Something from Nothing
While visiting my dad for
his 85th birthday, we watched some of our old family movies. It was funny to see
my brother as a one-year-old, crawling around, playing with the puppies, and
eating from the dog’s food dish. To think that this cute little baby would grow
up to be a distinguished college professor and international lecturer! It got
me thinking about how God makes special people out of nobodies. We come into
this world naked and helpless, and God transforms us into the unique people we
each are through our experiences and choices.
The laws of physics state that matter and energy can neither be created nor destroyed. It’s been said that God
delights in making something out of nothing, and I believe it. In fact, I
believe that God made everything out of nothing. The Nobel Prize-winning
physicist Dr. Arno Penzias seems to agree. He put it this way: “The best data
we have [about the formation of the universe] are exactly what I would have predicted
had I had nothing to go on but the five books of Moses, the Psalms, the Bible
as a whole. It was a moment of discrete [individually distinct] creation from
nothing!”
Skeptics ask, “How could the
universe have been created from nothing? The laws of science say that nothing
can ever be created or destroyed—only rearranged. In our physical world, you
have to have something to start with.” Perhaps the clearest and most compelling
answer I’ve found to that argument is put forth by James Perloff in Tornado in
a Junkyard:1
“The most widely accepted
theory of the universe’s origin says that, at one time, all mass and energy
were compressed in a tiny ‘cosmic egg.’ Then, about fifteen billion years ago,
the egg exploded, creating the universe in the Big Bang. …
“But the Big Bang itself
violates natural law. The laws of physics state that matter and energy can
neither be created nor destroyed. This is the First Law of Thermodynamics, the
law of conservation of energy. As the well-known physicist Paul Davies wrote in
his book The Edge of Infinity, the Big Bang ‘represents the instantaneous
suspension of physical laws, the sudden, abrupt flash of lawlessness that
allowed something to come out of nothing. It represents a true
miracle—transcending physical principles.’2
“If one allows for an event
beyond natural law—a ‘true miracle,’ as Davies put it—then it is logically
inconsistent to exclude other events, such as creation by God. If there was a
‘cosmic egg,’ who put it there? The cosmic chicken? Scientists have always
agreed that there is a cause for every effect. How then can the greatest effect
of all—the universe itself—have arisen without a cause?”
That cause, I believe, was
God’s command. God spoke and—BANG!—the universe was created.
1 James Perloff, Tornado in
a Junkyard (Arlington, Mass: Refuge Books, 1999), 29.
2 Paul Davies, The Edge of
Infinity (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1981), 161.
Curtis Peter Van Gorder is a
member of the Family International in the
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