Belief in God is a reasonable response to the evidence.

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Transcription:

Belief in God is a reasonable response to the evidence.

Recognizing (acknowledging) Design Improbability (complexity) plus specification equals design. Design demonstrates purpose, intentionality, and foresight. The design of all living things is based on information which is encoded in a chemical language system (DNA). These things (design, purpose, intentionality, foresight, information, and language) only, always come from a mind! How intelligent is the source (mind)? Omniscient. The God Conclusion then is a logical one based on everything we do know.

Arguments for the Existence of God

The Cosmological Argument A) Whatever begins to exist has a cause. B) The universe began to exist. C) Therefore the universe has a cause.

The Cosmological Argument The universe contains all Time. Therefore its cause must be independent of time. (Eternality) Space. Therefore its cause must be independent of space. (Omnipresence: no spatial limitations) Matter. Therefore its cause must be independent of matter. (Self-existence, Spirit) (We begin to see that the cause of the universe and the God of the Bible are identical.)

The Cosmological Argument The universe... Contains innumerable stars. Therefore its cause must be infinite. Contains infinite power. Therefore its cause must be omnipotent. Exists according to finely tuned laws. Therefore its cause must be omniscient and purposeful. Includes life. Therefore its cause must be living. Includes humans. Therefore its cause must be self-aware, rational, moral, loving, etc.

The Teleological Argument The purpose, order, and design we observe in the world calls for a designer. (Ryrie) (Derived from the Greek word telos, meaning end or purpose ) A finely tuned universe. Our solar system. Our earth with its laws, systems, and cycles including its relationship to our sun and moon. Life itself and ecological relationships. Human existence. (Really, how many impossible-odds-compoundcoincidences are you willing to accept?)

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument Humans are incredibly unique. (Atheists tend to minimize this vastly understated truth.) How can man, a moral, intelligent, and living being, be explained apart from a moral, intelligent, and living God? (Ryrie) A string of strictly blind, material processes - bigbang to abiogenesis to speciation to man - with all their happy accidents would never give rise to anything immaterial, let alone man with all his qualities.

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Morality and Ethics: standards of right and wrong Justice: legislating what is just, right or fair. Conscience: The awareness of a moral or ethical aspect to one's conduct together with the urge to prefer right over wrong. Religion and Spirituality: Belief in and reverence for a supernatural power or being. The innate desire to have a knowledge of or relationship with the one who is responsible for creation.

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Philosophy: The desire to understand the meaning of man s existence. Faith: belief, trust. Requires self-awareness, the ability to learn, and the ability to reason. Logic: The study of the principles of reasoning. Pride: A sense of one's own proper dignity or value. (And the perception of the violation of it.)

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Shame: emotion caused by a strong sense of guilt, embarrassment, unworthiness, or disgrace. Hatred, love, romance, envy, lust, guilt, longing, anticipation, joy, laughter, humor, good and evil. Symbolic, subtly nuanced, facial expressions.

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Symbolic language. The ability to conceptualize and convey abstract ideas in verbal or written communication. Sense of style: A quality of imagination and individuality expressed in one's actions and tastes. (Clothing, cars, music, hair, people.)

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Aesthetic Faculties: The ability to appreciate beauty. Art and Music: The ability to conceive and produce beautiful images and sounds melody, harmony, tone and timbre, rhythm; composition and recording; instrument building; musical representation of emotions.

The Anthropological Argument Coupled with the Moral Argument A string of strictly blind, material processes would never give rise to man with all his qualities. Design and Construction: buildings, vehicles, machines, tools. Education, Technology, Invention: The ability to acquire and assimilate new knowledge, and to transmit that knowledge and apply it to life. Community; economy; commerce; banking. Sin and the drive to rebel against what is known to be good.

And the flip-side of the anthropological argument: Man, a relative wimp in this strictly physical world, is running the planet. The God who is real has provided satisfying explanations for these stubborn facts in the Bible.