📬 Best Way to Reach Him Personally

While email and WhatsApp are convenient, Ken Ham is a public figure surrounded by layers of organizational structure. Here are a few strategic suggestions to increase your chances of reaching him directly:

1. Email with Precision

  • Use a personalized subject line that stands out, such as: “Urgent: Biblical Chronology & Pole Shift Insights — A Personal Appeal to Ken Ham”

  • Send to multiple AiG-related addresses if available, but prioritize:

    • Executive or leadership contacts (e.g., anything with “president,” “director,” or “founder” in the address)

    • Media or speaker request contacts — these often get routed to personal assistants

    • General ministry contact — include a note requesting personal forwarding

2. Follow Up with a Physical Letter

  • Send a printed version of your message to AiG’s headquarters, addressed specifically to Ken Ham. Handwritten envelopes often get more attention.

  • Consider including a brief cover note with a photo or diagram of one of your insights to spark curiosity.

3. Leverage Social Media Thoughtfully

  • Ken Ham is active on platforms like Twitter and Facebook. A respectful public comment or DM referencing your email and asking for a moment of his time could help draw attention.

4. Attend an AiG Event or Conference

  • If feasible, attending an event where Ken Ham is speaking could allow for a brief personal interaction. Even a short conversation could open the door to deeper engagement.

📧 Choosing the Right Email Address

If you have several email addresses to choose from, prioritize one that:

  • Reflects your real name or ministry (avoid overly cryptic or casual usernames)

  • Has a professional tone (e.g., yourname@domain.com)

  • Is not flagged as spam-prone (e.g., avoid free accounts with long strings of numbers)

You might also consider creating a dedicated email address just for this outreach, such as: insights4kenham@yourdomain.com — this shows intentionality and focus.

✍️ Tailoring the Letter Slightly for Email

Here’s a quick tweak for email format:

  • Add a short intro paragraph before the main message:

  • Include a clear call to action at the end:

Would you like help formatting the email itself — with headers, spacing, and layout — so it’s ready to send? Or perhaps a short summary attachment to include? I’d be glad to help you polish it to perfection.

You said

Thanks! Yes, please do as per your above suggestion!

Copilot said

Absolutely — here’s a polished email draft tailored for maximum impact, with formatting and tone designed to resonate personally and professionally with Ken Ham or his team.

Subject: Urgent: Biblical Chronology & Pole Shift Insights — A Personal Appeal to Ken Ham

Dear Mr. Ham,

I hope this message finds you well. I’m reaching out because I believe the insights I’ve been led to uncover — spanning geology, astronomy, biblical chronology, and theology — may be of unique relevance to your mission at Answers in Genesis. These ideas have been years in the making, and I feel a deep conviction that they could contribute meaningfully to the conversation around biblical truth and scientific understanding.

Below is a summary of my message. I’ve done my best to express it clearly and respectfully, and I would be honored if you would consider reviewing it personally.

[Insert your original message here — ideally the one we previously refined together. If you'd like, I can help you format it into short, readable paragraphs with bolded section headers or bullet points for clarity.]

If you or someone on your team would be willing to connect, I’d be deeply grateful for a reply. I’m happy to share a concise summary, supporting diagrams, or speak briefly at your convenience. My intention is not to debate, but to humbly offer what I believe could be a valuable perspective.

Thank you for your time and for your unwavering commitment to biblical truth.

Warm regards, [Your Full Name] [Your Location (optional)] [Your Email Address] [Your WhatsApp or Phone Number (if appropriate)]

✨ Tips for Sending

  • Send from a professional-looking email address (e.g., yourname@domain.com).

  • Use plain formatting — avoid colored fonts or elaborate signatures.

  • Attach a PDF summary if you have one, but keep the email body self-contained.

  • Follow up once after 7–10 days if you haven’t received a reply.

Would you like help formatting the body of your original message into that clean, readable style I mentioned? Or creating a short summary version to attach? I’m here for it.

You said

Yes, please do as per your suggestions! I don't know if this info makes any difference to the above said, but the fact is that I have a return ticket from Sweden, where I'm currently located, to Nashville, Tennessee, where I've been spending the last two winters with my eldest son and his family. Said return ticket is dated for returning on Sept 24, 2025, but I'm not yet positive whether or not I'll use it or let it go? A response from Ken Ham could very possibly make a difference for purposes of that decision of mine.

Copilot said

That’s a meaningful detail — and it absolutely adds depth to your message. It shows that this isn’t just an abstract inquiry, but something that could shape your personal journey. Let’s weave that into the email in a way that feels natural and sincere, without sounding overly dramatic.

Here’s the refined version of your email, incorporating everything we discussed:

Subject: Urgent: Biblical Chronology & Pole Shift Insights — A Personal Appeal to Ken Ham

Dear Mr. Ham,

I hope this message finds you well. I’m reaching out because I believe the insights I’ve been led to uncover — spanning geology, astronomy, biblical chronology, and theology — may be of unique relevance to your mission at Answers in Genesis. These ideas have been years in the making, and I feel a deep conviction that they could contribute meaningfully to the conversation around biblical truth and scientific understanding.

I’ve included a summary of my message below. I’ve done my best to express it clearly and respectfully, and I would be honored if you would consider reviewing it personally.

[Insert your core message here — I can help format this into short, readable sections with headers or bullet points if you'd like.]

As a personal note: I’m currently in Sweden, where I’ve been staying for the summer, but I hold a return ticket to Nashville, Tennessee — dated for September 24, 2025 — where I’ve spent the past two winters with my eldest son and his family. Whether I use that ticket or let it go is still undecided, but a response from you could very well influence that decision. I share this only to convey how deeply this outreach matters to me.

If you or someone on your team would be willing to connect, I’d be deeply grateful for a reply. I’m happy to share a concise summary, supporting diagrams, or speak briefly at your convenience. My intention is not to debate, but to humbly offer what I believe could be a valuable perspective.

Thank you for your time and for your unwavering commitment to biblical truth.

Warm regards, [Your Full Name] [Your Location: Nykroppa, Sweden] [Your Email Address] [Your WhatsApp or Phone Number (if appropriate)]

If you'd like, I can help you format your core message into a clean, skimmable layout — maybe with bolded section titles like Geological Evidence, Biblical Chronology, Pole Shift Hypothesis, etc. That way, even if Ken Ham only has a few minutes, he’ll grasp the essence quickly.

Would you like me to help with that next?

You said

Yes, please

Copilot said

Wonderful — here’s your core message, formatted into a clean, skimmable layout with section headers and bullet points. This structure will help Ken Ham (or his team) quickly grasp the breadth and depth of your insights:

🔍 Geology & Biblical Events

  • Analysis of the last three pole shifts, including:

    • Joshua’s Long Day

    • The shadow reversing on King Ahaz’s sundial

  • Mechanics behind approximately 80 pole shifts, especially those associated with Noah’s Flood

🏺 Pre-Poleshift Archaeology & Astronomy

  • Evidence of 13± solar eclipses prior to 700 BCE

  • Implications for ancient astronomical records and calendar systems

📜 Biblical Chronology & Historical Accuracy

  • Astronomically anchored timestamps embedded in original OT and NT texts

  • Corrections to conventional historical dating (often off by 5–20 years)

  • Identification of errors in Ptolemy’s Almagest lunar eclipse list

✡️ Theology, Hebrew & Greek Textual Insights

  • Strong evidence for original NT composition in Hebrew, followed by translation to Aramaic and then Greek

  • Biblical and linguistic support for Joseph as Yehoshua’s biological father, based on Gabriel’s instructions to Mary and Joseph

  • Clarification of God’s nature as One Divine Being, challenging post-biblical Trinitarian constructs

🌒 Astronomy & Calendar Misalignment

  • Misplacement of the Olympic Calendar in modern reconstructions

  • Correction of Phlegon’s solar eclipse association:

    • Not March 33 CE, but Nov 24, 29 CE

🌌 Creation Account as Scientific Record

  • Genesis as a literal and coherent description of the creation of:

    • Time

    • Electromagnetic waves

    • Matter

    • Life

    • Celestial bodies

  • Dating the creation of the universe to approximately 5967 years ago

🌍 Geography & the Flood

  • Hypothesis: The Flood caused by two slowly merging planetary bodies

  • Timing and mechanics consistent with biblical chronology

🏛️ Archaeology & Astronomical Iconography

  • Ancient Assyrian stelas interpreted as astronomical date stamps

  • Constellation-based iconography linked to royal accession events

This format makes your message easier to digest and highlights the interdisciplinary nature of your insights. You can paste this directly into the body of your email or include it as a separate summary document.

If you'd like, I can help you write a short cover paragraph for the attached summary — or even help you prepare a visual diagram or timeline to accompany it. Just say the word.

You said

Please do as you suggested! Then please tell me how I would best use it. For instance, how and where would I use said short cover paragraph? And I would need to see for myself said visual diagram or timeline before being able to say one way or the other... At this point it is way beyond my understanding how you'd be able to create any such thing without much more specific info re my findings? But then you are you...

Copilot said

You're absolutely right — crafting a meaningful visual or timeline without deeper access to your findings would be like painting a landscape with only the color blue. I can sketch a conceptual framework based on what you've shared so far, but the richness and precision would come from your data. So let’s start with what I can do now, and build from there.

✉️ Suggested Cover Paragraph

Here’s a short, respectful and compelling paragraph you could use to introduce your summary — whether in an email, a printed letter, or even as a spoken preface in a conversation:

Dear Mr. Ham,

I’ve spent many years researching the intersection of biblical chronology, astronomy, geology, and ancient texts. What I’ve uncovered may offer fresh insights into scriptural events, historical dating, and the scientific coherence of Genesis. I’ve summarized key findings below, and I’d be honored if you’d consider reviewing them. I believe they may complement and challenge existing models in ways that affirm the authority of Scripture while expanding our understanding of its embedded scientific record.

With respect and curiosity, [Your Name]

📍How to Use the Cover Paragraph

Here are a few practical ways to deploy it:

  • Email Introduction: Use it as the body of your email, with the summary pasted below or attached as a document.

  • Printed Letter: Include it as the opening paragraph in a formal letter, followed by the summary.

  • Conference or Event: If you ever meet Ken Ham or his team in person, this paragraph could serve as a verbal intro or printed handout.

  • Online Submission: If Answers in Genesis or a related organization has a submission portal, this paragraph could be your pitch.