Monday, October 1, 2007

“Hear, O Israel! The LORD is our God, the LORD alone. And you must love the LORD your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your strength. And you must commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands I am giving you today.
Deuteronomy 6:4-6

The most basic question of life may well be, Why is there something rather than nothing? Why am I here? Why is anything here at all?

Even Maria Von Trapp in the movie The Sound of Music knew the answer to this one. When she and the Captain are singing their love to each other in the gazebo, she croons, "Nothing comes from nothing, nothing ever could."

But naturalism, the belief that says there is no reality beyond the physical universe, offers two answers to this basic question. Until a few years ago, the hopeful wish of naturalism was that matter is eternal: the universe has always existed, and always will. There's no point to asking "why" because the universe simply is. End of discussion. Unfortunately for naturalism, the evidence that has come from our studies of astronomy makes it clear that the universe is unwinding, in a sense, and at one point it was tightly wound up. The evidence says that at some point in the past there was a beginning, and matter is most definitely not eternal. That's a major problem for a naturalist, who believes that everything that now is, came from nothing. First there was nothing, then there was something, but nothing caused the something to come into existence. Huh?

Pantheism is the belief that everything is part of one great "oneness." It comes from two Greek words, pan meaning "everything," and theos meaning "God." Pantheism says that all is one, all is god, and therefore we are one with the universe; we are god. We are part of that impersonal divinity that makes up the universe. In answering the question, Why is there something rather than nothing, pantheism says that everything had an impersonal beginning. The universe itself has an intelligence that brought itself into being. The "something" that exists is simply how energy expresses itself. If you've seen the Star Wars movies, you've seen the ideas of pantheism depicted in that impersonal energy field, "The Force." Since the beginning of the universe had an impersonal origin, the question of "why" gets sidestepped. Like naturalism, pantheism basically says, "We don't have a good answer to that question, so we won't think about it."

Christian Theism is the belief that God is a personal, transcendent Creator of the universe--and of us. This worldview showed up on a T-shirt I saw recently:

"There are two things in life you can be sure of.

1. There is a God.
2. You are not Him."

Christian Theism answers the question, Why is there something rather than nothing, by confidently asserting that first there was God and nothing else, then He created the universe by simply speaking it into existence. The Bible's opening sentence is an answer to this most basic of questions: "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth."

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was reading an article by a leading British naturalist who was defending his point of view, his response to the evidence for an expanding universe was that there was never a starting point but that the universe has expanding and collapsed in an every ending cycle. Without any evidence he can up with that theory to support his position. Which brings out the point it is better to have people think you are a fool, than open you mouth and prove it.

Steve Stiefel

Anonymous said...

The Big Bang Theory -- If you think about it, this theory widely used by atheists, can not separate itself from a point of a "beginning" or a connection to an "origin". As Christians, we could say that the Big Bang might have been the first utterance of God that commanded the universe into existance. Yet, God is so powerful that he only need whisper to gain the attention of nature and our souls.

Anonymous said...

Why are we here? Are we from and for nothing?

I think this one is so hard to explain, but so easy to understand. I don't even know what is outside my front door right now. I can't tell you the hospital room I was born in. I don't remember my childhood yet I am often asked where WE came from. I usually ask where that person thinks THEY came from and then tell them what I understand. I do not go into details. I just say GOD. I don't feel I have the words to decribe what was here before us. It is something we cannot explain. I understand it to be "nothing" but GOD. OK. Simple? To a believer it may not always even be simple, but it is TRUTH. I can only go with that.

What hospital room where you born in?

Anonymous said...

Read a great book recently called, "Darwin's Black Box". For those who don't mind a little scientific reading it presented a review of the THEORY of evolution based on what we know now about biochemical structure.

When Darwin put forward his theory it did not take into account the process of change, the "nuts and bolts" of how things work and fit together. When you analyze this theory with modern day science, there is very little debate that a "designer/creator" had to play a part in the creation of life.

My commitment to Christ was not based on a moment of raw emotion. Rather, it was through a more analytical process, working through some of the big questions we are discussing in this series. The answer to, "where did we come from" is one of the cornerstones of my belief in Christ.

Check out the book!