If there was a big bang then there is a couple of questions that need answered. What went bang and how did it get there? Considering that there are suns millions of times bigger than our sun and some smaller ones and some other suns have planets around them and there are nebula hundreds of thousands of light years across and there are estimated to be hundreds of billions of stars in one galaxy and there are estimated to be hundreds of billions of galaxies just how big was the thing that went bang, and why in the vacuum of space would objects that are hurtling at near light speed in all directions all of a sudden want to stop and form things yet the galaxies they are in are still moving outward?
2007-03-20 13:04:39
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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In the / beginning God created /
the heaven and the earth. Gen. 1:1
What was to become the big bang theory had been forming in the 1930s and taken form by the late 1940s.
Many who held to evolution were not pleased with what was taking shape for they did not believe in a beginning; didn't want to see anything that hinted a beginning; or hear anything sounding like a beginning. -- No beginning. no god, no creation.
Fred Hoyle, a well know British astrophysicist, was not fond of the theory and poked fun at it by calling it the Big Bang.
For many Christians, not all, nucleosynthesis was a beginning and the score was now even. Those who constantly chided that the first adjective in the Bible was wrong shut their face for quite a few years.
The big bang did not preclude the earth or humans or any others life forms. As for the Bible, it stands as one of the most studied and researched and argued set of books ever to exist. When all is said and done, my money says the Bible will have proved the best source of life, history and science that the world will ever see.
It may not have every word in every language; but it has a true picture that will serve any searching reader. Somewhat like the universe, it expands over time in a journey that surpasses any marvel science may find. A book that issued, like the cosmos, from the mind of God.
2007-03-20 16:36:44
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answer #2
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answered by Tommy 6
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There is too much actual proof of evolution to deny that it is the truth. That does not necessarily mean that God did not create Adam and Eve. Obviously, they were never the only 2 people on earth. I am trying to be kind and logical here.
In my opinion, the bible, which is most likely myths and parables, does not go anywhere near the creation of the universe. So the big bang would not necessarily mean that there is no God and definitely does not disprove the existence of Jesus.
I am a deist. I believe that God was the big bang and then evolution took over. What created God? A very valid question, in my mind. A question for which I have no answer. I don't know. Maybe He always was.
2007-03-20 13:12:23
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answer #3
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answered by Gorgeoustxwoman2013 7
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The fact is from a Christian perspective, Genisis does not include very many details, and just for your information we have a pretty good idea that Moses put the Torah (1st five books of the Old Testament) together. All we know is that God created the Heavens and the Earth. I don't think we honesly can interpret the time line, history of Earth, or way in which all of this was created by the vague disription in Genesis 1. Many Christians would argue that they know the details, but realistically it is all speculation. The idea is that the Bible is truth. Just because someone might not fully understand something contained within it, does not mean it is a lie.
2007-03-20 13:31:26
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answer #4
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answered by RedE1 3
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If The Big Bang, Abiogeneisis, Nebular Theory or even the Shoe String Theory were proven to be the cause of everything then it still wouldn't damage the Christians faith in God. They will just say that God did by way of any of those theories. I don't care though. If they want to believe in God then they should just do so without telling everybody else that they have to believe the same way. Peace!!!!!!!!!!
2007-03-20 13:27:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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The big bang doesn't explain the universe. It only explains how far back in time we can measure (at the moment). The singularity where all energy/matter was compressed to causes all laws of physics and time/space to break down. Time is a vector we determine time by the change in matter, if all matter becomes one thing we cannot deteremine time anymore. Further gravity for example doesn't exist in a singularity since all forces are being applied to the same location and not pulling/pushing on any other location it no longer exists.
2007-03-20 13:11:26
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answer #6
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answered by Magus 4
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It could be if God made the big bang that could have been his way of creating the world and people. But I can assure you he didn't. No more than he made the Banana Snake. He just took our legs for no good reason. We just wanted a little free love. If its proved beyond a reasonable doubt they will say God made the Big Bang.
2007-03-20 13:07:39
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The big-bang did occur.
The big-bang does not posit that the universe came from nothingness.
Only bible literalists are wrong.
Edit: Biblehelp, all of the questions you asked have answers. Consider reading up on the matter.
2007-03-20 13:04:15
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm with those that believe the following verse in Job pertains to the big bang and the angels witnessed it with great joy.
Job 38:7 when the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy?
2007-03-20 13:18:48
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answer #9
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answered by rangedog 7
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If God made the big bang would you have ever existed?
2007-03-20 13:04:38
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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