Ross rejects both abiogenesis and evolution as explanations for the origin and history of life, contrary to the scientific consensus.[6] Ross' position overlaps with that of intelligent design, but Ross argues that the evidence points to Jesus Christ as the designer, instead of an undefined intelligent designer.[7][8][9]
Hugh Ross was born in Montreal, Quebec, and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia after moving there at the age of five.[10] His parents were James Stewart Alexander Ross and Dorothy Isabel (Murray) Ross.[citation needed]He was interested in science from a young age, often reading science textbooks as a child.[11]
As a teenager, Ross read works by philosophers such as Immanuel Kant and Rene Descartes, but felt their works contained inconsistencies and contradictions.[10][12] Ross also read Eastern holy books from religions such as Hinduism, Buddhism, and Zoroastrianism.[10][12] He began studying the Bible in secret due to his family's disapproval.[13] He was inspired by the way the Bible described historical and scientific information, eventually becoming a Christian.[12]
Ross described his upbringing as moral, but not religious.[10][13] Ross became interested in astronomy at the age of seven, after asking his parents whether stars were hot when gazing up at the night sky. He visited the local library to find the answer.[14] He soon became convinced that the expansion of the universe and the Big Bang required a divine "cosmic beginner".[14] At 17 he began to serve as director of observations for Vancouver's Royal Astronomical Society and started examining religious texts.[14]
The National Research Council of Canada sent Ross to Caltech as a postdoctoral research fellow to study quasars and galaxies from 1973 to 1978.[15][16][17][18] While at Caltech Ross met Dave Rogstad and joined his Bible study group, which included his future wife, Kathleen Ann Drake.[14] The group encouraged him to spread his personal story about scientific evidence and Christianity.[14]
Ross presents at Grace Church St. Louis in November 2022
Ross served as a minister of evangelism at Sierra Madre Congregational Church. He was encouraged by leaders in his church to start his own ministry,[12] and in 1986 he and Kathy Ross founded the apologetics ministry Reasons To Believe in Sierra Madre, California.[14]
In 1991, Ross began writing books on Christian apologetics,[14] with his book sales exceeding a quarter million copies.[19]
Ross has made radio and television appearances, and his work has been covered by news outlets including Christianity Today,[22] The Houston Chronicle,[23] The LA Times,[24] The Washington Post,[25] and Fox News.[26]
In July 2022, Ross stepped down as CEO of Reasons to Believe to focus his efforts on writing and other endeavors.[27]
Ross believes God has revealed his existence and divine nature through both the Bible and creation.[28] He also believes that his creation model is empirically testable, and equally plausible as the evolutionary model.[29] Ross also believes that the Earth is fine-tuned for life,[30] and that science and Christianity intersect rather than contradict each other.[31] Ross believes that God has created the universe for a reason and desires a relationship with humans.[32]
Ross believes the record of creation is "like the 67th book of the Bible." He attempts to use science to find common ground with people, including secular scientists who reject the idea of God.[19]
Ross believes in progressive creationism, a view which holds that while the Earth is billions of years old, life did not appear by natural forces alone but that a supernatural agent formed different lifeforms in incremental (progressive) stages, and day-age creationism, a system of reconciling a literal Genesis account of creation with modern scientific theories on the age of the universe, the Earth, life, and humans.[33] He rejects the young-Earth creationist positions that the earth is younger than 10,000 years and that the creation "days" of Genesis 1 represent literal 24-hour periods. Ross instead asserts that these days (translated from the Hebrew word yom[34]) are historic, distinct, and sequential, but not 24 hours in length nor equal in length. Ross agrees with the scientific community that any version of intelligent design is inadequate if it does not provide a testable hypothesis which can make verifiable and falsifiable predictions, and if not, it should not be taught in the classroom as science.[35][7]
Ross married Kathy in 1977 and they have two sons.[37][12]
Kathy was formerly the senior vice president of Reasons to Believe and oversaw the organization’s communications.[12]
Ross has been diagnosed with Asperger syndrome.[38][39][10] He has credited his autism with helping him become an astrophysicist and an expert on celestial bodies.[39]
Who Was Adam? Colorado Springs, NavPress, 2005 (with Fazale Rana) ISBN978-1576835777
Creation as Science, Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2006 ISBN978-1576835784
Why the Universe is the Way it Is, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2008 ISBN978-0801071966
More Than a Theory, Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 2009 ISBN978-0801014420
Hidden Treasures in the Book of Job: How the Oldest Book of the Bible Answers Today's Scientific Questions, Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2011 ISBN978-0801072109
Navigating Genesis: A Scientist's Journey through Genesis 1–11, 2014 ISBN978-1886653863
Improbable Planet: How Earth Became Humanity's Home, Grand Rapids: Baker Books, 2016 ISBN9780801016899
Always Be Ready: A Call To Adventurous Faith, Covina, CA: RTB Press, 2018 ISBN978-1886653016
^Ross, Hugh (2018). The creator and the cosmos: how the latest scientific discoveries reveal God (Fourth ed.). Covina, CA. ISBN978-1-886653-14-6. OCLC1034740438.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Ross, Hugh (2012). More than a theory: revealing a testable model forcreation (Paperback ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Books. ISBN978-0-8010-1442-0. OCLC794541436.