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If the big bang was caused by a collision then where did the collision come from?

If the collision was cause by particles where did the particles come from?

If the particles were created by anything where did that something come from?

The only answer is my maker and savior Jesus Christ, he lives in me and his word is the guide to my life. He loves all and created everything. Ur answers and opinions?

2007-07-30 15:07:34 · 19 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

God has been alive forever and he is perfect. He walked the earth in flesh in the form of Jesus.

2007-07-30 15:11:32 · update #1

Here's something about, God is still alive and you can feel him there. But is the Big Bang still happening? No! Can you feel the Big Bang now? No! Yet I can feel God and he is still and will always be there.

2007-07-30 15:17:19 · update #2

19 answers

Notice that you were perfectly willing to think critically about the causes of the big bang, but your critical thinking went straight out the window the moment you started talking about your own beliefs.
This is a crystal clear illustration of that "biased reasoning" effect.

2007-07-30 15:13:23 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 4 0

If you can't except the universe existing without a cause, then why can you accept a god existing without a cause?

Not only that, you do not understand the Big Bang. Open a physics book of the grade level of your choice, and you will understand the theory more clearly.

Or, if you want an argument:
Existing things are existent. Existence must, therefore, be a logical primary.

Consicious things are themselves conscious...a simple tautology. However, something that is conscious must exist. It doesn't work in reverse; something could exist without being conscious. Therefore, consciousness does not have primacy over existence.

So, whatever existed first was not itself have been conscious.

Furthermore, the exist is to exist as something; nothing is merely "existence." To exist is to have an essence: a thing-which-you-are. And, to have a nature is to also make a claim as a thing-which-you-are-not. To exist, therefore, is to exist as a limited thing.

So, whatever existed first not only did not necessarily have consciousness, but it was a defined, limited thing. This doesn't sound like the god that theists are always raving about. It sounds more like something that can't think or act of its own accord, but instead follows defined laws governing its nature.

2007-07-30 22:18:16 · answer #2 · answered by jtrusnik 7 · 2 0

If the "maker and savior Jesus Christ" was the cause, where did he come from?

This argument wouldn't stand up to scrutiny from an elementary student. You jump from "caused" to "created" without blinking an eye. It's ridiculous.

The big bang is not an answer, it's the best current explanation. The answer, "god made everything" is no answer at all.

May I ask how something that loves all he's created be tortured for all eternity for a finite crime?

2007-07-30 22:17:54 · answer #3 · answered by J Bowden Hapgood 2 · 3 0

Arguments from first cause actually go against the existence of God. You assume than nothing occurs spontaneously in the universe, but quantum mechanics suggest otherwise. Second, you assume that the mass-energy of the universe could not be eternal, but there is no evidence to support that. Finally, you get down to the question of what is more likely to be uncreated and eternal, latent mass-energy or an intelligent being, and the former is the answer.

There was a big bang. We can see the residual glow and the universe expanding. Scientists have the courage to say I don't know when they reach the limits of their knowledge. You degrade religion when you use it to fill in ignorance. Your religious beliefs are your own, but don't sully them by fighting against what can be seen.

2007-07-30 22:19:21 · answer #4 · answered by novangelis 7 · 3 0

According to the current theory it was a collision of dimensions.

As for what you said........where did your maker come from?

Edit: Don't you see how asinine "god did it and you can't question it because he is magic and beyond time" is? THINK instead of accepting the crap you are being spoon feed by people no more enlightened than you are.

*sigh*
Do you think they just pulled the Big Bang Theory out of their butt? Every particle of matter is moving away from one central location in space just like it would if there had been a HUGE explosion. Therefore the EVIDENCE suggests that there WAS a big explosion hence the Big Bang Theory.

2007-07-30 22:11:36 · answer #5 · answered by thewolfskoll 5 · 3 1

Fungal, it's a good point. Maybe try seasoning with some grace.

Moose: God is self sustaining. You can't understand that, because you are only alive in this temporal realm. You would need to have a new birth with a transcendant spirit from said creator to understand that He exists without a cause agent.

No one doubts that the universe came from nothing. The only question is did the universe have a cause agent or not.

I believe it takes more faith to believe that there was no cause agent.

2007-07-30 22:15:25 · answer #6 · answered by TEK 4 · 0 4

Yeah, God creates out of nothing! Someone asked: Who created God? This is my answer.

To be the true God he must neither have a beginning nor ending. If something had made God, God would be an idol. Since the "beginning" (Genesis 1,1; John 1,1), God exists and his existence forces itself on us as an initial fact, which needs no other explanation. God had no origin, no becoming. Because he alone is the "first and the last" (Isaiah 41,4; 44,6; 48,12), the world is entirely his work, his creation.

Because he is first God he does not have to introduce himself. He demands recognition by man's spirit through the sole fact that he is God.

Peace and every blessing!

2007-07-30 22:10:43 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 4

Here's a better question: Where did god come from?

2007-07-30 23:29:13 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

how is that the only answer? it sounds more like a cop out answer to me. you don't have a real answer, so you fill in the blanks with god or jesus. ummm no. that's not the way the world actually works

2007-07-30 22:10:46 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

Jesus was not alive during the big bang.

2007-07-30 22:11:07 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

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