How is it meant to be deceiving? Perhaps scientific understanding just hasn't fully come to grips with the evidence. For instance, hundreds of years ago, scientists all swore the earth was flat and the center of the universe. Well now science says just the opposite.
Just because your science says something now, doesn't make it right and absolute. What God has created He created, and His understanding and wisdom goes beyond what yours or anyone else's can comprehend.
Let's say a person was created in a lab, a fully formed adult human being using some crazy sci-fi technology. The how isn't important for this analogy. The people who created this person then gave this person a lifetime of memories--memories of being a child, memories of their parents, memories of things they did, times they got in trouble, their first crush, their first kiss, memories of their grandparents dying. They even were designed with scars on their body, from accidents they acquired when they were supposedly younger. Now, of course, they were designed in the lab--they had no parents, no grandparents, never had a crush, a first kiss, and the scars are artificial. So all those memories, both what they remember in their mind as well as the physical memories on their body are all intentionally put there to make this person believe they had a full human life. But they never did. They were created last Thursday in a lab.
Would it be deceptive to make someone believe something is true that isn't true? To give them all the evidence to believe something is true, but it is all faked, meant to present a false reality--would that not be the very definition of deceptive?
Let's translate to God and His creation.
If God has given the material universe memories and scars of things which never happened, but are merely intended to give a false appearance of age, doesn't that mean God is planting false evidence, creating a false reality and presenting it as true when it isn't true.
That would be deceptive. If God created trees fully formed with tree rings that indicate a lifespan of continual tree growth for hundreds or even thousands of years before He created that tree--isn't that deceptive? Wouldn't ice core samples showing seasonal melts and freezes stretching back tens of thousands of years before the universe came into existence--indications of weather patterns and events that never really happened, be deceptive? Impact craters, and the erosion of geological features showing hundreds of thousands or even millions of years of physical events which--in fact--never happened would all be artificial scars. We are, when looking at such things, not seeing a true record of history, but a faked record of history. We are seeing faked evidence.
It's like saying God created the world with fossils already in the rocks, with the remains of dead things which never lived nor died. It's fake, it's deception.
To say God did that is to assault God's character, that God is not truthful, but is a liar.
From a Christian perspective, that is deeply problematic. The idea that the creator of the material universe is, fundamentally, a liar is completely at odds with a biblical and theologically orthodox Christian understanding of God. Because the confession of God as "Maker of all things, seen and unseen" is that God is fundamentally truthful in His creative endeavor; and the biblical pronouncement is that the created order bears truthful witness to God, "The heavens declare the glory of God" writes the Psalmist. The biblical witness, and the entire Christian position on creation as it relates to God and, ultimately, to salvation and eschatology is that God made all things, God made all things good, and that God is faithful to all which He made and, in the end, everything will be made whole and healed in Christ; the sting of death is a curse which causes creation suffering, being subject to futility as St. Paul says in Romans 8. That creation, therefore, is actually groaning in labor pain in a sense of longing for the birth of that new world out of this one, where resurrection and life, not death, reigns.
Even if the witness of the created order may challenge us, we ought to be compelled by the deep claims of our religion--and our Scriptures--that God as the Author of the universe tells the truth. Perhaps this means that we don't always know how to reconcile everything perfectly, or that overly simplistic interpretations of Scripture--and creation--might be demonstrated inadequate. We must still confess a truthful God, a truthful creation, because the chief claim of our religion is the Gospel.
And I think St. Augustine speaks great wisdom when he writes that if we present the Scriptures as being opposed to the plainly obvious things of observable reality, then we are actually insulting the Scriptures and their sacred writers. And if we act as though our Scriptures are untrustworthy about mundane things, then we present them as all the more untrustworthy when they speak of sublime things such as grace, salvation, and eternal life. We are not presenting a defense of Scripture by insisting that the findings and observation of science can't be true "because the Bible says so", we are in fact presenting an assault against the Scriptures. We are not presenting the Scriptures as more credible, but less credible.
When we see that the earth is round, and if we insist, "The Bible says it is flat, so it is flat", that
isn't defending the Bible.
-CryptoLutheran