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Ken Ham: Christians who support evolution are following a 'religion of death'

Creationist Ken Ham condemned Christians who support the theory of evolution as following what he referred to as "religion of death."

Ham took to Facebook Saturday, June 25 to publicly condemn Christians who do not share his belief in the Biblical or creationist theory.

Ken Ham, Australian young-Earth creationist | Wikimedia Commons/John Foxe

"Christians who accept millions of years are mixing the religion of death with the religion of life--death came after sin, Jesus conquered it," wrote Ham.

"Evolution requires death over millions of years, death is a 'friend' that produces life and death ends it all," he continued.

He explained that the Bible already foretold of death's defeat through Jesus' dying on the cross and resurrection. It is on the same vein that Ham postulated that "creation is a religion of life" while "death is a result of sin" because the "Creator" already assumed the consequences of the sins and replaced it with the gift of life. He further tried to simplify his explanation by saying that the contrast between Christianity and secularism is really the contrast "between the religion of life and the religion of death."

Ham also previously criticized the scientific community as they reported that their search for "Earth 2.0" remained elusive despite discoveries of more than a thousand exoplanets.

Among the scientists, though, world-renowned theoretical physicist Dr. Michio Kaku believes he discovered a proof of God's existence and that the universe is a Matrix.

"I have concluded that we are in a world made by rules created by an intelligence," Kaku said in an article published by Geophilosophical Association of Anthropological and Cultural Studies.

"This means that, in all probability, there is an unknown force that governs everything," said the physicist, as quoted by Nano Evolution in 2015.

Ham, the president of the Answers in Genesis (AIG) and the Creation Museum, is set to launch his Ark Encounter project on July 7. He promised that the Ark will be just as the Biblical Noah's Ark used to be. That means this would be 510 feet long, 85 feet wide, and 51 feet high.