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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Debate Announcement



I am pleased to announce an upcoming cross-blog debate with JD Longmire, of oddXian.com

JD is a fellow brother in Christ who writes from a Young Earth Creationist / Creation Science perspective. He will be arguing that Genesis should be read as literal history, and that it records the supernatural creative act of God over six ordinary days approximately 6,000 years ago, resulting in a functionally mature yet chronologically young world governed thereafter by stable, intelligible natural laws. JD will also defend the Fall as a cosmic event affecting all of nature and the historic reality of a global flood as a divine act of catastrophic judgment.

As JD has summarized in his own debate announcement, both of us are Christians. Both of us affirm the authority of Scripture. Both of us believe Genesis matters. Our disagreement concerns how Genesis should be read, how nature should be interpreted, and how Christians should reason when biblical interpretation and modern scientific reconstructions of natural history appear to be in conflict.

Purpose of the Dialogue

This exchange is designed to be a structured written dialogue rather than an open‑ended social media argument.

Each round will address a specific topic. Each of us will publish on our own blog. Each post will cross‑link to the corresponding post from the other participant, allowing readers to follow the exchange in sequence.

The goal is clarity.

Where we agree, we should say so. Where we differ, we should define the difference carefully. Where one of us thinks the other’s model fails, we should say that plainly and support the claim from Scripture, reason, and evidence.

Participants

JD Longmire  

oddXian

Young‑earth / functional mature special creation position

Riley Barton  

The Evidence is Plain: Thoughts and Musings on Christianity

Old‑earth creation position

Shared Commitments

Before the dialogue begins, we are agreeing to several basic commitments:

  • We both affirm Jesus Christ as Lord.

  • We both affirm Scripture as the inspired Word of God.

  • We both affirm that Genesis is theologically authoritative.

  • We both affirm that the natural world is real, intelligible, and created by God.

  • We will represent each other’s position in terms the other person would recognize.

  • We will distinguish exegesis, theology, philosophy, and scientific reconstruction.

  • We will avoid accusations of bad faith, unbelief, ignorance, or compromise.

  • We will cite sources where appropriate, with Scripture functioning as the primary source.

  • We will distinguish between what the text explicitly asserts, what it presupposes for narrative purposes, and what we infer from it.

Format

The dialogue will consist of six rounds.

Each round will include one post from each participant.

Each post will generally aim for approximately 1,200 to 1,800 words, with reasonable flexibility where the subject requires it.

Each participant may ask up to three direct questions per round.

Each participant should answer the other’s direct questions before moving too far into new objections.

Sources may be handled through normal blog‑style hyperlinks. A formal bibliography is optional.

Debate Sequence

Round 1: Opening Statements

Prompt: What is my position, and what am I trying to defend?  

This round will define our respective models. I will explain my position on the genre and interpretation of Genesis and the relationship between hermeneutics, science, and Scripture. JD will explain his young‑earth creation position. The focus will be clarity rather than rebuttal.

Round 2: Genesis and the Creation Days

Prompt: What does Genesis 1 require us to believe about the creation days?  

This round will address the meaning of yôm, the numbered days, “evening and morning,” the literary structure of Genesis 1, and the relationship between Genesis 1 and Exodus 20:11.

Round 3: Scripture, Chronology, and Biblical Theology

Prompt: How should Genesis 1–11 function within the broader canon of Scripture?  

This round will address Genesis 5 and 11, biblical genealogies, Jesus’ and the apostles’ use of early Genesis, Romans 5, 1 Corinthians 15, and the relationship between creation, fall, death, and redemption.

Round 4: Nature, Science, and Historical Reconstruction

Prompt: How should Christians use scientific evidence when reconstructing unobserved origins?  

This round will address operational science, historical reconstruction, uniformitarian assumptions, catastrophism, dating methods, starlight, fossils, geological strata, and the limits of inference from present processes to past events.

Round 5: Death, Fall, Flood, and Theological Coherence

Prompt: Which model better preserves the theological structure of creation, fall, curse, death, and redemption?  

This round will address animal death before human sin, predation before the Fall, disease, extinction, natural evil, the meaning of “very good,” the effect of the Fall, Noah’s Flood, and the relationship between Christ’s resurrection and the defeat of death.

Round 6: Closing Statements

Prompt: What would cause me to revise my position?  

This final round will ask each of us to identify the strongest challenge to our own view, the strongest argument from the other side, what remains unresolved, and what would cause us to modify or abandon our current position.

My Framing of the Central Issue

In sum, my position is that Genesis communicates theological truth through the literary and cultural conventions of the ancient world, not through modern scientific categories. Its authority rests in what God intended to reveal, not in what later readers assume it must be addressing. The question before us, then, is not whether Scripture is true, but how Scripture intends to communicate that truth.

This dialogue will test whether a historically grounded, genre‑sensitive reading of Genesis provides a more coherent and faithful account of the text than the modern Creation Science model. I appreciate JD’s willingness to engage these questions directly and charitably, and I look forward to a substantive and fruitful exchange.

Readers from all perspectives are invited to follow the exchange carefully.

The first round will begin with opening statements.


Saturday, June 6, 2026

Hawking's Paradox: Time, Cosmology, and the Necessity of a Divine Lawgiver

 




Introduction: The Search for the Beginning

The origin of the universe has captivated human thought for centuries, shaping scientific discovery while also aligning with theological reflection. The standard Big Bang model describes the universe expanding from an extremely hot, dense early state about 13.8 billion years ago. Unlike earlier models that assumed an eternal universe, modern cosmology supports the idea that there was a definite beginning—one that raises profound philosophical and theological implications.

The late Stephen Hawking argued that the universe is entirely self-contained and does not require an external Creator. However, his reasoning reveals an intriguing paradox: if time itself begins with the earliest moments of the universe, and the laws of physics describe that earliest state, what explains the existence of those laws themselves?

This article explores Hawking’s argument, the implications of his no boundary proposal, and the philosophical tension between a self-sustaining universe and the necessity of an immaterial Divine Lawgiver—the Creator of all things.

Hawking’s Argument: A Universe Without God?

Hawking’s lecture, The Beginning of Time (1), outlines his position that time itself began with the Big Bang. He states:

"At a singularity, all the laws of physics would have broken down. ... Since events before the Big Bang have no observational consequences, one may as well cut them out of the theory, and say that time began at the Big Bang."

This statement underscores Hawking’s commitment to empirical science—he asserts that what cannot be observed or measured should not be included in scientific theory. However, he also acknowledges that the Big Bang itself was governed by physical laws, stating:

"... the Big Bang is a beginning that is required by the dynamical laws that govern the universe. It is therefore intrinsic to the universe."

Yet, this assumption introduces another critical question: If time begins with the universe, and the laws of physics describe the universe from its earliest moment, what explains the existence of those laws themselves?
My
aim here is not to suggest that Hawking overlooked this question, but rather that his proposed answer that the laws of physics "co‑emerge" with the universe does not resolve the deeper philosophical issue of why such laws exist at all. Even if one grants his model for the sake of argument, the existence of governing laws remains a metaphysical question, not a scientific one.
This leads naturally into the question of energy and its origin.

The Big Bang and the Conservation of Energy

A common question that arises is whether the Law of Conservation of Energy—which states that matter and energy cannot be created or destroyed—contradicts the Big Bang theory.

In reality, the Big Bang model does not violate this law but operates under different physical conditions. Unlike classical physics, which applies within existing space-time, the Big Bang represents the very formation of space-time itself. Modern cosmology suggests that:

  • Matter and energy may not have existed in their current forms at the singularity. Instead, there could have been a state of pure energy, possibly governed by quantum fluctuations or primordial fields.

  • Matter "emerged" from energy through processes such as inflation and quantum field interactions, meaning it was not created from nothing but transformed into different forms over time.

  • In general relativity, energy conservation is a local principle, not a global one. In an expanding universe, there is no well‑defined global energy quantity that must remain constant. This is why the Big Bang does not violate conservation of energy.

It is important to note here that I am distinguishing between the scientific question ("Does the Big Bang violate conservation laws?") and the philosophical question ("Why does energy exist at all?"). The former is addressed within general relativity; the latter is not a physics question but an ontological one. My point is not to reintroduce global conservation, but to highlight that the existence of energy itself is unexplained by physical theory. Thus, rather than violating conservation laws, the Big Bang theory offers a framework where energy existed in an initial, highly condensed form and later transformed into the matter we observe today.

Does the Conservation of Energy Point to God?

If energy cannot be created or destroyed, then where did all the energy in the universe originally come from? The Big Bang theory describes an event where the universe emerged from an initial singularity, but it does not explain why energy itself exists in the first place. This leads to a cosmological question that science cannot fully answer—did energy have an eternal, transcendent cause beyond the material universe?

From a Christian perspective, this aligns with God as the uncaused cause, the eternal Creator who precedes and sustains all things. This is reflected in Genesis 1:1, which states:

"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." (Genesis 1:1)

If energy has always existed, it suggests a source outside time and space—which fits with God’s eternal nature, as described in Psalm 90:2:

"Before the mountains were born, before you gave birth to the earth and the world, from eternity to eternity, you are God." (Psalm 90:2)

Furthermore, energy’s fine-tuned transformation suggests order and intentionality, reinforcing the idea of a divine Designer. The Bible affirms God as the sustainer of creation, declaring:

"He is before all things, and by him all things hold together." (Colossians 1:17)

The No Boundary Proposal and Imaginary Time

Hawking and James Hartle proposed the no boundary hypothesis, arguing that space and imaginary time form a finite, boundaryless structure akin to the surface of the Earth (2). This model eliminates singularities in imaginary time, allowing physics to describe the universe’s entire history without a breakdown in natural laws.

In this framework, imaginary time removes the boundary that would correspond to a beginning, while real time still appears to have a starting point. Hawking interpreted this not as a literal metaphysical beginning, but as a feature of how we describe the universe using our time coordinate.

This challenge aligns with philosophical perspectives on cosmological contingency, the idea that the universe and its governing principles may necessitate a transcendent cause. One of the most well-known formulations of this argument is William Lane Craig’s Kalam Cosmological Argument, which asserts:

  1. Everything that begins to exist has a cause.

  1. The universe began to exist.

  1. Therefore, the universe must have a cause beyond itself.

Craig argues that since the universe had a finite beginning, it could not have caused itself but must instead have been brought into existence by a timeless, immaterial, and powerful first cause—a concept that aligns closely with the biblical depiction of God as Creator. This reasoning strengthens the idea that the laws of physics—being immaterial yet foundational—point to an intentional Designer rather than a random occurrence. (3) That being said, I want to stress that I am not presenting the no‑boundary model and the Kalam argument as compatible frameworks. Rather, I am treating them as alternative ways of describing the universe’s origin, each of which raises philosophical questions that physics alone cannot settle. Even if one grants Hawking’s model for the sake of argument, the deeper question of why the laws of physics exist remains.

Similarly, Plato’s Theory of Forms—which states that abstract truths, such as mathematical laws, exist independently of the physical world—offers another perspective on this paradox. (4) This demonstrates that even in pre‑Christian philosophy, the laws governing reality were understood as immaterial and abstract — a point that underscores the difficulty of grounding such laws in purely material terms.

The Deeper Question Beneath the Physics

The discussion of Hawking’s model, the nature of energy, and the immaterial character of physical laws ultimately points beyond the scientific descriptions themselves to a more fundamental philosophical question: Why is there anything at all rather than nothing? This is the classic question of contingency raised by Leibniz, and it presses on the distinction between things that exist but could have been otherwise, and a reality whose existence is necessary rather than contingent.

Some thinkers propose that the universe—or its most basic laws—simply exist as a "brute fact," the point at which explanation stops. Others argue that contingent realities, by their very nature, call for an explanation beyond themselves. On this view, the existence of laws, energy, and the very fabric of space‑time points toward a source that is not itself contingent or dependent: a necessary foundation of reality. The scientific models clarify how the universe behaves; the philosophical question concerns why there is a universe governed by laws in the first place. Whether one locates the terminus of explanation in the cosmos itself or in a transcendent Creator is a question that belongs to metaphysics rather than physics—but recognizing the question is essential for any deeper exploration of origins.

Conclusion: The Unanswered Question That Points Beyond Science

Hawking revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos, offering a framework in which the universe could emerge according to physical laws rather than external intervention. Yet, his own reasoning leaves an open question: If time and the laws of physics describe the universe from its earliest moment, what explains the existence of those laws themselves?

Christians believe that the answer is found in God, the Divine Lawgiver, who set both the physical universe and the immaterial laws that govern it into motion. Unlike Hawking’s vision of a self-contained cosmos, biblical revelation points to a Creator who is both the architect and the sustainer of reality itself.

"The heavens declare the glory of God, and the expanse proclaims the work of his hands." (Psalm 19:1)

The argument here is not a "God‑of‑the‑gaps" claim that inserts God wherever scientific knowledge is incomplete. Rather, it is a recognition that the existence of immaterial, mathematical laws is not the kind of question physics can answer even in principle. The issue is not an absence of data but a difference in category: physical explanations describe how the universe behaves, not why the foundational structures that make such behavior possible exist at all. Ultimately, the mystery of existence invites both scientific pursuit and spiritual reflection. The universe—magnificent in its complexity, governed by immutable laws—may not merely be a mathematical accident but rather the intentional creation of a higher intelligence. Whether one follows Hawking’s reasoning or sees, in it, the fingerprints of the Divine, the deeper question remains: What lies beyond science, beyond time, beyond the limits of human understanding?

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Big Bang Cosmology and Christianity: A Challenge to YEC, Not the Faith Itself





Introduction


The relationship between modern cosmology and Christianity has been a subject of debate for decades. Among the most contested topics is the Big Bang theory, which describes a universe that has been expanding from an extremely hot, dense early state for approximately 13.8 billion years. While some Young Earth Creationists (YEC) argue that this model conflicts with biblical accounts, many Christian scholars and apologists contend that the Big Bang is not at odds with the Christian faith but rather strengthens the case for a created universe. The rejection of the Big Bang by YECs stems not from theological necessity, but from a specific interpretation of certain biblical proof texts. In contrast, prominent Christian scientists, such as John Lennox and Hugh Ross, embrace Big Bang cosmology as supportive of Christian doctrine.

The Origins of Big Bang Cosmology: A Christian Contribution

Ironically, the Big Bang theory was first proposed by a Christian physicist, Father Georges Lemaître, a Belgian priest and scientist, in 1927. His hypothesis, known as the "hypothesis of the primeval atom" or the "cosmic egg exploding at the moment of creation," provided a foundation for what would later be confirmed as the Big Bang model.

Despite its scientific merits, Lemaître's idea was strongly opposed by non-religious scientists, particularly Fred Hoyle, a British physicist who rejected the notion of a cosmic beginning. Hoyle, who favored the Steady State theory, coined the term "Big Bang" in 1949 as a dismissive remark intended to ridicule the idea of a universe with a finite past. He continued rejecting the Big Bang until his death in 2001, fearing that a cosmic beginning implied the existence of a divine creator—an idea he sought to avoid.

Christian Thinkers Who Embrace Big Bang Cosmology

Unlike Hoyle, many Christian scholars and apologists have seen the Big Bang as supportive rather than contradictory to Christian belief. They argue that a universe with a definite beginning aligns with Genesis 1:1 ("In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth") and supports the philosophical concept of creatio ex nihilo (creation out of nothing).

John Lennox: Big Bang as a Friend to Theism

John Lennox, a mathematician and Christian apologist, has been vocal about how the Big Bang strengthens the case for theism. In his book God’s Undertaker: Has Science Buried God?, Lennox writes:

“Far from pointing away from God, the Big Bang points to the fact that the universe had a beginning, which is precisely what the Bible has said all along.”

Lennox argues that science should not be viewed as a threat to faith but as a means of discovering the rational order behind creation.

Hugh Ross: Astronomy and Biblical Faith

Hugh Ross, an astrophysicist and Christian apologist, has spent decades promoting the compatibility between biblical faith and Big Bang cosmology. His organization, Reasons to Believe, presents evidence that the Big Bang is consistent with fine-tuning arguments that suggest intelligent design. Ross states:

“A transcendent cosmic beginning is one of the strongest evidences for the existence of the biblical Creator.”

Ross also notes that rejecting the Big Bang because it does not align with a literal interpretation of Genesis risks missing the broader theological significance of a created and finely tuned universe.

Does the Big Bang Contradict Christianity or Just YEC?

The controversy surrounding Big Bang cosmology within Christian circles primarily arises from Young Earth Creationist interpretations of Scripture. YEC proponents often take a literal six-day creation view based on passages like Genesis 1-2:3 and Exodus 20:11. However, many theologians argue that these texts do not necessarily mandate a 6,000-year-old universe.

In contrast, Old Earth Creationists (OECs) and proponents of theistic evolution affirm that biblical texts allow for a universe consistent with Big Bang cosmology. They cite Psalm 19:1 ("The heavens declare the glory of God") and Job 38 as indicators of God's progressive creation.

Conclusion

The Big Bang does not threaten Christianity—it only challenges certain young-earth interpretations of specific proof texts. The resistance to Big Bang cosmology by YEC proponents is not a universal Christian stance but rather a reaction to models that contradict their view of creation. Christian thinkers like John Lennox and Hugh Ross argue that the Big Bang aligns with biblical teaching and strengthens the case for a created universe. Furthermore, the historical development of the theory shows that it was first proposed by a Christian scientist and opposed by atheist scientists who feared its theological implications.

Far from undermining faith, Big Bang cosmology serves as a powerful apologetic tool, demonstrating that the universe had a beginning—just as Christianity has maintained all along.