Science points to the Creator

Atheism suffers from ignorance of the most important thing in the entire universe. There are numerous indications of God’s wisdom and power in creation, facts that science has uncovered that prove there must be a supreme Mind behind this amazing creation. Stephen Meyer in his book “Return of the God hypothesis” deals thoroughly with three scientific facts that require a divine Mind. Let me summarise his reasons in simple language.

First, the Big Bang requires Someone who began it: you cannot evoke matter to explain the origin of matter, he writes. The Creator must have been immaterial (spirit), powerful, eternal, and personal. Secondly, the mind-boggling numbers of the constants of physics are so extraordinarily precise that life would not be possible if they were altered even just a tiny bit. Explosions normally result in much disorder and confusion: how then did the Big Bang issue in a created world where order and scientific laws abound, to say nothing of the beauty and the immense number of life forms? Our minds may easily conclude that this must involve an infinite Mind at work. Thirdly, the DNA discovered in every cell of our bodies possesses information encoded in what resembles a language. Scientists realise that wherever we see a language we have to acknowledge the agency of persons. The Creator of DNA must possess personal characteristics.

These three relatively recent scientific discoveries form the basis of a case for the return of the God hypothesis. People are led to believe in God on the basis of scientific facts for which no better explanation can be found. Indeed, scientists who want to hold persistently to their atheism have a hard time refuting these claims that Stephen Meyer backs up with his profound scientific reasoning. 

Atheists cannot simply close their eyes to these discoveries of science and what they imply. Rejecting as a matter of course the very notion of God is to ignore the most important factor in the universe: on the other hand, opening up to the probability of God would open the way to the meaningful and vital answers we need. God our Creator knows those answers. We do well to listen to him. And even if you’re not convinced, it’s worth taking a serious look at the Bible to check it out. There is wisdom to be found on every page!   

It may surprise atheists to know that the Christian faith is evidence based. It is not in conflict with science: rather, modern science developed in the West in the 17th century because the generally accepted Christian faith had established a consensus that the Creator was wise and intelligent and therefore his creation would yield scientific knowledge to those who studied it carefully.

But scientific facts are not the only things that point to God. It is astonishing that so many intelligent people do not grasp the vital fact that the historic person of Jesus Christ was none other than an incarnation of God the Creator! All who take the time and trouble to read and to seriously consider what Jesus said about himself in chapters 5 to 8 of John’s Gospel must admit he made divine claims. And a reading of his life and deeds in the Gospels also reveals his miraculous divine power, his unique sinless holiness and his brilliant teaching on all sorts of things we need to know. God sent his Son into the world to tell us truth we need to understand. Just consider what Jesus said before Pontius Pilate: “For this reason I was born and for this reason I came into the world, to testify to the truth” (John 18.37).

Clive Every-Clayton

A better story

I have been busy these last weeks preparing and giving lectures here in the Highlands of Scotland on a better way to conceive of our human reality.

Whether we like it or not, we in the West live in an atmosphere fashioned by a secular mind-set, and through this grid we seek to understand the way people think and behave. Some months ago, certain leading intellectual thinkers, politicians and academics meeting in London insisted that we have not been well served by the modern secular “story” – the worldview beclouding our western society with its morose and unhelpful ideas about our human meaning and value.

These thinkers are proposing a different approach, and although not all would adhere to a religion, there is a basic realisation that without a Transcendent framework, society tends to descend into a kind of hopeless moral relativism that brings on the anguish we see increasingly in the West.

As a Christian, I wholly concur that we need a “better story”, and my lectures have been addressing that need in various areas of our self-understanding. My basic thesis has been that the atheistic materialism underlying the secular story is unhelpful and psychologically damaging. It is a factor contributing to people’s confusion about their human reality, the rise of mental ill health, and the prevailing sense of hopelessness and despair. It is the hidden cause of a lot of the deterioration of our modern society that we have been sadly witnessing these last fifty years or more. 

Why is the materialist-atheist scenario so harmful? Because it proclaims that we all have come ultimately from an impersonal beginning – an immense explosion of energy and matter which, over billions of years, instead of obeying the second law of thermodynamics and deteriorating progressively into total disorder, has somehow managed – by some unaided process – to actually bring about the world we see around us with all its life, variety, beauty, and splendour. The essential blind spot of this “story” is its absence of any original personal Creator as the valorising ground of our human personality.

Dr Francis Schaeffer discerned this years ago, when, commenting on the thesis that “man is the product of the impersonal, plus time plus chance”, he wrote: “no-one has succeeded in finding personality on that basis, though many have tried. It cannot be done”.

This means that if you begin by adopting the atheistic materialist explanation of the origin of all things in an impersonal explosion of matter and energy, there is no way you are going to be able to establish the reality of human personality. That first assumption leads inexorably to an understanding of the human condition which cannot account for – and indeed undermines – all the marvellous enjoyable realities of our personal existence: our intelligence and rationality, our emotional nature, the reality of love, freedom to choose and to exercise our own will, our ability to communicate, and our moral sensitivity. All these much appreciated aspects of our personal lives have no real basis following the story told by secular materialism; it contradicts our well-known reality and would undermine our true personhood. This makes evident the falseness of that story: we know that our personal faculties are real and precious, so any explanation that cannot account for them must be wrong. 

Instead of assumptions that do not explain in positive terms who and what we are – but rather confuse us – what a relief to turn to the “better story” that an infinite and personal Creator made humankind in his image; that both valorises us and truly explains who we really are.

Clive Every-Clayton

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