Tag: God’s Existence

  • Can We Know God Exists Part-2-Evidence or Faith? The Surprising Case for God

    Can We Know God Exists Part-2-Evidence or Faith? The Surprising Case for God

    Addressing Secularism: When the Props of Chance Fail.

    In Part One, I established that truth is knowable and that reason, when diligently applied, leads us to the reality of a transcendent God. Yet, the current of Western culture flows strongly in the opposite direction, dominated by the philosophy of naturalism—the assertion that nature is all that exists, that there is no supernatural reality, and that every phenomenon, from the formation of galaxies to the creation of a thought, must be explained by purely physical, non-directed causes.


    Naturalism is the great intellectual and cultural challenger to faith. If it is true, then the questions of origin, meaning, and morality are definitively settled: they are merely accidents of chemistry, evolved for temporary utility. Therefore, to continue our journey to certainty, we must turn a critical, unblinking eye toward the primary claims of naturalism, particularly its proposed explanations for ultimate origins.


    Naturalism makes a grand claim—that it can explain everything. But upon close, rational inspection, the philosophical props it relies on prove to be surprisingly flimsy. I will demonstrate how secular origin theories, even when framed by prominent scientists, often contradict reason, scientific evidence, and observable reality. I am not here to dismiss science, but to critique the philosophical assertion that tries to claim science as its exclusive territory.

    The Problem of Ultimate Cosmic Origin: The Fine-Tuning Paradox.

    The most fundamental question is the origin of the cosmos itself. Secular accounts, often rooted in the Big Bang model, describe the universe expanding from an initial singularity. While the physics and mathematics of the expansion are robust, the naturalistic assertion that this event occurred by pure, undirected chance runs headlong into the Fine-Tuning Paradox.


    Simply put, the universe appears to be mathematically, almost impossibly, tailored for life. The laws of physics are governed by fundamental constants—values like the strength of gravity, the electromagnetic force, and the ratio of the electron mass to the proton mass. These constants are not derived from known laws; they are simply the given conditions of our universe.


    The paradox lies here: if these values were altered by even the smallest fraction—in some cases, one part in a billion billion—the universe would be sterile. A slightly weaker gravitational force, and matter would never clump into stars and planets. A slightly stronger force, and the universe would have immediately collapsed. The precise density fluctuations in the early universe, the exact amount of dark energy, and the required initial low-entropy state all scream of an arrangement.


    As the renowned British Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin Rees, noted when discussing the precise values of six key cosmological numbers: “The basic recipe involves these six numbers… if any one of them were to be [changed] by more than a few per cent, there would be no stars, no carbon, and no life.”


    The naturalistic explanation for this incredible precision is often dismissed as pure luck, or by resorting to speculative, untestable theories like the multiverse—an infinite collection of universes that ensures, by sheer probability, that one of them had to hit the cosmic jackpot. But postulating an unobservable infinity of universes to explain one highly ordered universe is a philosophical leap, not a scientific conclusion, and certainly fails the test of observable reality.

    The Problem of Life’s Origin: The Information Gap.

    If the universe’s origin is problematic for naturalism, the origin of life on Earth—abiogenesis—presents an even more formidable obstacle. How did non-living chemicals assemble themselves into the first self-replicating, metabolizing cell?


    Naturalism requires that, given enough time and energy, random chemical reactions somehow crossed the vast chasm separating inert molecules from living matter. Yet, the immense complexity of even the simplest cell fundamentally challenges this assertion. The cell is not merely a bag of chemicals; it is an irreducibly complex factory, requiring dozens of different molecular machines (proteins) that are simultaneously necessary for replication and energy production.


    The greatest hurdle is information. The function of a cell is dictated by the precise sequence of chemical “letters” in its DNA and RNA—a sophisticated, digital-like code. This code is not merely ordered (like a repeating crystal structure); it is specified (like the text of a novel). Information theory consistently shows that specified complexity, whether in a computer program or a DNA molecule, is the product of intelligence, not random physical forces.


    Dr. James Tour, a world-leading synthetic organic chemist, has repeatedly demonstrated that scientists cannot even rationally propose a method for synthesizing the necessary precursor molecules, let alone assembling them into a self-replicating system. He writes that scientists “have no idea how life arose,” and that the naturalistic explanations offered often rely on cartoon models rather than actual chemistry.


    For naturalism to be true, the universe must have created its own operating system and coded its own software entirely by chance. This defies logic, the principles of information science, and the observable laws of chemistry.

    The Problem of the Conscious Mind.

    Finally, naturalism struggles profoundly to account for the unique phenomenon of the conscious mind—subjective experience, self-awareness, reason, and objective moral intuition.


    If the mind is only the brain—a purely physical, chemical reaction, as naturalism asserts—then our thoughts, feelings, and even our most brilliant scientific insights are merely the predictable movements of atoms, nothing more than the fizzing of soda or the falling of a domino.
    The devastating self-contradiction here is clear: If our thoughts are just the product of unguided chemical reactions designed solely for evolutionary advantage, why should we ever trust them to arrive at the objective truth? Why trust the very reason naturalists use to argue their case?


    When the philosophical props for secularism fail to account for observable reality—the fine-tuning of the cosmos, the specified complexity of life, and the immaterial reality of the mind—the door opens wide for a logical, non-naturalistic explanation: the transcendent God we introduced in Part One.

  • Can We Know God Exists. Part-3-Why Atheism Demands More Faith Than Christianity.

    Can We Know God Exists. Part-3-Why Atheism Demands More Faith Than Christianity.

    Finding Meaning: The Foundation That Cannot Be Shaken.

    We have journeyed from establishing the bedrock of truth in Part One to confronting the intellectual weaknesses of secularism in Part Two. Now, we turn to the most urgent question of all, the one woven into the fabric of human existence: What is the meaning of life?


    Even in periods of unprecedented affluence and technological advancement, a profound sense of void, a hunger for significance, persists across every generation. Secularism attempts to fill this space by counselling that meaning is something we create for ourselves. Its mantra is often: “live well, be kind, and find fulfilment in your temporary existence.”


    While admirable, this self-created meaning is built on sand. When the great, inevitable questions of suffering, ultimate justice, and mortality arise, this purely subjective meaning collapses. True meaning cannot be manufactured by us; it must be discovered. It must be objective, permanent, and universal.


    This ultimate meaning is only viable when anchored in a reality that transcends the temporary, the accidental, and the purely physical. It is here that belief in God moves from a philosophical necessity to a profound foundation for life, providing the only ultimate structure for meaning, and embodying the truth that bathes the world in beauty and joy.

    Meaning’s Solid Foundation: Transcendent Value.

    If the universe is, as naturalism holds, a colossal accident—a random collision of particles destined for ultimate, cold oblivion—then everything is temporary. Human life, love, justice, and achievement have no ultimate worth beyond their fleeting utility. In this scenario, your life matters for seventy years, and then, truly, it doesn’t matter at all. The logical conclusion of a godless universe is nihilism—the belief that life is meaningless—a conclusion few people can actually live with.


    The Theistic Foundation provides the only escape from this logical paradox. Belief in a transcendent God provides a source of ultimate, objective value. Our significance is not something we earn or construct; it is a purpose assigned to us by an eternal, perfectly loving being.


    When your existence is the result of intention rather than accident, your life is imbued with inherent, indestructible worth. Every act of kindness, every pursuit of justice, and every creative endeavour is not merely a temporary chemical reaction, but an engagement with an eternal, cosmic reality. This is the definition of objective meaning.

    Purpose, Morality, and the Divine Law.

    A life that is truly meaningful must be grounded in an understanding of right and wrong that is more than just social convention. We possess an undeniable awareness of objective morality—a sense that some things (like selfless sacrifice) are genuinely good, and others (like torture) are truly evil, regardless of what our culture or current laws dictate.


    If naturalism is true, morality is nothing more than an evolved survival mechanism—a useful illusion that encourages cooperation. But if that is the case, then morality is fluid, relative, and has no power to condemn truly wicked acts. Why, then, is a heinous crime wrong in an absolute sense? According to naturalism, it’s only inconvenient.


    The reality of objective morality requires a Moral Lawgiver. We know what goodness is because we are made in the image of a perfectly good God. Our deep-seated, inner moral compass points toward Him. Our sense of purpose is intrinsically linked to this reality: to live a life aligned with the nature of the Creator who first defined what is good, true, and beautiful.

    Beauty, Joy, and the World Bathed in Truth.

    Finally, belief in God provides the only viable explanation for the overwhelming beauty and joy we experience in the world. Why do we find profound fulfilment in music, art, and the intricate wonder of nature? Why does genuine joy feel like a discovery of something real and external, rather than just an internal, fleeting chemical boost?


    A transcendent God created the world with order, structure, and aesthetic intention. The ancient concept of the Logos—the rational principle structuring the cosmos—means that the universe is intelligible. This is why we can discover scientific laws, why mathematics describes reality, and why we are moved to tears by a sunset or a piece of music. The order we discover is the reflection of the ordered mind of the Creator.


    Meaning is not about creating a temporary distraction from the impending void; it is about finding our place within the true, beautiful, and eternal reality that God created. This is not a restrictive belief but an expansive one—it aligns us with the deepest, most joyful reality of the cosmos, leading to a fulfilment that no shifting secular trend can ever provide.