
    +2
    Being a believer in God but not religions that are oppressive and controlling I can see where this Creation movement will grow.
  • jackolantyrn356 2012/07/03 01:42:57
    Yes.
    jackolantyrn356
    +2
    God Blesses Countrys who trust in God....
  • Pat 2012/07/03 01:41:46 (edited)
    No.
    Pat
    +9
    All this means is that the rest of the world is becoming as bat s--t crazy as the evangelicals in the U. S.


    creationism
  • Shadow13 2012/07/03 01:38:45
    No.
    Shadow13
    +7
    Stupidity knows no bounds I'm sure there are adherents all over the place but rational science will prevail over superstitious mythology.
  • Temlako... Shadow13 2012/07/03 01:39:43
    Temlakos~POTL~PWCM~JLA~☆
    +1
    I don't call it rational. Too many fudges.
  • Brian ☮... Temlako... 2012/07/03 03:38:06
    Brian ☮ R P ☮ 2012 ☮
    +2
    True science, for the most part, does not "fudge" anything, it simply adapts to new data. Not that there aren't unscrupulous purveyors of the sciences out there, but there certainly isn't some grand conspiracy to falsify knowledge...as in say...religion.
  • Cal 2012/07/03 01:27:00 (edited)
    Yes.
    Cal
    +2
    Brazil is a very vibrant country, and come a little later in time it'll be hosting the next FIFA World Cup. All eyes will be on Brazil soon.
  • endthefed.soundmoney 2012/07/03 01:26:50
    Undecided
    endthefed.soundmoney
    +1
    It could.
  • COCO 2012/07/03 01:18:21
    No.
    COCO
    I just don't think countries that have large populations of people living in extreme poverty should be bringing more children,kids should come when they are wanted and when people have the means to care for them,they shouldn't be brought by accident or just because you want your partner to be with you forever,many children come to this world to suffer,hunger,stigmas,even inheriting mortal diseases such as AIDS,I don't advocate abortion,I advocate prevention,contraception. children living in favelas in Brasil children living in favelas in Brasil
  • Dwight-... COCO 2012/07/03 02:38:44
    Dwight-AFCL>dogsbody
    +1
    I agree. are you having yourself fixed?
  • COCO Dwight-... 2012/07/03 04:07:53
    COCO
    +1
    No fix,I am old,I already have my kids,in a responsible way.
  • Onyx11 2012/07/03 01:16:47
    No.
    Onyx11
    +3
    Parts of the world are too educated to beleive that.
  • Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL 2012/07/03 01:12:39
    Yes.
    Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL
    +2
    I believe it because no other theory makes any sense.....if you are honest with yourself.
  • KrSpo Barefoo... 2012/07/03 03:13:36
    KrSpo
    +2
    The Bible Makes sense... Riiight.
  • Barefoo... KrSpo 2012/07/03 08:34:27
    Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL
    Yes it does.
  • The Judge Barefoo... 2012/07/03 09:51:24
    The Judge
    +4
    Not really, Talking Snakes, people being swallowed by whales, hearing voices?
  • Barefoo... The Judge 2012/07/04 06:39:46
    Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL
    Makes more sense than our administration.
  • nightcrawler2005 2012/07/03 00:56:29
    No.
    nightcrawler2005
    +5
    Sorry. Truth and science will win out in the end.
  • Temlako... nightcr... 2012/07/03 01:34:05
    Temlakos~POTL~PWCM~JLA~☆
    +2
    If some of the other replies I have already received are any indicators, you might want to re-evaluate what you think, or have been told, is the truth, as against what is actually the Truth.
  • nightcr... Temlako... 2012/07/03 02:37:44
    nightcrawler2005
    +2
    Your entitled to believe what ever you want and I don't personally advocating basing your opinion on what other people think. I much more prefer seeking the truth and making up my own mind.
  • Michelle Temlako... 2012/07/03 02:40:48
    Michelle
    +3
    Most of the population once believed the entire universe revolved around the Earth; the Earth still orbited the Sun without care of what it's inhabitants thought. Just because some people believe creation doesn't make it true. It just means that some people believe creation.
  • KrSpo Michelle 2012/07/03 03:16:05
    KrSpo
    +1
    Today that Crowd is called the TEA PARTY...
  • KrSpo Temlako... 2012/07/03 03:15:19
    KrSpo
    Ok, tell us one proven truth of the Bible.. Oh wait, there aren't any proven truths in the bible.. There is no evidence
  • The Judge Temlako... 2012/07/03 09:52:45
    The Judge
    Just because more people believe it does not make it fact.
  • Rubyking 2012/07/03 00:55:11
    Yes.
    Rubyking
    +1
    but that will not help it be accepted worldwide
  • kir 2012/07/03 00:46:26
    No.
    kir
    +5
    I honestly don't think it will have that large an impact on the rest of the world; the world's views are headed increasingly towards science which requires evidence to back up a hypothesis and must disregard a hypothesis as being unlikely when there is contrary evidence.
  • Adam 2012/07/03 00:31:54
    Yes.
    Adam
    +4
    I'm a physicist with a masters degree and I believe in the young earth theory. I have just ran into way to much that supports young earth and way to much that contradicts old earth.
  • Barefoo... Adam 2012/07/03 01:14:47
    Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL
    +1
    Thank you. :)
  • Adam Barefoo... 2012/07/03 01:39:50
    Adam
    +3
    its sad because my colleagues tell me I am not a scientist because I believe that. Then I shock them when I ask them how they could say that when science itself requires an interpretation of the evidence and that many interpretations have fit with evidence many times before, and just because mine is different doesn't make it wrong. Clearly many have made colossal mistakes in the past.
  • Idiot r... Adam 2012/07/03 02:33:48
    Idiot repubs
    +3
    You are not a scientist, you don't have a doctorate, you might be a technician, you certainly have no lab or funding of your own.
  • Adam Idiot r... 2012/07/03 05:23:24
    Adam
    +1
    You don't need to have a doctorate to be a researcher. Heck you don't even need a bachelor's degree to be a scientist. All you need is the know how and the desire. Many scientist in history have done their study without any higher level education.
  • Barefoo... Adam 2012/07/03 08:36:20
    Barefooted Nana ∞ijm♥∞AFCL
    well said
  • Idiot r... Adam 2012/07/03 11:41:11
    Idiot repubs
    Liar, it just makes you a crackpot that people laugh at.

    You'd do well in the 16th century, not today.
  • Adam Idiot r... 2012/07/03 12:39:27
    Adam
    I'm sorry the truth angers you.
  • Idiot r... Adam 2012/07/03 18:14:59 (edited)
    Idiot repubs
    LOL, you do your research on the internet, not in a physics lab? You are no more a physicist than Bristol Palin is.
  • Adam Idiot r... 2012/07/03 19:49:12
    Adam
    Are you so seriously deluded to not realize how many reliable sources one may be able to obtain through access on the internet. When it comes the creation/evolution subject of course I research it on the internet. Its not like that is my specific field of study. I have access to many journals and scholarly websites not to mention other scientist through the internet.
  • Idiot r... Adam 2012/07/03 20:10:34 (edited)
    Idiot repubs
    Working in a major research facility, I know you saying you do research on line and not working even as a technician in the field of Physics only makes you delusional about who you really are. It only makes you a wanna be
  • Adam Idiot r... 2012/07/04 00:35:22
    Adam
    you might want to check yourself on what is delusional.

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