Seven Reasons Why A Scientist Believes In God
by Mr A Cressy Morrison
this article shows how science compels the scientists to admitn that their is a Creator
We are still in the dawn of the scientific age
and every increase of fight reveals more brightly the handiwork of an
intelligent Creator. In the 90 years since Darwin we have made
stupendous discoveries; with a spirit of scientific humility and of
faith grounded in knowledge we are approaching even nearer to an
awareness of God.
For myself, I count seven reasons for my faith.
First: By unwavering mathematical law we can prove that our universe was designed and executed by a great engineering Intelligence.
Suppose you put ten coins, marked from one to ten, into your pocket and
give them a good shuffle. Now try to take them out in sequence from one
to ten, putting back the coin each time and shaking them all again.
Mathematically we know that your chance of first drawing number one is
one in ten; of drawing one and two in succession, one in 100; of drawing
one, two and three in succession, one in a thousand, and so on; your
chance of drawing them all, from one to number ten in succession, would
reach the unbelievable figure of one chance in ten thousand million.
By the same reasoning, so many exacting conditions are necessary for
life on earth that they could not possibly exist in proper relationship
by chance. The earth rotates on its axis at one thousand miles an hour;
if it turned at one hundred miles an hour, our days and nights would be
ten times as long as now, and the hot sun would then burn up our
vegetation during each long day while in the long night any surviving,
sprout would freeze.
Again, the sun, source of our life, has a surface temperature of 12,000
degrees Fahrenheit, and our earth is just far enough away so that this
"eternal fire" warms us just enough and not too much! If the sun gave
off only one-half its present radiation, we would freeze, and if it gave
half as much more, we would roast.
The slant of the earth, tilted at an angle of 23 degrees, gives us our
seasons; if it had not been so tilted, vapours from the ocean would move
north and south, piling up for us continents of ice. If our moon were,
say, only 50 thousand miles away instead of its actual distance our
tides would be so enormous that twice a day all continents would be
submerged; even the mountains would soon be eroded away. If the crust of
the earth had been only ten feet thicker, there would be no oxygen
without which animal life must die. Had the ocean been a few feet
deeper, carbon dioxide and oxygen would have been absorbed and no
vegetable life could exist. Or if our atmosphere had been thinner, some
of the meteors, now burned in space by the million every day, would be
striking all parts of the earth, starting fires everywhere.
Because of these, and host of other examples, there is not one chance in millions that life on our planet is an accident.
Second: The resourcefulness of life to accomplish its purpose is a
manifestation of all-pervading Intelligence. What life itself is, no
man has fathomed. It has neither weight nor dimensions, but it does have
force; a growing root will crack a rock. Life has conquered water, land
and air, mastering the elements, compelling them to dissolve and reform
their combinations.Life, the sculptor, shapes all living things; an
artist, it designs every leaf of every tree, and colours every flower.
Life is a musician and has each bird to sing its love songs, the insects
to call each other in the music of their multitudinous sounds. Life is a
sublime chemist, giving taste to fruits and spices, and perfume to the
rose changing water and carbonic acid into sugar and wood and, in so
doing, releasing oxygen that animals may have the breath of life.
Behold an almost invisible drop of protoplasm, transparent and
jelly-like, capable of motion, drawing energy from the sun. This single
cell, this transparent mist like droplet, holds within itself the germ
of life, and has the power to distribute this life to every living
thing, great and small. The powers of this droplet are greater than our
vegetation and animals and people, for all life came from it. Nature did
not create life; fire-blistered rocks and a salt less sea could not
meet the necessary requirements.
"Who, then, has put it here?
Third: Animal wisdom speaks irresistibly of a good Creator who infused instinct into otherwise helpless little creatures.
The young salmon spends years at sea, then comes back to his own river,
and travels up the very side of the river into which flows the tributary
where he was born. What brings him back so precisely? If you transfer
him to another tributary he will know at once that he is off his course
and he will fight his way down and back to the main stream and then turn
up against the current to finish his destiny more accurately.
Even more difficult to solve is the mystery of eels. These amazing
creatures migrate at maturity from all ponds and rivers everywhere those
from Europe across thousands of miles of ocean - all bound for the same
abysmal deeps near Bermuda. There they breed and die. The little ones,
with no apparent means of knowing anything except that they are in a
wilderness of water, nevertheless find their way back not only to the
very shore from which their parent came but thence to the rivers, lakes
or little ponds -- so that each body of water is always populated with
eels. No American eel has ever been caught in Europe, no European eel in
African waters. Nature has even delayed the maturity of the European
eel by a year or more to make up for it's longer journey. Where does the
directing impulse originate?
A wasp will overpower a grasshopper, dig a hole in the earth, sting the
grasshopper in exactly the right place so that he does not die but
becomes unconscious and lives on as a form of preserved meat. Then the
wasp will lay her eggs handily so that her children when they hatch can
nibble without killing the insect on which they feed; to them dead meat
would be fatal. The mother then flies away and dies; she never sees her
young. Surely the wasp must have done all this right the first time and
every time, or else there would be no wasp. Such mysterious techniques
cannot be explained by adoption; they were bestowed.
Fourth: Man has something more than animal instinct - the power of reason.
No other animal has ever left a record of its ability to count ten or
even to understand the meaning of ten. Where instinct is like a single
note of a flute, beautiful but limited, the human brain contains all the
notes of all the instruments in the orchestra. No need to belabour this
fourth point; thanks to the human reason we can contemplate the
possibility that we are what we are only because we have received a
spark of Universal Intelligence.
Fifth: Provision for all living is revealed in phenomena which we
know today but which Darwin did not know - such as the wonders of
genes. So unspeakably tiny are these genes that, if all of them
responsible for all living people in the world could be put in one
place, there would be less than a thimbleful. Yet these
ultra-microscopic genes and their companions, the chromosomes, inhabit
every living cell and are the absolute keys to all human, animal and
vegetable characteristics. A thimble is a small place in which to put
all the individual characteristics of two thousand million human beings.
However, the facts are beyond question. Well then, how do genes lock up
all the normal heredity of a multitude of ancestors and preserve the
psychology of each in such an infinitely small space? Here evolution
really begins - at the cell, the entity, which holds and carries genes.
How a few million atoms, locked up as an ultra-microscopic gene, can
absolutely rule all on earth is an example of profound cunning and
provision that could emanate only from a Creative Intelligence - no
other hypothesis will serve.
Sixth: By the economy of nature, we are forced to realise that
only infinite wisdom could have foreseen and prepared with such astute
husbandry.
Many years ago a species of cactus was planted in Australia as a
protective fence. Having no insect enemies in Australia the cactus soon
began a prodigious growth; the alarming abundance persisted until the
plants covered an area as long and wide as England, crowding inhabitants
out of the town’s and. villages, and destroying their farms. Seeking a
defence, the entomologists scoured the world; finally they turned up an
insect, which exclusively feeds on cactus, and would eat nothing else.
It would breed freely too; and it had no enemies in Australia. So animal
soon conquered vegetable and today the cactus pest has retreated, and
with it all but a small protective residue of the insects, enough to
hold the cactus in check forever.
Such checks and balances have been universally provided. Why have not
fast-breeding insects dominated the earth? Because they have no lungs
such as man possesses; they breathe through tubes. But when insects grow
large, their tubes do not grow in ratio to the increasing size of the
body. Hence there has never been an insect of great size; this
limitation on growth has held them all in check.
If this physical check had not been provided, man could not exist. Imagine meeting a hornet as big as a lion!
Seventh: The fact that man can conceive the idea of God is in itself a unique proof.
The conception of god rises from a divine faculty of man, unshared with
the rest of our world - the faculty we call imagination. By its power,
man and man alone can find the evidence of things unseen. The vista that
power opens up is unbounded; indeed, as man is perfected imagination
becomes a spiritual reality. He may discern in all the evidence of
design and purpose the great truth that heaven is wherever and whatever
is; that God is everywhere and in everything, but nowhere so close as in
our hearts.
It is scientifically as well as imaginatively true; in the words of the
palmist: The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth
His handiwork.
Maybank IB revises up 2025 TIV forecast to 790k units
40 minutes ago