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Tuesday, August 19, 2025 at 1:46 AM

Is God Dead?: Where to Begin?

Where to begin? Two weeks ago, we made the comment that for the Christian, everything needs to have warrant, or approval from Scripture. That includes how and what we study about God. In search of scriptural warrant last week, we looked in Scripture at Paul’s repeated use of classical philosophy in his speech and teaching as an example for us. And week before last we looked at God using observations from nature to present an apologetic (defense) of Himself to Job (Job 38-41). Thereby giving us approval from Scripture to use created things from nature, (science, philosophy, and history) in building a defense of the existence of God and the truthfulness of Christianity (1 Pet 3:15). And so, the question now is this; with scriptural warrant from God and Paul in hand, where do we begin to answer the question, “is God dead?”

Since we introduced the Bible skeptic “ Michael” a few weeks ago, it would seem to make sense to begin to answer the question “ is God dead?” by looking for some common ground that we both can agree upon. Christians, and rightly so, always want to begin with the Bible. But since Michael does not believe that the Bible is God’s Word but is rather “a creation of man,” the Christian needs to find some source of common ground that both can agree upon. How about this; what if we take the same approach that God took with Job (Job 38-41), and look to the world around us to see if it can serve as a witness to the existence of God. The universe is a vast and complex system of planets and moons, and suns, and stars. In turn each planet has its own unique complexity, especially planet Earth. Although the complexity of the universe is an apologetic defense for another day, the mere existence of the universe should speak to mankind. Now it seems to me that there are only two possible conclusions that the universe could speak to us about its existence, either it has been here all along, or, it had a beginning at some point in time past. That is it; either one or the other.

Now, we human beings are both creatures of habit, and creatures of observation. In fact, at abase level habits are simply the outworking of observations and experiences. If we think about our observations and life experiences, we know that nothing comes into being without something causing it. We often talk about cause and effect because we understand that all effects have acause. We can think about how a tree comes into being and we all know that it is caused by aseed. The same is true of pigs and cows, cars and houses; even human beings. Everything that comes into being had a cause. Known in classical philosophy as the cosmological argument, some version of this idea of cause and effect concerning the universe has been summarized in a simple way going back to Aristotle and Plato.

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