In order for any of this to be true though, you'd have to have fundamentally different forces at work in the universe at the onset. Hubble (the guy who invented the telescope) made an observation that the universe is expanding. That jives with entropy. (Things going from a state of order to a state of chaos; or what we might call "decay".)
Two things are wrong in this statement. The telescope is named after Hubble, but he didn't invent it. Edwin Hubble died in the 1950's, the Hubble Space Telescope was launched in 1990. And second you have entropy backward. Entropy is not things going from a state of order to chaos, but rather just the opposite; entropy involves things entering into a state of equilibrium. Entropy is like if you were to take a snowglobe and tip around a few times and all the material is now floating around (because an external force was applied) and now the particulate inside the globe slows, the water movement slows, and the particulate falls back to the bottom and everything enters into a state of rest. Energy reaches equilibrium and nothing continues to happen at all. A state of perfect entropy would mean perfect equilibrium of all energy. And so the process of entropy is closer to chaos -> order, not order -> chaos. A star burning through its reserves, dying, and then eventually cooling to a point of absolute zero until nothing is happening at all is entropy.
Now if he's right; which I don't see any reason to think that he's not. At one point obviously the universe was "smaller" (and smaller and smaller and smaller) as you go back through time, until you get to a "singularity" and the "second" before that it didn't exist. Now that jives with Genesis. Some unknown "force" brought this universe into existence; yet did so in an organized matter.
The first verse in Genesis describes "earth is without form and void and darkness upon the face of the deep". This is still an organized dividing of (probably) atomic mass from what ever other forces are created to govern the universe from the standpoint of physics. Gravity is only one "element" of that. It is the mass / attractive property of the physical matter. There is a "counter law" to that though. I don't even know if science has a name for it? "Anti-gravity?" Either way; what is "without form and void" is still delineated from the "darkness upon the face of the deep." Now quantum physics has a theory of "dark matter" which is a counter force to the material atomic structure of the universe. (Again, fit's Genesis.) (Matter / dark matter, Gravity / "anti-gravity"?) Time?
Time only goes one direction because "we" can't reverse entropy. Thus making time travel as science fiction has depicted it impossible. We can not go back into an event that is past. That being said though, there is this "rubber banding" of "time" as it relates to gravity of objects in the universe. For example: The further you move from a sun, the slower "time" goes. i.e. A human on Pluto is not going to age as quickly as one on earth, yet the process of their aging is still moving forward. Just the pace at which this happens is relative to the gravitational pull of the bodies in the solar system.
Yet is there some sort of "counter time" to the forward motion of time? That is certainly a valid question. I believe the answer to that is "eternity". God exists in a domain that has no time. That, I believe is the stabilizing "factor" that makes time as we understand it exist.
Now the other aspect of this is physicists have realized that the space between objects of mass contains something. It's not just "empty". There's "stuff" in the "space". Now this "stuff" operates like a grid for the material universe (stars, solar systems, galaxies) to exist in. Now what that is, they don't know, but they know it's there because it's not just random "gravitational force" that keeps objects in place. And here's where your cereal in the bag example does not fit the paradigm of what we currently understand about gravity. The mass of the universe is not evenly distributed. On the vertical plane of this "bag of cereal" the objects of mass are not distributed according to size surrounding a gravitational center (or gravitational "direction"). The mass of the universe is "caught" in this "grid". And on top of this we seem to have "holes" in the grid (black holes) that we don't really understand how they operate, why they are there; yet it does appear to us that they are a destructive force upon matter.
Now it is assumed that the universe is a "closed system"; meaning mass and energy are constant factors; but maybe that's not true either? In order to sustain life, there has to be a constant injection of energy into that process. Because just like the passing of time; once energy is "spent" its "gone". "Renewable resources" of energy (like trees) all come from the creation of life. The amount of "matter" on a planet, very much depends on the amount of life it contains. The multiplication of life, just like the "rubber banding" of time, is a variable factor. The agent of the injection of that "energy" into the system that creates life is called "the breath of life" which comes from God.
So here raises another question. Does "spent mass" leave the universe as new mass is created (in the form of life) by God. Is that the purpose of black holes? Thus keeping the mass of the universe at a stable level and having to do so because of the operation of gravity?
Now if one looks at "quantum physics" from the vanish point of having to account for energy and mass entering and leaving an open system. You'd reasonably draw the conclusion that the universe would contain a lot of life.
So moral of the story is; considering what is currently known about the laws that govern the operation of this universe; the only theory of origin that makes any sense is intelligent design. It's too pristinely organized in all of it's components to be otherwise.[/QUOTE]
The problem with intelligent design as a theory is that it is built upon the premise that purely natural systems require a mind behind them to work. But, for example, this obviously isn't the case with what we observe with natural systems. And simply pushing back the intelligent designer backward, or merely speaking of the intelligent designer acting in a stop-gap fashion is neither scientific nor theologically sound.
Now of course I believe God is the maker of all things, that the universe is what God made, that He brought it into existence, and that He is the One present working through the universe to bring about His purposes. I believe these things as a matter of faith, it is a theological position. As I confess the Nicene Creed which reads, "We believe in one God the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all things seen and unseen." But that isn't a scientific statement it is a religious, theological statement. It is not a statement based on observation and naturalistic methodology (science) but a statement based on divine revelation.
"God did it" isn't and cannot be a scientific statement. No matter the fact that it is a true statement.
I believe the orthodox Christian position isn't to postulate a god-of-the-gaps, or to entertain the Deist philosophy of the clock-maker-god; but rather to confess the God who is at work and is present through His creation. So when we talk about "the big bang" it is not a matter of the universe having a beginning apart from the Divine Creator, but rather this is the work of the Divine Creator. In the same way that we can say that the Psalmist can say, "You formed me in my mother's womb." and this is not at odds with the purely naturalistic processes of human sexual reproduction.
There's no need for "Intelligent Design", because science and faith are not enemies on a battlefield which need to be reconciled through forced arbitration; but rather two distinct ways of engaging with the world which are simply not at odds with one another.
Science is allowed to be science--a purely naturalistic discipline.
Faith is allowed to be faith--a matter of trust and conviction in the revelation which we have received by God sending forth His Son, His very Word, made flesh and dwelling among us.
-CryptoLutheran