Friday, March 27, 2026

Alternative Explanations For The Resurrection Of Jesus Christ…And Their Failures

Alternative Explanations For The Resurrection Of Jesus Christ…And Their Failures

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, March 27, 2026 (Donate)

The resurrection of Jesus Christ stands at the center of Christianity and the Bible. The Bible says Jesus is risen. So, He is risen! It’s that simple.

Because of the power of the resurrection, unbelievers, in their opposition to God, have proposed hosts of alternative explanations and hypotheses in an attempt to account for the empty tomb and post-crucifixion appearances. Even so, it is rather easy to refute these false ideas that have been suggested to cast doubt on the resurrection.

Image of the empty tomb; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

Christian apologists, like myself, have examined these “explanations” (or more accurately failed hypotheses) in detail and show they lack merit over an over again. Below is an overview of the most common explanations and why they fail miserably.

Unknown Tomb Hypothesis

This idea suggests that the location of Jesus’ tomb was unknown, and therefore the disciples mistakenly proclaimed a resurrection simply because they couldn’t find the body.

However, this proposal doesn’t fit the historical record. Jesus was buried by Joseph of Arimathea, a respected member of the Sanhedrin (Matthew 27:57–60). His tomb was newly hewn and known to both Jewish authorities and Roman officials. The women who followed Jesus observed where He was laid (Mark 15:47), and they returned to the same location after the Sabbath.

If the tomb had been “unknown”, the Jewish leaders could have easily stopped the resurrection message by producing the body or identifying the correct burial site—which they didn’t! The fact that the message of the resurrection began in Jerusalem, the very place of the burial, shows that the tomb’s location was not in question. This suggestion fails miserably because it ignores the public and well-documented nature of the burial.

Wrong Tomb Hypothesis

Closely related to the previous claim is the suggestion that the women and disciples went to the wrong tomb and mistakenly concluded that Jesus had risen.

This explanation collapses after a remedial study of it. It requires that multiple individuals and groups independently made the same error. More importantly, it assumes that hostile authorities, who had every reason to disprove the resurrection, failed to correct such a simple mistake. If the wrong tomb had been visited, the correct tomb containing Jesus’ body could have been identified immediately.

Furthermore, the Gospel accounts record that guards were placed at the tomb and that it was sealed (Matthew 27:62–66). This indicates that the location was known and carefully monitored. The wrong tomb idea cannot explain why no one corrected the supposed error, and thus it lacks credibility.

Spiritual Resurrection View

Some suggest that Jesus rose only in a spiritual sense and that the resurrection narratives should be understood symbolically rather than physically.

This view contradicts the plain testimony of Scripture. The resurrection accounts often discuss the physical aspects of Jesus’ bodily resurrection. Jesus invited His disciples to touch Him (John 20:27), ate food in their presence (e.g., Luke 24:42–43), and showed that He wasn’t merely a spirit (Luke 24:39). Furthermore, the empty tomb itself demands a physical explanation.

In the Jewish context of the 1st century, resurrection was understood as bodily, not merely spiritual—as was the case of Lazarus being raised bodily as well (e.g., John 12:9). A purely spiritual resurrection would not have convinced the disciples that Jesus had conquered death. This idea fails because it does not align with the historical and textual evidence.

Hallucination Model

Another popular explanation is that the disciples experienced hallucinations of Jesus after His death.

While this may initially appear like a good possibility, it fails on several grounds. Hallucinations are typically individual experiences, yet the New Testament records appearances to groups, including more than 500 people at once (1 Corinthians 15:6). The possibility that large groups would experience identical hallucinations is laughable.

Moreover, hallucinations do not account for the empty tomb. Even if individuals imagined seeing Jesus, His body would still have remained in the grave. The model also fails to explain the conversion of skeptics such as James, the brother of Jesus, and Paul, a former persecutor of Christians.

The diversity, frequency, as well as the physical nature of the appearances make the hallucination hypothesis…miserably untenable.

Body Was Stolen Suggestion

This idea was based on claims that the body of Jesus was stolen, either by the disciples or by others—even Jewish leaders, and that the resurrection was therefore “fabricated”.

The Gospel accounts indicate that the tomb was sealed and guarded by Roman soldiers (Matthew 27:65–66). Overcoming such security would have been extremely difficult, especially for fearful disciples who were in hiding. Furthermore, if the disciples had stolen the body, they would have known the resurrection was false.

Yet these same disciples later endured persecution, imprisonment, and death for their testimony. People may die for what they believe to be true, but they do not willingly suffer for what they know is a lie. Additionally, this suggestion does not explain the numerous post-resurrection appearances of Jesus. Thus, the stolen body idea fails.

Nevertheless, The New Testament records that the religious leaders spread this specific explanation and claimed that the disciples stole the body of Jesus while the guards were asleep.

This is found in Matthew 28:11–15. The passage explains that after the resurrection, some of the guards reported what had happened. The chief priests met with the elders, devised a plan, and gave the soldiers money to promote a false story. The claim they were paid to say:

“His disciples came at night and stole Him away while we slept.” (Matthew 28:13 NKJV)

The leaders also assured the soldiers that if the report reached the governor, they would protect them and keep them out of trouble (Matthew 28:14). The text concludes:

“So they took the money and did as they were instructed; and this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this day.” (Matthew 28:15 NKJV)

Why this excuse is problematic? It should be obvious! If the guards were asleep, they could not have known who stole the body. Roman guards sleeping on duty could face severe punishment, even death for failing this mission by sleeping on the job. The presence of guards strengthens the case that the tomb was secure and the massive fear by the disciples for thinking they were next—consider Peter’s three denials of Jesus and the disciples hiding in rooms. This goes against this idea that they were bold enough to roll away a heavy tomb rock in the front of the guards who were ready for a warpath!

Thus, the explanation given by the leaders unintentionally highlights the weakness of alternative models and actually gives strong support to the reality of the empty tomb.

Resuscitation (Swoon) “Theory”

The resuscitation or “Swoon Theory” is the view that Jesus didn’t actually die but merely fainted on the cross and later revived in the tomb.

This view is medically and historically implausible. Roman executioners were highly skilled and ensured death. Jesus endured severe scourging, crucifixion, and a spear wound to His side (John 19:34), which produced blood and water, indicating death.

Even if Jesus had somehow survived the impossible, He would have been in a severely weakened condition. A 99%-dead man, who had not drunk anything in days after being crucified and speared through, nails holes in his foot nerves to prevent walking, could not inspire the belief that He was the risen Lord of life.

He would not have been capable of rolling away the stone—which is not a one-person job, escaping the tomb in front of soldiers, and appearing to His disciples in a way that convinced them He had triumphed over death. This “theory” fails because it contradicts both medical knowledge and the Gospel accounts.

Passover Plot

This idea is that Jesus intentionally orchestrated events to present Himself as the Messiah and staged His resurrection.

This explanation is arbitrary (speculative). It is also unconfirmed by evidence. This view assumes that Jesus was working with Jewish leaders, and Roman authorities, and his disciples, and hosts of the general public to plot His own execution “acting” by Roman authorities. It also fails to account for the certainty of His death and the post-resurrection appearances.

Furthermore, it does not explain the transformation of the disciples or their willingness to suffer and die for their message. If the resurrection had been staged, the disciples would have been participants in a deliberate deception, which contradicts their later actions. When the Jewish leaders were pressured, they could easily have said it was just a big plot instead of hunting down and killing people like Paul was sent to do.

The Passover plot ultimately collapses under its own arbitrary assumptions and lack of evidence.

Judas (or Substitute) Crucifixion Hypothesis

This alleged explanation is that Jesus wasn’t actually crucified, but that someone else, often suggested to be Judas, was executed in His place, while Jesus escaped death.

This view isn’t supported by any early historical sources. The Gospels consistently says that Jesus Himself was crucified, and even hostile sources such as Tacitus confirm His execution under Pontius Pilate. Roman soldiers were skilled executioners who ensured the correct individual was crucified. The idea that they mistakenly crucified another man is highly implausible—especially with onlookers like Jesus own mother Mary being present as well as his disciple John.

Additionally, Jesus was publicly known, and many witnesses observed His arrest, trial, and crucifixion. Substituting another person would have required widespread deception among both enemies and followers. This idea also fails to explain the empty tomb and post-resurrection appearances. It is a later invention that contradicts the earliest and reliable accounts.

Legend (Myth Development)

This suggestion is that the resurrection accounts developed gradually as legends over time and were not part of the original Christian message.

However, the historical evidence shows that belief in the resurrection arose immediately after Jesus’ death. The early creed recorded in 1 Corinthians 15:3–7 is widely recognized as originating within a few years of the crucifixion. It affirms Jesus’ death, burial, resurrection, and appearances to many witnesses. Christianity was exploding in Jerusalem and Judea like wildfire.

Legends typically require long periods to develop. Yet people were alive who saw the risen Savior and testified to it. They were attacks, beaten, and/or and martyred for it. There were just too many eyewitnesses early on to challenge false claims like a later legend. The fact is that the resurrection message was professed openly in Jerusalem while many witnesses were still alive.

The presence of actual named individuals and specific details is further evidence against myth formation. This suggestion fails because it can’t account for the early, widespread, and consistent testimony to a bodily resurrection.

Copycat (Pagan Savior) Exclamation!

Some will often claim that the resurrection of Jesus was borrowed from earlier pagan myths about dying and rising gods.

This argument does not hold up under careful examination—especially considering Jesus already proved Himself by raising Lazarus from the death (John 12:17) and the Jewish leaders knew it and wanted to go back and kill Lazarus (John 12:10).

The alleged parallels to vague pagan accounts are often superficial and involve seasonal fertility cycles, not historical individuals who died and rose bodily in real time and space. Pagan stories are typically symbolic and lack the historical grounding—which is far different from the details found in the Gospel accounts.

Furthermore, first-century Jews, including the disciples, were strongly opposed to paganism and wouldn’t have borrowed from such sources without ridicule. The resurrection message comes directly from the pages of Scripture with a distinct understanding of the bodily resurrection—like Isaiah 53 or Jesus own prophetic statements that He will be put to death and resurrect in 3 days (Mark 8:31).

Most of the supposed pagan parallels either (1) postdate Christianity or (2) differ significantly in content. So, this idea fails because it misrepresents both pagan myths and the nature of the resurrection accounts.

Body Moved To Another Location

This simple suggestion is that someone, such as Joseph of Arimathea, the Jewish leaders, or Roman authorities, moved Jesus’ body to another location, leading to the belief in a resurrection.

While it is possible that a body could be relocated, this idea does not explain the full set of biblical evidence. If authorities had moved the body, they could have easily ended the resurrection claims by producing it once the disciples began preaching. Their silence suggests they did not have the body.

If followers moved the body, it reduces to the stolen body model, which faces the same problems of motive and risk. Additionally, this suggestion does not account for the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus to multiple individuals and groups.

Another problem is that the guard were still guarding this tomb! If the body was moved, they would have known it and went and guarded it there. The body moved position fails because it cannot explain both the empty tomb, the guards, and the reported appearances.

Family Tomb (Jesus Ossuary) Find

This is a modern idea in recent times due to an archaeological discovery.[1] This claim is that the tomb or more specifically a bone box (called an “ossuary”) of Jesus has been discovered, often referencing the Talpiot tomb or inscriptions such as “Jesus son of Joseph.”

These claims are highly disputed and lack credible support. The names found in such tombs were extremely common in first-century Judea. There is no definitive evidence linking these findings to Jesus of Nazareth. Furthermore, Jesus was only “thought” to be the son of Joseph (Matthew 1:16; Luke 3:23) but anyone close to Christ, like his mother, wouldn’t dare put such a thing as His description.

Moreover, early Christians proclaimed an empty tomb and a risen Christ. If Jesus’ bones had been known or discovered, this would have immediately undermined the resurrection message. No early source suggests that Jesus’ remains were ever found. Furthermore, the bones that go into a bone box are after decay from long periods of time in the grave. Clearly this doesn't account for an empty grave on the third day! So this view can't make sense of the empty grave. 

Archaeological claims of this kind rely on speculation rather than clear identification. This idea fails because it can’t be established that any discovered tomb or ossuary belongs to the actual Jesus of Scripture and it is in contradiction to the earliest historical testimony.

Conclusion

Each alternative explanation for the resurrection of Christ fails miserably when analyzed closely. They simply can’t adequately account for the historical facts: the empty tomb, the multiple appearances of Jesus, and the transformation of the disciples.

Furthermore, these false ideas are in contradiction with the plain reading of Bible—that Jesus indeed resurrected! Therefore, they are false and the Bible stands supreme, just as it has since its words were revealed by God to man.

The bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ remains the most coherent and comprehensive explanation. The Scripture accounts are perfectly consistent for the empty tomb, the eyewitness testimony, and the rapid growth of the early church in the very place where Jesus was crucified and buried. If you haven’t already, please consider the claims of Christ and His death and resurrection—it is a matter of eternity.

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist defending 6-day creation and opposing evolution since 1998. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.  

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.

Mr. Hodge earned a Bachelor and Master of Science degrees from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (SIUC). Then he taught at SIUC for a couple of years as a Visiting Instructor teaching all levels of undergraduate engineering and running a materials lab and a CAD lab. He did research on advanced ceramic materials to develop a new method of production of titanium diboride with a grant from Lockheed Martin. He worked as a Test Engineer for Caterpillar, Inc., prior to entering full-time ministry.

His love of science was coupled with a love of history, philosophy, and theology. For about one year of his life, Bodie was editing and updating a theological, historical, and scientific dictionary/encyclopedia for AI use and training. Mr. Hodge has over 25 years of experience in writing, speaking and researching in these fields. 



[1] Gorden Franz, The So-Called Jesus Family Tomb 'Rediscovered' in Jerusalem, Associates For Biblical Research, March 17, 2007, https://biblearchaeology.org/research/contemporary-issues/2722-the-socalled-jesus-family-tomb-rediscovered-in-jerusalem.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Modes of Baptism (The Three Different Doctrinal Positions)

Modes of Baptism (The Three Different Doctrinal Positions)

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, March 25, 2026 (Donate)

Since the time of the Reformation (AD 1500s), there are many distinct denominations of churches. One of the main causes of church splits has to do with the mode of baptism.

These various churches all agree with baptism, but how and when to administer it becomes the point of contention. In short, the three basic positions are:

    • Paedobaptistic: With paedobaptism, one baptizes infants based on covenant inclusion or in the case of Lutherans, it is a means of grace. Paedo means child. This is done usually by sprinkling or pouring, rarely by full immersion. Those who are paedobaptistic also accept adult baptism and that can be full immersion.
    • Baptistic: Baptizes only professing believers and is done by immersion. They reject infant baptism.
    • Anabaptistic: Rejects infant baptism and rebaptizes adults if they were baptized as infants. They tend to overlap with Baptists on baptism but differs historically and sometimes doctrinally. For instance, just because one professes, doesn’t automatically permit them to be baptized—often, they must shows genuine signs of conversion to Christ before they are permitted to be baptized.

Let’s look at these positions in more detail.

Dishes being cleaned by sprinkling (in a dishwasher), being cleaned by pouring water from a faucet, and being cleaned by immersion; Image requested by Bodie Hodge (ChatGPT)

Paedobaptistic (Infant Baptism)

Paedobaptism is the practice of baptizing infants, typically grounded in a form of covenant theology. Paedobaptists argue that baptism has replaced circumcision as the covenant sign, and thus should be applied to the children of believers just as circumcision was applied under the Old Testament to the boys. This view is commonly held by Presbyterians, Reformed churches, and some Anglicans.

This is not the view of Lutherans who view infant baptism as a means of grace that leads to God working in their lives to grant forgiveness of sins, regeneration, and faith.

Leading Baptist commentator, Dr. John Gill strongly opposed paedobaptism. He argued that there is no explicit New Testament command or example of infant baptism. For Gill, baptism is an ordinance tied to personal faith and repentance, which infants are incapable of exercising. He rejected the covenantal continuity argument, insisting that the New Covenant differs in nature from the Old and is composed only of regenerate believers.

Nevertheless, Lutherans, Presbyterians, and Anglicans disagree…and as you can see, this is a major division within protestant circles.

Baptistic (Believer’s Baptism)

Baptistic theology, which dominates Baptist Churches, Churches of Christ, Christian Churches, and Pentecostals, holds that baptism is reserved only for those who personally profess faith in Jesus Christ. Baptists hold baptism as an ordinance for visible believers, administered after conversion—when they believe in Jesus Christ and His death and resurrection.

Baptism, in this view, follows faith, citing the consistent New Testament pattern: hearing the gospel, believing, and then being baptized (e.g., Acts 2 when they heard Peter preach the gospel, they believed when they were cut to the heart in Acts 2:37, they were to be baptized in Acts 2:38).

Baptists argue strictly for immersion as the proper mode, seeing it as the clearest representation of union with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection. Baptists reject infant baptism and insist upon the baptism of professing believers only.

Anabaptistic (Re-baptizers)

The term “Anabaptist” historically refers to those during the Reformation who rejected infant baptism and were therefore rebaptized upon profession of faith. The name means “re-baptizer,” though many Anabaptists rejected the label, arguing that infant baptism was invalid and thus not a true baptism at all. So, the name is used strictly for descriptive purposes.

Anabaptists often held additional distinctives beyond believer’s baptism, such as separation from state churches and, in some cases, more deviant social or theological views of other believers such as the Amish and Mennonites.

Baptists are to be distinguished from Anabaptists. While both rejected infant baptism, Baptists do not see themselves as “re-baptizers” since they considered infant baptism invalid. Therefore, what critics called “rebaptism” was, in Baptist understanding, true baptism for the first time.

Conclusion

These divisions have split many churches in the last 500 years. Some churches literally put their distinctive division in the name of their local church—e.g., First “Baptist” Church!

The point is that there are several different views and I want to encourage you see what the Bible says. I also want to encourage you to chat with your local pastor, elders and of course, your family and see what they believe and why they hold those positions biblically. 

This is merely meant as an introductory discussion to give you some basic understanding of the positions. It isn’t meant to dive into the debate in immense detail with scriptural battles ensuing.

But just to let you know, it can become a heated debate. But at the end of the day, remember that brothers and sisters in Christ can still stand together on the authority of God’s Word and should be able to have these discussions in an iron-sharpening-iron fashion, with respect and gentleness, to grow closer to Christ (1 Peter 3:15).

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist defending 6-day creation and opposing evolution since 1998. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.  

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.

Mr. Hodge earned a Bachelor and Master of Science degrees from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (SIUC). Then he taught at SIUC for a couple of years as a Visiting Instructor teaching all levels of undergraduate engineering and running a materials lab and a CAD lab. He did research on advanced ceramic materials to develop a new method of production of titanium diboride with a grant from Lockheed Martin. He worked as a Test Engineer for Caterpillar, Inc., prior to entering full-time ministry.

His love of science was coupled with a love of history, philosophy, and theology. For about one year of his life, Bodie was editing and updating a theological, historical, and scientific dictionary/encyclopedia for AI use and training. Mr. Hodge has over 25 years of experience in writing, speaking and researching in these fields.

 

 

 

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Does It Take Millions And Billions Of Years To Make Diamonds?

Does It Take Millions And Billions Of Years To Make Diamonds?

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, March 24, 2026 (Donate)

I was taught it take millions and billions of years to form diamonds. It is often suggested that natural diamonds today are billions of years old.

As a materials scientist and a biblical creationist, I suggest they are not that old. Why would I be so bold as to suggest such a thing? Because there are many ways to make diamonds today and none take much time at all!

Gemstone; Photo by Bodie Hodge

Why presume that diamonds take long ages to form in the first place? You need to understand that it is because of a worldview that is predicated on long age uniformitarianism and billions of years—the secular humanistic religion.

Science is observable and repeatable. Yet, no one has ever observed diamonds forming billions of years ago. No one has ever been able to repeat that alleged slow process.

From a true scientific perspective, diamonds can be formed quickly today using several well-established industrial and laboratory methods. These processes replicate the essential conditions needed for diamond formation: high pressure, high temperature, or carbon-rich environments.

These methods are so well known that I’m going to list the scientific technical papers with each method instead of footnotes. That’s how well known these methods are. Let’s hit these methods.

High Pressure High Temperature (HPHT)

This is the most traditional industrial method and closely mimics natural diamond formation in the earth.

Carbon (usually graphite) is placed in a press and subjected to pressures of about 5–6 GPa (roughly 700,000–900,000 psi) and temperatures of about 1,300–1,600°C. A metal catalyst such as iron, nickel, or cobalt is typically used to help dissolve the carbon and allow it to crystallize as diamond.

A small diamond seed crystal is placed in the chamber, and carbon atoms attach to it, growing a diamond over days to weeks.

·       Ekimov, E. A. (2020). High-pressure, high-temperature synthesis of diamond from hydrocarbons. Progress in Materials Science, 113, 100671.

·       Wentorf, R. H. (1965). Synthesis of the cubic form of boron nitride. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 42(12), 4115–4116.

·       Zhang, J., Li, M., & Wang, H. (2024). A review of diamond synthesis, modification technology, and cutting tool applications. Materials & Design, 235, 112345.

·       Hemley, R. J., & Mao, H. K. (Eds.). (2021). Synthesis of diamonds and their identification. Mineralogical Society of America.

Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD)

This is a more modern and highly controlled laboratory method. You take a thin diamond seed and then place it in a vacuum chamber filled with a carbon-rich gas, usually methane mixed with hydrogen. The gas is energized using microwaves, hot filaments, or plasma, which breaks the molecules apart. Carbon atoms then deposit layer by layer onto the seed, forming diamond.

This is done at a lower pressure than HPHT and the temperatures range from 700–1,200°C—far less than the last method. Growth can occur over days to weeks, producing very pure diamonds.

·       Balmer, R. S., Brandon, J. R., Clewes, S. L., Dhillon, H. K., Dodson, J. M., Friel, I., Inglis, P. N., Madgwick, T. D., Markham, M. L., Mollart, T. P., Perkins, N., Scarsbrook, G. A., Twitchen, D. J., Whitehead, A. J., Wilman, J. J., & Woollard, S. M. (2009). Chemical vapour deposition synthetic diamond: Materials, technology and applications. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 21(36), 364221.

·       Martineau, P. M., Gaukroger, M. P., Lawson, S. C., Twitchen, D. J., Evans, D. J. F., & Crowder, M. J. (2009). High crystalline quality single crystal CVD diamond. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 21(36), 364205.

·       Zhang, J., Li, M., & Wang, H. (2024). A review of diamond synthesis, modification technology, and cutting tool applications. Materials & Design, 235, 112345.

Detonation Synthesis (Nanodiamonds)

This method produces extremely small diamonds very quickly. Carbon-containing explosives are detonated in a sealed chamber. The explosion generates extremely high pressure and temperature for a fraction of a second, causing carbon atoms to crystallize into nanodiamonds before they can revert to graphite.

The resulting diamonds are typically only a few nanometers in size. But they have great industrial uses.

·       Danilenko, V. V. (2006). On the discovery of detonation nanodiamond. In Ultrananocrystalline diamond: Synthesis, properties, and applications (pp. 1–19). William Andrew Publishing.

·       Shenderova, O. A., & Gruen, D. M. (Eds.). (2012). Ultrananocrystalline diamond: Synthesis, properties, and applications (2nd ed.). William Andrew Publishing.

·       Zou, Q., Zeng, X., & Wang, H. (2010). Fabrication of nanodiamond by detonation method. Materials Research Innovations, 14(3), 187–190.

Shock Compression (Impact Methods)

Similar to detonation, this method uses sudden shock waves to create diamonds. A projectile or explosive force compresses carbon-rich material (like graphite) at extremely high pressures and temperatures for a very short time (seconds). This can convert carbon into diamond.

This process is also believed to occur naturally during meteorite impacts and possibly very explosive volcanoes (in small amounts). At both sites, people have commonly found diamonds. Regarding volcanoes, most diamonds might have been formed well below the surface where condition were more favorable to formation and they were transported via magmatic and lava movement.

·       Danilenko, V. V. (2006). On the discovery of detonation nanodiamond. In Ultrananocrystalline diamond: Synthesis, properties, and applications (pp. 1–19). William Andrew Publishing.

·       Shenderova, O. A., Nunn, N. A., & Ozerin, A. N. (2019). Synthesis, properties, and applications of nanodiamonds. Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B, 37(3), 030802.

·       Yan, X., Li, Z., & Chen, Y. (2026). Formation mechanisms of nanocarbon under extreme detonation conditions. arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.18316.

Ultrahard Ceramic and Catalyst-Free Methods

Laboratory advances have shown that diamonds can be formed without metal catalysts under extreme conditions.

Using advanced presses and carefully controlled environments, graphite can be converted directly into diamond at very high pressures and temperatures. Some experiments in labs have even shown diamond formation at somewhat lower temperatures by applying shear stress along with pressure (hours, weeks).

·       Stehlik, S., Varga, M., Ledinsky, M., Jirasek, V., Artemenko, A., & Kromka, A. (2015). Size and purity control of HPHT nanodiamonds. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 119(49), 27708–27720.

·       Ekimov, E. A. (2020). High-pressure, high-temperature synthesis of diamond from hydrocarbons. Progress in Materials Science, 113, 100671.

·       Zhang, J., Li, M., & Wang, H. (2024). A review of diamond synthesis, modification technology, and cutting tool applications. Materials & Design, 235, 112345.

Plasma and Laser-Assisted Growth Variations

These are refinements of CVD-like techniques. High-energy lasers or plasma fields are used to enhance carbon breakdown and deposition. These methods allow precise control over diamond growth, including doping diamonds with elements for electronics.

·       Shenderova, O. A., Nunn, N. A., & Ozerin, A. N. (2019). Synthesis, properties, and applications of nanodiamonds. Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B, 37(3), 030802.

·       Lipatov, E. (2020). Diamond synthesis and applications. In Advanced materials research. IntechOpen.

To Summarize

Modern science methods that researchers use show that diamonds do not require millions or billions of years to form. Under the right conditions, they can be produced in:

  • Seconds (e.g., detonation and shock methods)
  • Days to weeks (e.g., HPHT and CVD)

Each method shows that diamond formation depends primarily on conditions, not time. Industry today routinely produces diamonds rapidly for both commercial and scientific purposes. And of course, some companies make gemstones for jewelry as well.

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist defending 6-day creation and opposing evolution since 1998. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.  

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.

Mr. Hodge earned a Bachelor and Master of Science degrees from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (SIUC). Then he taught at SIUC for a couple of years as a Visiting Instructor teaching all levels of undergraduate engineering and running a materials lab and a CAD lab. He did research on advanced ceramic materials to develop a new method of production of titanium diboride with a grant from Lockheed Martin. He worked as a Test Engineer for Caterpillar, Inc., prior to entering full-time ministry.

His love of science was coupled with a love of history, philosophy, and theology. For about one year of his life, Bodie was editing and updating a theological, historical, and scientific dictionary/encyclopedia for AI use and training. Mr. Hodge has over 25 years of experience in writing, speaking and researching in these fields.

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Hilariously Illogical!

Hilariously Illogical!

Bodie Hodge, M.Sc., B.Sc., PEI

Biblical Authority Ministries, March 23, 2026 (Donate)

Letter, explicative edited out:

The information on your website is so illogical and wrong that it’s hilarious. Yet I feel worried that there are so many people who obviously believe this @!*&%$. I’m an Australian and I feel utterly embarrassed to think that Ken Ham is an Australian. And also someone that supposedly has an applied science degree from the university of queensland? Just because you believe in something doesn’t make it true. It’s one thing to read the bible’s stories and garner moral lessons from them, but to take its word literally? The bible is a historical book, which has been edited and changed over history. This site’s utter hate of science is ridiculous. Scientific thought is logical and critical thinking. The thoughts and ideas on this site are illogical and disgusting. Just because you can’t explain something or science is yet to explain it, doesn’t mean that the unexplainable is attributed to an unseen entity. This site even tries to refute things that science clearly explains. It’s just sad!

A.D. Australia

Response (point-by-point style):

Thanks for sending the email. I am replying below to your comments and questions. Please note that my comments are said with sincerity. (I understand that tone is sometimes difficult to display in writing, so I wanted to be up front about it.)

The information on your website is so illogical and wrong

Such as? This is called an unsubstantiated allegation. So, I’m surprised such a claim was made without any backing. We want the information on the website to be both logical and correct, so if there was anything to be challenged, please point it out so we can revisit it to make sure it is accurate and modify it if necessary.

Based on the humanistic worldview promoted in your email (i.e., the Bible is not true), why do you think logic exists? For logic to exist, the Bible must be true. The sheer fact that you believe logic exists betrays the very worldview to which you pay lip service. In other words, your worldview is self-refuting.[1]

The battle over morality is a matter of God's authority vs. man's faulty, imperfect, sinful understanding of authority; Image from Presentation Library

that it’s hilarious.

This is an epithet fallacy. But consider the humor of someone claiming something is wrong and chuckling about it, and yet they cannot name why it is wrong.

Yet I feel worried

Why would an evolutionist worry (see Luke 12:22)? If everything follows either purely random processes or purely predetermined material results of chemical reactions, then why worry? In such a worldview, this is illogical.

Again, the fact that people worry reveals that they want some sort of moral code, which is meaningless in an evolutionary worldview, by the way. But I’m glad you have the sense of worrying because it means that you want morality. I want to encourage you to realize that morality comes from God.

that there are so many people who obviously believe this @!*&%$.

This is another epithet fallacy.

I’m an Australian and I feel utterly embarrassed to think that Ken Ham is an Australian.

Why? The feeling of embarrassment in an evolutionary worldview is simply chemical reactions in the brain and is no different from chemical reactions for love and compassion.[2]

But again, why the sense of morality in an evolutionary worldview? What is going on here is that in your heart of hearts, you know God exists (Romans 1:20–21), and God is the basis for morality since He is the ultimate Law Giver. You are trying to suppress that knowledge (Romans 1:18), but you must still borrow from the biblical worldview in order to uphold some form of morality.[3]

And also someone that supposedly has an applied science degree from the university of queensland?

Not supposedly; Mr. Ham earned it years ago. This should come as no surprise since Christians earn advanced degrees every year at universities all over the world and are not anti-science. But consider that science is possible simply because the Bible is true, so this should come as no surprise either. In fact, most of the great founders of scientific disciplines believed the Bible such as Newton, Boyle, Galileo, etc.

Just because you believe in something doesn’t make it true.

Ditto. What makes things true is predicated on the possibility of truth existing. In a materialistic, atheistic universe, why would truth, which is immaterial, exist? This is a major problem for materialists like atheists. Of course, truth is not a problem for Christians since God is both the truth (John 14:6) and the source of truth.

Without His Word, truth is meaningless. Of course, there is so much more we could dive into from this point, but that’s another discussion.

It’s one thing to read the bible’s stories and garner moral lessons from them,

But morality is meaningless if God does not exist. In a purely evolutionary worldview, chemicals react. Why would anyone care about morality unless there is an ultimate standard to reveal what morality is? God is that standard, and in His Word He has told us what is right and what is wrong.

but to take its word literally?

What do you mean by literally? Literally has traditionally meant to take something the way it is written (not the false modern concept that everything must be taken in a strict literal sense—i.e., that the metaphorical use of “pillars of the earth” means the earth is sitting on top of pillars in space). If it is a metaphor, then it should be understood as a metaphor. If the writing style is literal history, then it is literal history and should be interpreted as such. If it is a song, then follow the principles for understanding a song. This concept is entirely biblical.

But consider something else here. What if I were to argue that evolutionists should not interpret evolutionary papers literally when they use metaphors? They should interpret them in a strict literal sense. Would the evolutionists accept this? Not at all. So why attack Christians for trusting what God’s Word says in its context and literary style?

The bible is a historical book,

Yes, but it is more than that (psalms and songs, genealogies, prayers, prophecies, etc.). But I’m glad you agree that it is a historical book in some sense anyway. This very premise challenges the evolutionary ideas of origins at their very core. So how can one trust an evolutionary history of billions of years, knowing the Bible is indeed history?

which has been edited and changed over history.

This is basically a contrary to the fact conditional error fallacy. Any student of this subject would say the opposite after only a little research. The Bible’s words have been attested to through thousands of ancient manuscripts that repeatedly affirm the texts have been faithfully transmitted to us.

This site’s utter hate of science is ridiculous.

This is false and is another epithet fallacy, as well as equivocation. As an aside, it should have been obvious on our website how much we do love and enjoy science. However, I think the equivocation fallacy is pertinent here. Equating science with an evolutionary worldview is a fallacy.

The issue is not science versus religion, as many seem to think. It is worldview versus worldview. More specifically, it is humanism (with its views of evolution and millions of years) versus biblical Christianity (with its views of creation and thousands of years).[4]

We both have the same science, and when it comes to repeatable, experimental science (known as operational science), both evolutionists and creationists would agree almost every time! Where we disagree is our interpretations of the past (i.e., origins).

The reason we disagree here is due to our differing authorities. Is God the ultimate authority, or is mankind the ultimate authority on the subject? This is the debate—humanism versus biblical Christianity.

It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man. (Psalm 118:8)

It will be a sad day when people who rejected God stand before Him in judgment (Hebrews 9:27) and tell Him that they trusted the false ideas of man over what God lovingly revealed to mankind. How should a just God respond?

Scientific thought is logical and critical thinking.

We agree, but again, this view is only possible because the Bible is true. (Keep in mind that the point is not that people need to believe the Bible is true, but simply that the Bible is true.)

The thoughts and ideas on this site are illogical and disgusting.

Again, this is an unsubstantiated allegation and question-begging epithet.

Just because you can’t explain something or science is yet to explain it, doesn’t mean that the unexplainable is attributed to an unseen entity.

This is a reification fallacy. “Science” doesn’t explain things; it is a methodology. People use it as a tool to help explain things, but science doesn’t make the statements; people do. This reveals how much faith is given to the religion of humanism. People have such faith in other people to come up with strange stories to explain things. This puts the ultimate authority in mankind. When the ancient Greeks didn’t know the answers, they came up with some fancy stories that fit within their worldview. And sadly, generations of people believed those stories, and now we look back and call those stories mythology.

The same thing is going on today. In an evolutionary worldview, when people don’t know an answer, they come up with stories that fit within their worldview (e.g., Oort cloud, abiogenesis, missing links, etc.) I look forward to a time when people look back and the evolutionary stories as mythology. But the point is that evolution, like Greek mythology is a product of the religion of humanism.

The issue is that when God speaks on a subject, He cannot be wrong, but fallible, sinful, imperfect human beings can and will be wrong when they try to explain things, especially about the past, apart from God and His Word.

This site even tries to refute things that science clearly explains.

Again, this is a reification fallacy. “Science” does not explain things; people do. I’ve had some people say science speaks, tells, or explains things to them, but what they really mean is that scientists speak, tell, or explain their views of the data.

Also, this is another unsubstantiated allegation.

Moral relativism is based on a false understanding of history. Image from Presentation Library

It’s just sad!

This is an appeal to emotion fallacy, which is especially illogical in an evolutionary worldview because everything would ultimately be meaningless (like sadness) in a strictly chemical universe. This actually undercuts the anti-Bible argument that has been presented in this email.

I want to encourage you to consider abandoning the humanistic worldview with its materialistic evolutionary bent. A materialistic evolutionary worldview is illogical on many fronts (such as having no basis for logic, which is immaterial, and no basis for truth or knowledge).

With that in mind, I would like you to consider a biblical worldview, which does have a basis for logic, truth, knowledge, and more—including morality, which seems to be important to you (to your credit). Please take some time to read this message entitled What Does It Mean to Be “Saved”? This extended article explains salvation, one of the major themes in the Bible in an easy to read fashion starting at the beginning.

With kindness in Christ,

Bodie

Bodie Hodge, Ken Ham's son in law, has been an apologist defending 6-day creation and opposing evolution since 1998. He spent 21 years working at Answers in Genesis as a speaker, writer, and researcher as well as a founding news anchor for Answers News. He was also head of the Oversight Council.  

Bodie launched Biblical Authority Ministries in 2015 as a personal website and it was organized officially in 2025 as a 501(c)(3). He has spoken on multiple continents and hosts of US states in churches, colleges, and universities. He is married with four children.

Mr. Hodge earned a Bachelor and Master of Science degrees from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale (SIUC). Then he taught at SIUC for a couple of years as a Visiting Instructor teaching all levels of undergraduate engineering and running a materials lab and a CAD lab. He did research on advanced ceramic materials to develop a new method of production of titanium diboride with a grant from Lockheed Martin. He worked as a Test Engineer for Caterpillar, Inc., prior to entering full-time ministry.

His love of science was coupled with a love of history, philosophy, and theology. For about one year of his life, Bodie was editing and updating a theological, historical, and scientific dictionary/encyclopedia for AI use and training. Mr. Hodge has over 25 years of experience in writing, speaking and researching in these fields. Originally at Answers in Genesis; Edited; Republished by permission.



[1] Atheism: an irrational worldview, Dr. Jason Lisle, Answers in Genesis website, October 10, 2007, http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/aid/v2/n1/atheism-irrational.

[2] For the reader, Ken Ham, who is originally from Australia, was the president and CEO of Answers in Genesis. 

[3] Evolution and the Challenge of Morality, Dr. Jason Lisle, Answers in Genesis website, April 14, 2008, http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2008/04/14/evolution-challenge-of-morality.

[4] See The New Answers Book 2, Ken Ham, Gen. Ed., chapter entitled: How old is the Earth? by Bodie Hodge, Master Books, Green Forest, AK, 2008, https://www.biblicalauthorityministries.org/2024/05/how-old-is-earth.html.

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