Timeline vs. Truth: The Real Question of Earth’s Age

The Question Beneath The Clock. Some questions feel like they’ve been buried in the dust of time—tough, tangled, and endlessly debated. And one of those questions is this: How old is the Earth, really?

Honestly, I’ve never felt like that was my assignment to answer. Whether the world is six thousand years old or six billion, that debate seems better suited to geologists and astronomers than to pastors and poets. But still, people ask. So here’s what I’d say.

Timeline isn’t the same as Truth

Christian faith doesn’t hinge on how long the Earth has been spinning. To hang the whole weight of the gospel on the tick of a clock is like putting your trust in the scaffolding instead of the structure. Let’s not confuse chronology with theology.

Genesis—majestic, mysterious, and foundational—isn’t written like a science manual. It’s poetic, but that doesn’t mean it’s untrue. It tells the truth that matters most. Not the kind you measure with charts and carbon dating, but the kind that wakes your heart up and points it toward something eternal.

Wonder is Greater than a Telescope

When the Psalmist wrote, “The heavens declare the glory of God,” he wasn’t waiting for a telescope. He already knew what awe looked like. He saw the stars and felt the truth behind them.

Could God have created everything in six literal days? Of course. Could He have used six billion years? Absolutely. Time is His to command. If He made the world appear aged—like Adam, formed as a man rather than a baby—that’s His prerogative. He’s not bound by our systems; He invented time.

The Deeper Question

So whether you lean young-earth, old-earth, or somewhere in the mystery between, don’t let the timeline shake your faith. Because the most important question isn’t how long the world has existed, but what will we do with the One who stepped into it? The One born of a woman, in the fullness of time.

This story isn’t just about beginnings. It’s about redemption.

And that, my friend, is the truest wonder of all.

Sharing His Wonder,

The age old question of age. By Scott Humston

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