Recent
polls show that as many as 96 percent of all Americans strongly believe in the
existence of a God who is holy and perfect, and who created the world and rules
it today. But is there really a God? You cannot prove that god exists, at least
by normal scientific methods. If it is beyond our five senses to examine, then
you cannot use science to either prove or disprove. But think about it, no one
has ever seen love, yet we all know it is real. No one has ever smelled
freedom, but it exists. The key is to look for evidence that would support
whether or not it is reasonable to believe in the existence of God. Christians
believe that such evidence exists in abundance.
For
example, the leading hypothesis for the beginning of the universe is the
"Big Bang" theory, which maintains that at one time all matter was
packed into a dense mass at temperatures of many trillions of degrees. Then,
roughly 4 billion years ago, there was a huge explosion. From that explosion,
all of the matter that today forms our planets and stars was born. The great
cosmological question is "What
caused the Big Bang?"
Even
more important, where did the matter come from-you can't have something come
from nothing!
Dr.
Robert Jastrow, professor of Astronomy at both
Columbia
University
and
Dartmouth
College, director of the Mount
Wilson Institute and manager of the Mount Wilson Observatory, and for twenty
years director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies, made the
following comment in regard to the Big Bang:
"Now
we see how the astronomical evidence leads to a biblical view of the origin of
the world."
But
there is far more than "cause and effect" to consider, there is the
great order and design of the world as well. Imagine you came upon a space
shuttle sitting in the middle of the desert. You could reason that it came
together by chance through a chaotic sandstorm. But your initial thought would
likely be that someone made it and placed it there. Buildings imply an
architect, paintings suggest a painter. There is design in the universe, so it
is reasonable to assume that there is a Great Designer. The alternative is that
infinite time plus chance, in the context of chaos, created incredible order
and purpose. This would be akin to having the software for the latest windows
application result-by chance-from an explosion in a computer warehouse.
Physicist
Stephen Hawking once told a reporter that "The odds against a universe like ours emerging out of
something like the big bang are enormous...I think clearly there are religious
implications."
And
so do Christians.
The debate is hardly academic. More consequence for thought
and action flow from this one question than any other question you can raise.
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