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150 Attended the Summer
School in 2024 

Summer-School-photo

The Bible is historically and scientifically trustworthy

Professor Steve Taylor blew the lid off from the secular idea that dinosaurs are prehistoric creatures dying out millions of years ago. Analysis of actual soft tissue from a T-Rex thigh bone turns out to be mere thousands of years old. No Carbon 14 should be present after half a million years (87 half lives) and yet there it was, not in one sample but in every dinosaur fossil tested. Professor Taylor works with the most sophisticated mass spectrometers and his evaluation is backed up with independent testing.

This was just one of the great discoveries made known from a wide range of experts to those about to attend university. Dr Peter Williams of Tyndale House Cambridge spoke on the reliability of the Old Testament, looking at the structure of ancient languages and how the Hebrew alphabet and Biblical names came to be. And what proved yet again a highlight, was to hear Professor Stuart Burgess speak on the intricacies of our hands and feet far exceeding robotic machines.

There were talks on geological evidence for a world-wide flood. Also the theological implications of death preceding mankind, one of liberal theology’s foundation stones. We heard the wonder of human speech from Elizabeth Smith, and how to respond to the LGBT movement by guest speaker Dr Julie Maxwell of Lovewise. You can access various video recordings from the summer schools in the Student Initiative tab.

What was the take-home message for the 150 attending these two days of stimulating talks and discussions? That the Bible is 100% trustworthy and reliable and that you can study science or humanities knowing that the contrary narratives you will encounter are at best a secular worldview that cannot stand firm under the same scrutiny that the Bible has endured. And so until next years Truth in Science Summer School on 29th-30th August 2025 students can tune in on Zoom to the Student Forum meetings held from November to July (please contact for more information