Creationist Ken Ham Slams Michael Gungor's Latest Comments About Jesus Christ [VIDEOS]

Answers in Genesis President Ken Ham recently broke his silence after Dove Award winning performer Michael Gungor made remarks concerning the Bible being literal in the book of Genesis.

Ham expressed his thoughts on Gungor's theology beliefs in a recent blog post on his Answers in Genesis website.

"So not only does Michael Gungor deny the historical accuracy of the creation and Flood accounts-but he believes Jesus Christ was probably wrong, too! Or worse yet, that Christ might have just lied to the Jews about it. This is a sad place for a professing Christian to be in (see the article Was Jesus Wrong? Peter Enns Says, "Yes")," wrote Ham.

"Michael Gungor has an influence on the youth of this generation and will lead them astray with such views. I urge you to pray for him, that he'll accept our offer to visit the Creation Museum and that he'll come to accept the authority of God's Word in every area-including the history in Genesis!"

Gungor said on his Liturgists Podcast show, "In college, I came up against some of the science, you know, showing the age of the Earth, showing evolutionary principles, and it really kind of rocked me a little bit ... I was raised in Christian school and I learned in my Christian school textbooks how carbon dating was flawed and the scientists of the world-the more mainstream scientists-were all very biased and were trying to sway the science toward atheism because they didn't want to believe the Bible."

"And then when I got into college and had to cite my work for my papers, and I was trying to argue that against my professors, I kept seeing that my sources were the biased ones ... and that created a lot of tension for me."

In addition, the musician also recently revealed that he no longer thinks "that the first people on earth were a couple named Adam and Eve that lived 6,000 years ago" or "that there was a flood that covered all the highest mountains of the world only 4,000 years ago and that all of the animal species that exist today are here because they were carried on an ark and then somehow walked or flew all around the world from a mountain in the Middle East after the water dried up," according to a Charisma News report.

"I think you're making a lot of assumptions based in a perspective that was handed to you from our culture, and the way we think in the modern world is very different than how people thought in the pre-modern world. To just see a few words that somebody said, that Jesus said, about Noah, and to assume that you can get into Jesus' mind and know exactly how He thought about the whole situation, and how He considered history versus myth versus whatever-how do you know," said Gungor.

Gungor further expressed on his views on Jesus and other notable religious figures depicted in the Bible.

"And even if He [Jesus] was wrong, even if He did believe that Noah was a historical person, or Adam was a historical person, and ended up being wrong, I don't understand how that even would deny the divinity of Christ. ... The point is it wouldn't freak me out if He was wrong about it, in His human side. But I still don't see the issue," said Gungor.

"If Noah and Adam were mythical ideas, the point of what Jesus was saying still applies to me. ... It has very little to do, in my perspective, with Jesus trying to lay out a history of the world to a historical-minded people ... Even if Jesus knew that Noah and Adam were mythical, but knew He was talking to people who thought they were real, that's another possibility."