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The big bang may have happened but someone or something must have made the matter to "bang" there is your answer to a supreme being there must be a God. If the aethist Stalin really died shaking his fist in the air 'Who was he shaking it at'?

2006-12-22 05:40:08 · 18 answers · asked by davejoyce1286 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

18 answers

Ooookay. Stalin = Not Atheist. Now that we have it all cleared up, let me explain that Stalin was shaking his fist at his enemies, as if to say, "You bastards. You finally got me..." The Big Bang? Speculation (heresy for Christians), but it has never occurred to you to MIX science with religion? How do you know God didn't kill himself, and the Big Bang was the effect of this? And our souls just conglomerate to make one being, aka God? How about this (btw, I'm going waaay off subject here...): An omnipotent and omniscient God can do everything and know everything, right? Well, what would a living being of omni-whatever NOT know or NOT be? Dead? Yup. Sorry to say, but to truly become an omnipotent and omniscient being, God had to destroy himself. Sorry to break it to you, but we are pieces of God. With each atom in the universe, we will see a gathering of debris eventually coming together to form one supreme being, that is, God. So when he destroyed himself, he caused the Big Bang, which, in turn, created us. Hope this helps you a little bit, and let's try to expand our minds instead of being so narrow in our thinking, m'kay?

2006-12-22 05:46:34 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Science has no answer to this question yet. All we know is that the universe is expanding, and everything is rushing away from everything else. Logically, we can deduce that there was a time in the past when everything was closer together. If everything was close together but stationary, gravity would pull it together. Therefore, when everything was close together, it must have been moving outward very rapidly. That suggests it was even closer together at an earlier date. Continue this logic, and you eventually arrive at a universe contained in a single point, which must have exploded outward. Furthermore, we find microwave background radiation in every direction that precisely matches predictions theoretical physicists made of what the 'afterglow' of such an explosion would look like. But as for the cause of the Big Bang, or what happened before (if there was a before), we have absolutely no idea.

2016-05-23 16:04:50 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The Big Bang theory is one that states the beginning of matter, not the explosion of matter that was already there. I suggest you read about it (http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/universe/b_bang.html) if you are genuinely interested, but it seems you're just trying to pose this as a question to defend your faith and challenge science, which is fine.
However, let me ask you this: Where did God come from? If God was formed from nothing, or just "always there," then why couldn't that be true of the Big Bang or matter itself?

2006-12-22 05:44:27 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Use your logical mind for this one. If something that was completely undocumented occurred hundreds of billions of years before your consciousness ever came into being, can you really say with absolute certainty exactly how it happened?

No, you cannot. You can make excuses and fill in the blanks with canned answers, or you can accept that no matter what or hwo it happened you will NEVER know the absolute truth and can do nothing to alter it anyway.

Live your life, already. Your God-filled question does nothing to end poverty, violence or world hunger, so in the grand scheme of things you are just small and petty.

2006-12-22 05:53:36 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

One theory is that once the universe has stopped expanding it will start collapsing back onto itself being drawn back in by gravity to the center of the universe again and because of the unfathomable pressures of gravity it will totally collapse into something the size of an atom and then will be exploded again in another 'big bang' to start the cycle all over again. Some theorize this has been going on forever.

2006-12-22 05:48:11 · answer #5 · answered by Haven17 5 · 1 0

This is one of those "nobody really knows yet" questions, and the same thing can be asked about God: Where did he come from? If everything has to have a creator, who created God? Where did the matter come from to make God? It's an endless repeating cycle, and both are impossible to answer to anyone's satisfaction, really.

2006-12-22 05:44:31 · answer #6 · answered by angk 6 · 0 0

If you know ANYTHING about science, you would know that matter and energy cannot be CREATED NOR DESTROYED - only changed. So, no God created it, thats for certain.....

You know how everyone claims that God doesnt have a creator and was "always there?" Well, you can say the same about matter and energy. Go on, prove me wrong.

2006-12-22 05:52:38 · answer #7 · answered by YDoncha_Blowme 6 · 0 0

There was no matter in the big bang it was a singularity which may be the true image of god.

2006-12-22 05:42:21 · answer #8 · answered by bocasbeachbum 6 · 1 0

If the God theory is true, where did God come from?

The answer to either question would be the same: it just existed.

2006-12-22 05:44:20 · answer #9 · answered by Phoenix, Wise Guru 7 · 1 0

There may be a god but someone or something must have made him. Where did he come from?

2006-12-22 05:43:03 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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