Bill Morgan Interview
Bill Morgan has worked most of his life as a mechanical engineer with a myriad of experiences and projects in all areas of life. He served in the Navy for 38 years and even applied his skill set to the design of submarines. However, after he retired from the Navy, he wanted to keep pursuing a passion that he kept close to his heart. This passion, poetically, was getting other people to realize their own passions, and after he got a call from AzOSA, he would have the perfect playing field for his calling.
Bill Morgan effectively does free counseling for AzOSA, it includes teaching lectures and being on stand-by at certain events. There are many different lectures Morgan teaches but most of his are geared towards tips for arguments with atheists and evolutionists, and a special lecture designed like a gameshow to get the audience involved. The counseling side is a little different, as it involves digging deep with other people to discover their beliefs and why. Through his counseling experience and work ethic, Morgan has seen that people are actually very similar to ducks on water: above they look calm and collected, but underneath they’re kicking up a storm in spontaneous rounds of flapping to and fro.
This passion stemmed from, of course, personal fruition in Morgan’s life. As he attended school, he was often taught evolution as for how the world came to be, he took it at face value from his teachers for many years. Until, he started studying the actual science behind evolution, and from looking at science, Morgan concluded that the only logical solution is that there is a God.
Morgan took this revelational experience very seriously, to the point where he felt genuinely lied to for so long. He puts an extreme focus on the importance of teaching the youth and felt very genuine when thinking about how so many youths are being lied to not only about what they should study but also about what plain truth is in the world.
Despite the number of people today that believe in evolution and that God doesn’t exist, Morgan has said in his experience there is also no shortage of open-minded people when you evangelize to them correctly. At the end of the day, Morgan says, most people who don’t believe in God either feel hurt by God, or they’ve never truly examined all the evidence for why He exists. A striking conclusion Morgan has come to is that “there are no science-based atheists,” because real science does not support the theory of evolution, but it does support the fact of God.
Morgan’s personal favorite lecture to teach on this fact is the lecture titled Can you witness to evolutionists & atheists? or the TWO lecture, as Morgan calls it. It’s a lecture centered around two questions: why do you believe in God? And what about evolution? Discussing these two questions essentially segue into a third: what do you think will happen to you at death? No matter the response to that third question, it leads to the definitive example of why God exists. All the proof for God’s existence lay within your own two eyes.
Morgan inspirationally uses the artistic and divine design of the human eye to show not the result of chance but the result of intended construction. The crux of this reasoning lies not only in that the human eye is still more advanced than any camera we can produce but in the crucial reliance we have on the optic nerve. Each eye has an optic nerve that connects with one another at the brain, and without this nerve, the eye would be substantially useless. Our ability to see rests on two tiny nerves, with millions of nerve fibers within them to function properly. Thus, there are only two explanations for how this came to be: either it was the result of chance or design.
Bill Morgan is speaking at many of this month’s AzOSA lectures. He considers himself to be the luckiest guy you’ll ever meet and absolutely adores all things about evangelizing, (including an enjoyable pastime of evangelizing to telemarketers). He is excited to meet anyone who attends and wants to remind everyone to make sure to bring the kids.