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So many scientists and non-believers rely on the Big Bang theory so they don't have to 'deal' with the fact that there IS a God.

If the Big Bang Theory did, in fact, happen - what or who was it that created the dust and fragments that lead to the Big Bang Theory?

I firmly believe that SOMETHING or SOMEONE created EVERYTHING. The Big Bang Theory didn't just pop up from anywhere.

2007-02-19 14:00:31 · 19 answers · asked by ♥ Scorpio X 3 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

19 answers

Why does the "religious evangelical" community persist in doing the opposite and chasing away people from the word of God and his grace through this moronic dialog about creation?

The Bible has an excellent an simple explanation for the creation, perfectly consistent with the current scientific observations and theories, such as the "Big Bang". And WHY exactly7 wouldn;t God use the rules and mathematics that HE invented to create the universe...and explain it in simple terms to his simple children. And why is it wrong for his children to grow up and understand the mysteries and the language of science that HE has written...

I firmly believe that SOMETHING or SOMEONE created EVERYTHING. The Big Bang Theory didn't just pop up from anywhere.

2007-02-19 14:13:02 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

I do not support the theory. As you say the branches of Physics, Mathematics, and topological astronomy as well as other sciences are just to much to put it all together. Remember the big bang is just a Theory and not a fact! It cannot be proven as a fact! Even Hawkings can't get back to point zero, and he never will. The reason is he is looking for the beginning. So, let us now put the big bang on the shelve for a minuet and let us look at the expanse of the universe as always being there. Not everything that is in it. but an expanse that has always been. Now we have a starting point! an empty eternal expanse that has always been there. Everything in the expanse we see today has order This we call the universe.It continues to expand in the eternal expanse. everything follows all the rules of physics, and math. So just how did the three dimensional universe as we know it start? We know from Einstein's formula E=MC^2 that we can get energy from matter. We also know from Newton's law of physics that every action has an equal reaction. So, taking dynamic energy one could create everything and start the motion of everything created in the expanse with order. Is this logical? Yes! Is it true? It has to be because we continue to discover more about it using the laws of physics and mathematics. So this would open the biggest question of all, just who or what created it? This my friend I will leave up to you to decide.

2016-05-24 18:34:55 · answer #2 · answered by Inge 3 · 0 0

Let's deal with it paragraph by paragraph:

Firstly, scientists don't necessarily rely on the Big Bang theory, and if they do, it has nothing to do with resisting the possibility of a God. The definition of God is another question in itself (for another day).
Secondly, the Big Bang Theory did not 'happen'. And remember it is a theory, and it is confusing to think of it as originating from dust and fragments because the human mind works in such a way as to conceive of phenomena with a beginning and an end. The challenge is to resist the temptation to do so, and to simply start off at the theoretical "singularity" and try to understand the theory from that point forward.
Thirdly, if you believe that something and someone created everything, then who created that something or someone? Again, the challenge is to think outside those parameters. Understanding the theory requires us to adopt a different ontological framework to that which we adopt when considering the Newtonian world.

2007-02-19 15:21:22 · answer #3 · answered by illy 1 · 1 1

We can only base our assumptions on our observations, what we can measure, what makes common sense. There are many reasons to believe that there was a big bang, the two that come to mind is the expanding universe (all the galaxies going away from us) and 2, the background cosmic radiation. Its true, we don't know what caused that initial singularity, but to jump to the supernatural conclusion makes no sense.

Reminds me of the movie “The Gods Must Be Crazy,” a native in the Kalahari Desert encounters technology for the first time--in the shape of a Coke bottle. I found this to be very amusing, but I also began to see parallels between his thought process, and that of the modern day Theist. Both are using CAVEMAN LOGIC to explain their world. I fail to see the difference between “hmm, bottle fall from sky, must be gods” and “hmm, trees, complex human eye, butterflies and lack of knowing what caused the initial big bangs proves the existence of god.”

In both of these cases, someone is simply replacing one unknown for another unknown, but proving nothing!

Not only can God not be proven, but I will also go so far as to say that God can be disproved. It is impossible for something to be all knowing and all good. If you are aware that something bad is going to happen, and you allow it to happen anyway, then you cannot be all good. If God created everything, then he also created evil. It is also impossible to be all-powerful; can God create a rock that even he himself cannot move?

I would have thought that as man became more knowledgeable and logical that he would have pushed aside his caveman beliefs, but it seems to be just the opposite.

2007-02-19 16:32:47 · answer #4 · answered by Its not me Its u 7 · 1 0

I agree as do many other scientists....The scientists have pretty much proven the Big Bang Theory as much as a fact. However, non can say how the singularity that sparked the big bang came to be. In science you cannot say God created it because that is a conflict between science and sprituality. You cannot scientifically explain God so you cannot use God in Science.

But many , self included believe in the Big Bang AND God. It's not one or the other as so many people try to portay it.!

2007-02-19 14:07:38 · answer #5 · answered by fade_this_rally 7 · 2 1

I agree with you. You know how scientists say that the universe was a big ball of matter that exploded one day? Well, here's my question, what was that big ball of matter sitting in before it exploded? Is there another universe outside of ours? It doesn't make sense. The only logical reason I have about how the universe came to be is that God created it. It's so much less confusing.

2007-02-19 16:11:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

GREETINGS: God created the heavens and EARTH.
He created the dinosurs the Aliens or so- callded Aliens,
They were here way before us,So we are the ALIENS not Them,how do you know it went BANG did anyone hear it
There was nothing there at all a big black nothingness.
GOD did it he made it from other planets that are out there
sent a supercollider into this space we call home and thats how we begain

2007-02-19 14:11:16 · answer #7 · answered by ashkicker420 3 · 1 1

I'm with you.
If you read the Genesis account of the beginning it sounds a lot like the scientific description of the same event.
Besides, if God created a universe, wouldn't he do it with a BIG BANG ?

2007-02-19 14:27:35 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

That seems like such an elementary question (where did the stuff that banged come from?). I like the way Southpark put it: Couldn't that just be the answer to how, and not why?

2007-02-19 15:43:19 · answer #9 · answered by spewing_originality 3 · 0 1

when i heard about the big bang theory i fell out laughing.

2007-02-19 14:12:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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