Book Signing in Colorado Springs, Co
Posted by pmyrant on April 30, 2010
On Saturday, May 15th, I have a book signing at the Mardel Bookstore, in Colorado Springs, from 1-3 pm.
Store Address: Barnes Road, Colorado Springs, CO – (719) 573-0402
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Posted by pmyrant on April 30, 2010
On Saturday, May 15th, I have a book signing at the Mardel Bookstore, in Colorado Springs, from 1-3 pm.
Store Address: Barnes Road, Colorado Springs, CO – (719) 573-0402
Posted by pmyrant on
On May 15th, I will be in Salida Colorado, doing a book signing at “The Book Haven”. It will be from 5-7 pm. If you are in the area or know someone from there, please let them know.
Paul
Posted by pmyrant on
What a great month, I had the privilege of being on TV four times this month, each was an interview about my book “The Challenge of Evolution”. If you were able to see them I would love to hear what you thought. If not I will be putting them in an edited version on the website in the next week or so.
It was a great experience, I enjoyed it very much , it felt very natural, like this is what I was born to do.
Paul
Posted by TimJones on April 16, 2010
Be sure to tune in and hear Paul talk about his book, “The Challenge of Evolution”…
The first show is The Harvest Show, it airs on KWHD TV in the Denver area at 8pm on Tuesday April 13.
You can find the time in your area at the following link. http://www.harvest-tv.com/ShowInfo/Viewing-Times.cfm
The second show is TLN NOW – it airs in the greater Chicago area, at 9pm on Tuesday April 13. http://www.tln.com/showdetails.aspx?id=224
On April 26th I will be on WATC TV – Rick Goins – WATC’s Atlanta Live –
7-9pm and possibly on a replay the next morning between 7-9am http://www.watc.tv/atlanta_live.htm
On April 27th, I will be on http://www.wggs16.com/ Nite Line TV in Greenville SC 8 –
10pm ET.
Posted by TimJones on November 19, 2009
Our next ORIGINS discussion is scheduled for January 15 and 16 at the Littleton Vineyard Church.

The lecture and discussion will begin at 7PM on Friday evening and resume at 9AM on Saturday morning.
Paul underscores the importance of Creation’s biblical foundation, discusses the presuppositions of evolution and builds a case for the existence and action of the Creator reasonably and logically.
Registration fees will include a copy of Paul’s book, The Challenge of Evolution.
More details and online registration available soon at www.littletonvineyard.org.
Posted by pmyrant on October 14, 2009

What they found...
Denver, Colorado – The most recent discovery in Ethiopia’s Afar Rift of older skeletal remains is yet another indication of the mercurial nature of evolutionist faith. As if giving the bones a name, in this case, “Ardi,” evolutionists believe it will humanize the find. The idea of humans evolving from an ancient chimp-like creature is now debatable.
Scientists assembled the skeleton from 125 pieces and announced the find, “One of the most important discoveries for the study of human evolution,” according to David Pilbeam of Harvard’s Peabody Museum. Because Ardi doesn’t have some of the characteristics of modern apes, evolutionists automatically tout the find as a link in human evolution. Not all agree.
Paul Myrant is the author of The Challenge of Evolution and an outspoken critic of evolutionary science. “Many assume that belief in a Creator or God is based on blind faith separate from reason,” says Myrant. “Educators keep telling their students, ‘Science is rational; belief in a Creator is irrational and reserved for the weak-minded, emotional, easily duped, uneducated segment of society.’”

What they "extrapolated."
“Bound to their subjective biases and misunderstanding of the true history of humanity,” says Myrant, “science is forced to change the ‘facts’ of their interpretation of the origins of man. Using the flawed and subjective dating methods of radiometric dating, science now believes that we walked upright several millions years earlier, and that we may have come from a different line of Darwinians evolution, not directly descended from chimpanzees.”
The latest find is based on the scientific worldview of naturalism, uniformity and anti-Catastrophism; a position that Darwin committed himself to hundreds of years ago. While many sincere scientists remain deluded by this atheistic worldview, the Christian worldview remains unchanged.
It takes great faith to believe in atheistic evolution, it is not reasonable to believe in an uncaused universe and earth, says Myrant. However because it is so widely taught as fact, people accept it as truth. “Everything has a cause and the cause must be greater than it effect,” he explains. “The cause of the universe is beyond the scope of scientific investigation. Logically, there must be a cause behind every event.”
Science cannot tell us with absolute certainty the cause of the universe and living things, they can only speculate about its origin and history. However, “Scientific commitment to naturalism and natural selection causes scientists to devote all, or at least most of their time and energy in defense of these anti-supernatural assumptions,” says Myrant. Instead of remaining open-minded, they entrench themselves within their belief system and look for evidence that support their presuppositions.
To schedule an interview with Paul Myrant call Don Otis @ 719.275.7775 or email
interviews@veritasincorporated.com
Posted by TimJones on October 5, 2009
Paul will be delivering the keynote presentation at the October meeting of the Rocky Mountain Creation Fellowship. Join Paul for a discussion of the Creator and the Bible.
Bethlehem Lutheran Church
2100 Wadsworth Blvd in Lakewood, CO
October 9 at 7pm
Click here for a map.
Posted by TimJones on
Paul will be signing copies of his book, The Challenge of Evolution, and answering questions about the Creationism at:
Tattered Cover Highlands Ranch
9315 Dorchester Street
Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
Friday, October 23, 2009 at 7:30pm
Click here for a map.
Posted by pmyrant on September 4, 2009
In The Challenge of Evolution Paul Myrant articulates problems with the evolutionist theory which I have struggled with for years, and brings up others I have not yet considered. He presents simple, logical, scientific answers for belief in a Creator. However, more important to this reader, produces a sense that this Creator can, and must, be worshiped.
- Rick Kamrath, Worship Leader
This book has given me a better understanding and grasp of the concept of faith. It is a great book and answers questions that many have about their religious beliefs. I recommend this book to any one who has ever questioned their faith in God.
- Chadd Elsen, Lay-leader
The Challenge of Evolution is the perfect book to wake up and inspire junior high and high school students, to equip their young minds with a worldview that will guide them in matters of science, society, and religion.
- Nancy Gill, Christian School Principal
The Challenge of Evolution succeeds where other (books) have not. Paul presents for us a alearly thought through, plainly written and easy to follow argument that covers the key issues surrounding the question of origins.
- Ian Prichard, Pastor
Posted by TimJones on
German philosopher Frederick Nietzsche said, “You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist.”
In today’s society, relativism has been fused with the belief that truth can be found only through the scientific method. It is compounded further by the current cultural demands of “tolerance”. As a result, many believe that there is no absolute truth concerning cultures, religion or even morality. The desire is for everyone to get along and not for create problems; after all, all religions are the same anyway.
Certainly a relativist will disagree, but truth cannot be relative, subjective or a matter of opinion. Truth is absolute and is not affected by our personal feelings or beliefs. It is not a matter of what the majority thinks or believes, which political party is in power, or who controls the airwaves. We may believe something very sincerely but that does not make it a fact; only an opinion.
There is either a Creator or there is not. There are either absolute moral laws or there are not. In either case the existence or non-existence of a Creator is absolute. Furthermore, Nietzsche’s statement “the right way, correct way or only way does not exist,” is also an absolute statement and as such is a self-contradiction. You cannot make an absolute statement about the non-existence of absolutes.
On Natural Selection:
What explanation can there be for natural selection, or matter, creating the needed environment for our survival? How or why would inanimate objects place themselves in just the right locations to support living things? Dawkins has assured us that natural selection is blind and does not plan ahead, so how are objects able to adapt?
We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully designed to have come into existence by chance. All appearances to the contrary, the only watchmaker in nature are the blind forces of physics, albeit deployed in a very special way. A true watchmaker has foresight: he designs his cogs and springs, and plans their interconnections, with a future purpose in his mind’s eye.
Natural selection, the blind, unconscious, automatic process which Darwin discovered, and which we now know is the explanation for the existence and apparently purposeful form of all life has no purpose in mind.** It has no mind and no mind’s eye. It does not plan for the future. It has no vision, no foresight, and no sight at all. If it can be said to play the role of watchmaker in nature, it is the blind watchmaker.
- from Richard Dawkins’ book, The Blind Watchmaker
How does this blind, mindless, purposeless automatic process work? By taking an innumerable number of teeny tiny steps, over millions and millions of years, all unguided, all unplanned, all for either an unknown reason or simply to survive.
To say that an unknown, unseen, and unplanned series of “simple, cumulative steps” which lead to a complex end is not random chance; it is nonsensical. Is it more difficult to take several large steps in the darkness than lots of small ones? You may miss a hole with a large step or fall into the same hole with a small step.
If you find yourself in a pitch-black cave without a reference point, it makes no difference if you take thousands of tiny steps instead of hundreds of large steps. It makes no difference if you turn right instead of left, or go up instead of down. In fact it makes no difference what you do, since there is no plan in the first place. Are you trying to get out of or stay in the cave? Frankly without a plan or purpose it does not matter if you get out or stay in. If you did actually get somewhere that was unplanned, with no forethought or purpose, not only would it be meaningless, it could only happen by random chance.
On Creating Life in a test tube
If a scientist were able, in a controlled laboratory environment, to perform an experiment that produced some form of life, it would not prove how life began in the universe. It would only mean that a form of life could be created in a test tube. Creating life in a “hostile” environment is a completely different reality than creating life in a laboratory, under controlled conditions. Moreover, even life created in the laboratory could only happen using materials already in existence, and this life would have a creator as well, the scientist.
About Mt. Rushmore
To deny the existence of a creator is the same as saying that Mount Rushmore and its creator, sculptor Gutzon Borglum, came into existence on their own out of nothing. However, to carve this incredible monument took foresight, planning organization, great intelligence and skill. It does not make sense to say that the universe and life are less complex than the carving of this monument. The clear evidence of creation removes any doubt that there is a Creator.