I can get behind most of what you said, though I think you didn't intend that lol. If I misunderstood your comment, I apologize.
The "scientific" view of the origin of the universe presupposes SO MUCH, it's laughable.
"Everything MUST HAVE started from a 'big bang' that started matter expanding out from nothing."
"It MUST HAVE taken billions of years for stellar matter to coalesce into stars, planets, etc."
"It MUST HAVE taken millions of years for life to evolve from single-cell organisms to what we have currently."
Just throwing out numbers. The materialist has a god, too; it's the got Time.
For me, it's much easier to believe that everything was created by a God who loves his creation and is all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-present in his creation.
Humanity rebels against this, and will try to believe almost anything else instead.
You are assuming I donāt believe in god. But I do.
Do you know how star functions? How it supports the energy it does. It cannot support the energy perpetually because there not enough desirable atoms (atomic number less than Iron) to continue with fusion?
Because I have studied for years, Iām letting you know the facts. Like the fact that gravitation force attracts all masses. Like magnets with like poles repel and unlike poles attract.
But if you donāt believe in gravity, or if you believe the earth is flat, I donāt have the time to try to convince you that stars die and when they do they expand. And our sun will expand such that it will engulf earth.
You are correct, I did make an assumption. I apologize. However, you make the assumption that I'm an idiot, who has never read or studied these things. I have, quite intensely, and I REJECT the premises you presented.
The God I believe has a plan for this universe. I may not know it, I may not understand it, but I trust that he does, and that everything he does is for good, because he is good, and loves his creation.
What does YOUR good so?
I didnāt assume you were idiot. I assumed your expertise lies in somewhere else and not physics and astronomy.
I am a Hindu, and follow Bhagavad Gita. Bhagavad gita doesnāt dwell in the external. In fact, its states the universe is dynamic and it keeps changing. It doesnāt say the sun and earth will be there forever to protect us. It actually teaches us the path to go beyond the karma of life and death, to find the god in the invariant space, whatever that may be.
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