September 30, 2024 | Michelson Borges, South American Division, and Adventist Review
In the mountains of Bolivia, scientists and researchers from around the world gathered for an event that united science and faith in a unique way. From September 4 to 7, the city of Cochabamba and Torotoro National Park hosted the 5th South American Meeting of Faith and Science.
Organized by the Seventh-day Adventist Church’s South American Division (SAD) and Bolivia Adventist University, the event brought together more than 70 experts from eight countries. Speakers delivered lectures, offered workshops, and led an expedition to study the largest record of dinosaur fossil footprints on the planet. More than a scientific event, it was an opportunity to reflect on the harmony between biblical faith and scientific research, organizers said.
Francislê Neri de Souza, director of the SAD branch of the Geoscience Research Institute (GRI), said the event underpins the dialogue between faith and science within a creationist perspective. “Meetings like this are essential to strengthen the participants’ convictions and provide scientific tools to explain the biblical view on origins,” Souza said.
GRI in South America promotes geological expeditions to important sites such as the Galápagos Islands (Ecuador); Chapada do Araripe, in Brazil; and Ocucaje, in Peru, reinforcing the integration between science and faith in the study of origins.