KAGIN’S  COLUMN

Edwin F. Kagin is a lawyer‑poet. He believes that, through grace

and faith, this will be a regular column and, if events are predestined,

that whatever he believes makes no difference whatsoever.

He has a Website at: http://www.edwinkagin.com

He can be reached in care of this publication,

or through e‑mail at: edwin@edwinkagin.com
 

ON HOW ONE SMALL FIG FIGURED IN THE FLOWERING OF THE FRUITS OF FULFILLMENT OF GOD’S DIVINE PLAN, SANK THE ARKONUTS AND MADE AUSTRALIAN RADIO

(For those so interested, here is a bit of history, being a report on the first attempt by the Arkonuts to build a museum of nonsense in Northern Kentucky.)
                                                                             

But peace, I must not quarrel with the w

Of highest dispensation, which herein

Haply had ends above my reach to know…

John Milton.

 

You may have heard of the Battle of Big Bone, now part of the history of the American Religious Civil War (ARCW).  We won.  It should be remembered down the ages at the picnics of the Daughters of the ARCW.

The arkonuts arrived from Australia, California, and Florida.  They had triangulated on Boone Country, Kentucky, home of Big Bone Lick State Park, for a “creation museum” and theme park designed to teach “creation science” (an oxymoron on the order of “grape nuts”) and to counter, with biblical truth, the godless evolution being vended at the fossil finds of Big Bone Lick.  The enterprise was targeted for rural land on Highway 42, between Big Bone Lick and the town of Beaver Lick, Kentucky.  One wit suggested that “Answers in Genitals” might be more appropriate to the location than the proposed  “Answers in Genesis.”  But I digress, and this is a family friendly publication.

The genesis gambit  had been in the planning for some time.  Only a small legally mandated announcement of the proposed zoning change and a small sign on the targeted property informed the secular world that a request had been make by the arkonuts to rezone the land from rural to recreational so they could legally do their thing.  A sharp eyed member of a local secular humanist outfit, the Free Inquiry Group, Inc.–FIG for short–spotted the newspaper post and, in the manner of a true patriot who has seen the signal lights, raised the alarm to be up and to arm.

Some FIG members got the word out.  At the standing-room-only public zoning hearing the news item announced, the arkonuts, who had good reason to believe their scheme would survive the legal hoops as slick as goose grease on marble, were stunned to be met with reasoned opposition from both secular and religious neighbors.  Their plan, proclaimed as god’s will, was suddenly, plainly, and most unexpectedly, in deep trouble.  On national fundangelical radio stations, and on call-in-your-contribution-cause-god-needs-money 800 numbers, the faithful were urged to pray that secular science lose to the truths of Genesis and that god would bring to Kentucky, and to his glory, a museum of creationism.  The prayers failed, because prayer doesn’t work.  At least not for creationists trying to limit god to their understanding of Bronze Age myths.

Sensing the need to regroup, those who teach children that dinosaurs were on the ark and that the Earth was created six thousand years ago, made the fatal strategic error of requesting more time to polish their presentation before the final hearings.  This permitted the quickly formed and disorganized opposition to get organized.  Public hearings were held, a TV debate, in which your narrator participated,  was conducted, and–most importantly–citizens of the county learned, largely by door to door visits, just who, what, and why the arkonuts really are.  By the time of the final public hearing, over one thousand voting residents of the county had signed petitions urging a denial of  the zoning change.  The plan was unanimously defeated.  And it went down for zoning reasons, not religious ones, i.e., the requested change to recreational use was a subterfuge for the true commercial use this new international headquarters for nonsense intended.  If  they had wanted to build a church, even to teach that the earth is flat, or that things fall up if dropped, FIG would have fought for their First Amendment right to preach their thing..

Now to the point.  FIG has a membership of around sixty souls, maybe some one hundred on the mailing list.  Only two FIG members live in Boone County, and only four FIG members ever opened their mouths at any public hearing.  And to what cause did the arkonuts attribute their defeat?  Why to those godless secular humanists of FIG, of course.  Those thousand good Christians who came together and stopped them were ignored.

So here’s how their leader, Ken Ham, described their situation on Australian radio in December , 1996, during Hanukkah, just a few days before his plan sank like an overloaded ark (he doesn’t know we have a tape of it, but we do):

Actually, overwhelmingly, we had the support of the local community. It’s really only a small number of people who have stirring up (sic) opposition to this museum and most of them belong or associated with (sic) a group called “Free Inquiry” which is a local humanist        group which of course are against anyone believing at all in the supernatural and actually           the Boone County Courthouse the Fiscal Court and the Zoning Board have received overwhelming support from local residents.  In fact we have a long list of churches, businesses, organizations in Northern Kentucky who support us so really its got                 overwhelming support from the community…there’s been a lot of exaggeration about       what’s gone on here, mainly because there’s a very vocal humanist group who are very     anti-god and anti anything to do with the bible and they’re the ones that have sort of         stirred up the controversy, but actually, as I said, the residents of Northern Kentucky         overwhelmingly support someone to come in and give people an opportunity to have a    family center…we’ve been very low key in all this…and certainly there’s been a few       residents, just a small number who’ve been stirred up by this vocal minority             here…because the local humanist group went to the press… (sic semper sic).

When the plan was defeated, Ken Ham announced on the Internet that the defeat was clearly god’s will, and revealed unto them that god had other plans for their ministry.   Guess so.   And now you know the rest of the story.

 

Comments

  1. peterh says

    As gas been clear all along, the man’s not dealing fro a full deck. He wouldn’t know a full deck if one bit him one the vestigials.

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