Return to 4th Quarter 2022 articles.
Both science and theology deal with the fundamental human desire to know. We are naturally curious because God made us that way. Science began with Christian believers who sought to learn more about God through his creation. A desire to learn about God through the things he has made motivated men like Roger Bacon, Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, and others to create what today we call “science.”
Faith in a loving and orderly Creator opened the door to a realization that the universe is orderly and not the chaotic product of the many gods of the ancient Greeks and Romans. As a result, theology and theologians developed many of the methods of modern science. Also, it was theologians who recognized that only natural causation is open to our direct study. They knew by faith that God was the ultimate cause of the universe. But since God is not a physical being, we can only study the secondary causation.
Even though we recognize that God is the only possible cause of the universe, all we can do is discover how he did it and marvel at the precision fine-tuning of the cosmos. If we say that God “zapped” these things into existence without a process, we deny God's engineering and architectural skills. Science and faith are friends, and we can know there is a God through the things he has made (Romans 1:20).
Today, well-known skeptics use books and TV programs to proclaim atheism, materialism, and scientism. At the same time, prominent and often highly-paid religious teachers debunk science and tell people to take off their “science glasses” and put on “Bible glasses.” It is time to call a truce in the war between science and faith. Although the Bible is scientifically accurate beyond its time, it is not a science book. Although nature can tell us much about God, only the Bible can tell us everything we need to know about the Creator of the universe and how to have a relationship with him. Good science and good theology go hand in hand because science and faith are friends.
The scientific understanding of the Cause of the universe matches the biblical description of God. Since God is outside of time, he can hear the prayers of millions of people all over the world at the same time. We cannot imagine what it would be like to be outside of time because being locked into time is all we know. If we could step out of history's timeline and see it from God's perspective, we could understand why God allows things to happen. We could understand the things that make us ask, “Why doesn't God prevent that?” We could see the conclusion of all things and know that because of God's wisdom, justice, and love, the conclusion is good.
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Scripture links/references are from BibleGateway.com. Unhighlighted scriptures can be looked up at their website.