- Dec 2, 2021
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I agree that God, being supernatural, is not directly observable or testable like a chemical reaction in a lab. But that doesn’t mean there’s no evidence for God; it just means the type of evidence is different. We often infer the existence of something not because we see it directly, but because we see its effects.Yes, evolution deals with the natural world as a natural unguided process because that is what the scientific evidence shows us. There is no scientific evidence for God, since God is supernatural, beyond and outside of nature. Thus He cannot be studied through a scientific lense, only a theological lense.
For example, we’ve never seen the wind or gravity directly, but we see what they do. Similarly, we’ve never observed anyone creating the universe, but we do observe cause and effect, order, complexity, and information, things that consistently point to an intelligent source.
In fact, this kind of reasoning is consistent with the scientific method:
- A building points to a builder.
- A painting points to a painter.
- Code points to a programmer.
- And complex, information-rich biological systems point to design.
- A creation points to a creator
So, the issue isn’t that there’s no evidence for God, the issue is how that evidence is interpreted. If someone’s worldview rules out the supernatural before even looking at the data, then of course they won’t “see” God in the evidence. But that’s not a scientific conclusion, that’s a philosophical starting point.
WOW. I am still back on page 4 in this thread and I just noticed that it is already up to page 8. I give up. LOL
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