[Faith-talk] Daily Thought for Thursday, August 28, 2014
Paul
oilofgladness47 at gmail.com
Thu Aug 28 20:25:05 UTC 2014
Hello and good day to all my fellow saints of the Most High God. I hope and pray that, by God's matchless grace and His providential care, that you are all doing well today, no matter the time of day or day of the week.
The author of this article is not given, but it appeared several years ago in a publication called "Good News Publishers." For me it surely provided food for thought when I read it the first time, and hopefully it will for you. It is entitled "Creator: Faith Or Fiction? The Fusion of Science and Faith," rendered as follows:
There's a lot of misunderstanding about faith. Some believe faith actually contradicts facts. "The whole point of faith," scoffed Michael Shermer, editor of The Skeptical Inquirer, "is to believe regardless of the evidence, which is the very antithesis of science."
However, that's certainly not my understanding. I see faith as being a reasonable step in the same direction that the evidence is pointing. In other words, faith goes beyond merely acknowledging that the facts of science and history point toward God. It's responding to those facts by investing trust in God--a step that's fully warranted due to the supporting evidence.
Oxford's Alister McGrath pointed out that all worldviews require faith. "The truth claims of atheism simply cannot be proved," he said. "How do we know that there is no God? The simple fact of the matter is that atheism is a faith, which draws conclusions that go beyond the available evidence."
On the other hand, the available evidence from the latest scientific research is convincing more and more scientists that facts support faith as never before. "The age-old notion that there is more to existence that meets the eye suddenly looks like fresh thinking again," said journalest Gregg Easterbrook. "We are entering the greatest era of science--religion fusion since the Enlightenment last attempted to reconcile the two."
INTELLECTUAL COUSINS
For John Polkinghorne, who achieved acclaim as a mathematical physicist at Cambridge before becoming a full-time minister, the same kind of thinkin he uses in science has helped him draw life-changing conclusions about God:
"No one has ever seen a quark, and we believe that no one ever will. They are so tightly bound to each other inside the protons and neutrons that nothing can make them break out on their own. Why, then, do I believe in these invisible quarks?
"In summary, it's because quarks make sense of a lot of direct physical evidence. I wish to engage in a similar strategy with regard to the unseen reality of God. His existence makes sense of many aspects of our knowledge and experience: the order and fruitfulness of the physical world; the multi-layered character of reality; the almost universal human experiences of worship and hope; the phenomenon of Jesus Christ (including His resurrection). I think that very similar thought processes are involved in both cases. I do not believe that I shift in some strange intellectual way when I move from science to religion.
"In their search for truth, science and faith are intellectual cousins under the skin."
Polkinghorne added, however, an important distinction. "Religious knowledge is more demanding than scientific knowledge," he said. "While it requires scrupulous attention to matters of truth, it also calls for the response of commitment to the truth discovered."
THE NATURE OF TRUTH
According to McGrath, the Hebrew word for "truth" suggests "something which can be relied upon." Thus, he said, truth is more than about simply being right. "It is about trustworthiness," he explained. "It is a relational concept, pointing us to someone who is totally worthy of our trust. We are not being asked to know yet another fact but to enter into a relationship with the One who is able to sustain and comfort us."
The facts of science and history then can only take us so far. At some point, the truth demands a response. When we decide not merely to ponder the abstract concept of a designer but to embrace Him as our own--to make Him our "true God"--then we can meet Him personally, relate to Him daily, and spend eternity with Him as He promises.
HAVE YOU EVER WONDERED IF GOD EXISTS?
Maybe you think belief in God is only for the weak-minded, those who are ignorant enough to let blind faith keep them from acknowledging the hard facts of science. But science and faith don't have to come at odds. As you have just read, many scientists are discovering that the facts of nature suggest an intelligent designer behind it all.
That designer is God--the Creator and Sustainer of the universe. God cares for us--all of us--because He created us in His image. In fact, "God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16). God sent His Son, Jesus to die as a substitute for you and me, to take the punishment for our sins.
When asked which was the greatest commandment, Jesus responded, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength" (Mark 12:30). Faith is not just an emotional response; it involved every part of your being--heart, soul, mind and strength. If you admit to God that you have sinned and put your whole trust in Jesus Christ as your Savior, you will discover what it is to truly know God--not just know _about Him.
And there you have this article by an unknown author. I'll admit that the last part is something we are all familiar, but perhaps the greater part of this contribution will be spiritual food for thought. It surely was when I originally read it more than eight years ago.
And now may the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob just keep us safe, individually and collectively, in these last days in which we live. Lord willing, tomorrow there will be another Daily Thought article for you. Your Christian friend and brother, Paul
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