10 April 2011

Why Do I Believe in God? A few reasons...

First and foremost, I have my own personal interactions with God. I feel like the rest of my blogs give way to that.

Secondly, there's the existence of the universe itself. Way back when, people used to think that the universe had always just existed; however, Einstein developed a theory, the theory of relativity, which concludes that the universe had a beginning, a starting point. Now, even Einstein had issues with this, along with other scientists of his day. They tested and retested this theory, yearning for a flaw in the equation, but none was ever found. More recently, confirming this theory, is the use of the Hubble Telescope. We can actually see the universe expanding. To sum this reason up: if the universe is constantly expanding from one point and had a beginning, something had to create it. Something outside of the universe. According to science, things don't just exist without a cause. This usually begets the question, "By this logic, who created God?" To me, this is the wrong question. By our own scientific reasoning, we state that everything that has a beginning needs a cause, not that everything needs a cause.

Thirdly, there's how our universe is just so perfectly in place. If our earth's axis weren't at its precise degrees, no life. If it were too close to the sun, no life. If it were too far away, no life. If the force of gravity were to change by one part in ten billion billion billion relative to the total range of the strengths of the four forces of nature, no life. If the neutrons that make up our very being were not exactly 1.001 times the mass of the proton, no life would be possible. Honestly, I could go on for days, but basically what it sums up to is: the laws and physical constants that govern all the matter in the universe appear to be precisely balanced and finely tuned for life to occur and flourish. What's even more crazy is that all these things are not dependent upon one another. Everything could be just so perfect, save one, and it would ruin the possibility for life. I was doing some research and found that there are at least 2 dozen characteristics that must be "just so" for life on this earth alone to even be remotely possible. Examples: correct mass; being orbited by a large moon, having a magnetic field; manifesting an oxygen-rich atmosphere; orbiting a main sequence G2 dwarf star; and being in the correct location in the galactic habitable zone. Aw, man, it's crazy how perfect our world is. How could it all be just so precise and deliberate by chance? Something had to create it with purpose and knowledge.

My final reason, though not scientific I feel should still be mentioned, is our morally good universe. First, on what basis is something considered good and evil? Did it just arise out of no where from the Big Bang? Honestly, no one believes that morality emerged out of physical explosions. Second, I feel it's important to point out that morals and values are different from etiquette. Think not? What if there were a culture where men kept females as slaves and beat and raped them at will? We'd all be morally outraged, right? Right. We know that murder, rape, bigotry, and racism are really objectively wrong, regardless of traditions, customs, or preferences. But where's the intrinsic sense of right and wrong come from? If we didn't invent it and it is beyond culture and politics, and we can never escape it, what's it's source? As a Christian, I have a solid basis for objective moral values (and they are objective, not relative) - God, who is divine, transcendent, and supreme. Goodness flows from God; moral values are created by Him, and only discovered by humans. This is not to say that atheists and the like cannot recognize and live by a generally moral life. Surely they can. But recognizing something and even living by it does not mean that one has a real basis for it.

God doesn't really force Himself on anyone, but He has left His fingerprints all over the world and universe for us to find. Jesus says, "keep on seeking, and you will find." Matthew 7:7

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