How old is the Earth?
What the church teaches
The Earth is about 6,000 years old, created in six days, its history written in the genealogies that run from Adam onward.
What the evidence shows
The Earth is 4.54 billion years old, a number measured independently, again and again, by clocks that have no reason to agree unless it's true.
Where the 6,000 years comes from
The number isn't in the Bible. It was calculated from it. In 1650, Archbishop James Ussher added up the lifespans in the Genesis genealogies (Adam begat Seth, Seth begat Enosh) and landed on a creation date of 4004 BC. That is the entire method: a chain of “begats,” totaled.
It was careful arithmetic for its time. But it can only ever be as sound as the assumption underneath it: that the genealogies are a literal, complete, gap-free ledger of years. Nothing outside the text supports that assumption, and almost everything outside the text contradicts the total.
How we actually know
Some atoms are unstable. They decay into other atoms at a fixed, measured rate that nothing (not heat, not pressure, not prayer) has ever been shown to change. Uranium-238 becomes lead-206 with a half-life of 4.47 billion years. Potassium-40 becomes argon-40 over 1.25 billion. Measure how much of the parent is left and how much of the daughter has built up, and the rock tells you its own age.
The Earth's age was first pinned down by Clair Patterson in 1956, reading lead isotopes in meteorites left over from the solar system's formation: 4.54 billion years, a figure that has only tightened since. The oldest mineral grains ever found on Earth, zircon crystals from the Jack Hills of Western Australia, date to 4.4 billion years. Not one rock, anywhere on the planet, has ever dated to six thousand years and stopped.
And not just one clock
If radiometric dating were the only method, you might imagine a hidden flaw in it. It isn't the only method. Antarctic ice cores preserve more than 800,000 individual annual layers, countable like the rings of a tree. Unbroken tree-ring records reach back over 12,000 years, already twice the entire age Ussher gave the universe. Lake-bottom sediments, coral growth bands, and the slow spread of the seafloor all tell the same story, on the same scale.
These methods rely on completely different physics. A young Earth needs every one of them (radioactive decay, the freezing of snow, the growth of trees, the drift of continents) to be wrong in exactly the way required to fake the same answer. That is not how error behaves. That is how the truth looks when you check it five different ways.
The light gives it away
Look up. Some of the stars you can see are thousands of light-years away; the faint smudges between them are galaxies millions of light-years off. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, and nothing travels faster. For that light to reach your eye, it has had to be traveling for millions of years. In a 6,000-year-old universe, almost the entire night sky would simply be dark: the light would not have arrived yet.
The last move
There is one reply left: that God made the world 6,000 years ago but built it to look billions of years old, ancient starlight already mid-flight, rocks pre-loaded with decay products, ice layered with seasons it never saw. Maybe. But notice what that argument costs. It cannot be tested and it cannot be wrong, which means it explains nothing. And it turns God into the author of a flawless, internally consistent forgery, planted across every independent record in nature, for the sole purpose of leading the honest investigator to a false conclusion.
You were told the evidence was a trick and that your doubt was the sin. It is worth sitting with which of those two things the evidence actually supports.
What you’ll hear back
The evidence above is the case. This is the part that comes after it: the replies you’ll get when you actually say any of this out loud, and what each one is worth once you look at it.
You’ll hearRadiometric dating is unreliable. Decay rates could have changed, or the samples were just contaminated.
Why it doesn’t hold
Decay rates have been pushed in the lab across enormous swings of heat, pressure, and chemistry, and they refuse to move. And the age never rested on a single clock: uranium, potassium, rubidium, and others, with half-lives ranging from millions to billions of years, all land on the same number. Contamination scatters results. It cannot forge agreement across a dozen independent methods.
Check it yourselfIsochron dating is built to catch contaminated samples: a disturbed rock fails the internal check and is thrown out, rather than quietly returning a wrong age.
You’ll hearCarbon dating can’t measure millions of years, so how could anyone know the Earth is billions of years old?
Why it doesn’t hold
That part is true, and no geologist uses carbon for it. Carbon-14 has a half-life of about 5,700 years, useless past roughly 50,000. The Earth’s age comes from completely different clocks, like uranium-lead, with half-lives in the billions. The objection swaps in the wrong tool and then declares the job impossible.
Check it yourselfLook up the half-life of carbon-14 next to that of uranium-238. One is thousands of years, the other is billions. They were never the same instrument.
You’ll hearGod created the Earth fully formed, with the appearance of age, the way Adam was made as a grown man.
Why it doesn’t hold
This can’t be tested and can’t be wrong, which is exactly why it explains nothing. It also asks you to accept a God who planted a flawless false record in the rock, the ice, the trees, and the starlight, every piece of it aimed at leading an honest person to the wrong answer. And it isn’t in the text. It gets added afterward, to keep the conclusion safe.
You’ll hearDistant starlight is no problem. Light could have moved faster in the past, or it was created already on its way to us.
Why it doesn’t hold
Changing the speed of light would unravel the rest of physics, from how stars burn to the energy bound in every atom, and nothing suggests it ever changed. “Created in transit” is the appearance-of-age move again: it means the light from exploding stars shows events that, on this view, never actually happened. The night sky becomes an elaborate fiction with no purpose but to mislead.
Check it yourselfSupernova 1987A went off in a neighbor galaxy about 168,000 light-years away. We watched it arrive on schedule, its light and its neutrinos together, which a 6,000-year-old universe has no room for.
Watch
The Age of Our World Made Easy (potholer54, the geologist Peter Hadfield, walking through the many independent clocks that all land on the same age)
Sources
- U.S. Geological Survey, “Geologic Time: Age of the Earth” (the 4.54-billion-year figure, stated plainly)
- C. C. Patterson (1956), “Age of meteorites and the earth,” Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 10(4): 230–237 (the original measurement)
- S. A. Wilde et al. (2001), “Evidence from detrital zircons … 4.4 Gyr ago,” Nature 409: 175–178 (the oldest known terrestrial minerals, the Jack Hills zircons)
- EPICA Community Members (2004), “Eight glacial cycles from an Antarctic ice core,” Nature 429: 623–628 (800,000+ countable annual ice layers)
- James Ussher (1650), Annales Veteris Testamenti (the source of the 4004 BC creation date)
- Video: The Age of Our World Made Easy (potholer54, the geologist Peter Hadfield, walking through the many independent clocks that all land on the same age)