Redeeming Science: A God-Centered ApproachCrossway, 13 okt. 2006 - 384 sidor Many people think science is antagonistic to Christian belief. Science, it is said, shows that the universe is billions of years old, while the Bible says it is only thousands of years old. And some claim that science shows supernatural miracles are impossible. These and other points of contention cause some Christians to view science as a threat to their beliefs. Redeeming Science attempts to kindle our appreciation for science as it ought to be-science that could serve as a path for praising God and serving fellow human beings. Through examining the wonderfully complex and immutable laws of nature, author Vern Poythress explains, we ought to recognize the wisdom, care, and beauty of God. A Christian worldview restores a true response to science, where we praise the God who created nature and cares for it. |
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... exist? Beauty is also displayed in the harmony among different areas of science, and the harmony between mathematics and science that scientists rely on whenever they use a mathematical formula to describe a physical process. The ...
... exists, in inaccessible, and that revelation is impossible. But growing historical distance from Kant's time, and especially the shift toward postmodernism, has gradually made it more evident that Kant's starting assumptions about the ...
... exists, but how he relates to the world. He has to know whether or not God will choose to make a speech from heaven such as Exodus 20 describes. Kant also has to know about the nature and limitations of human reason, and more broadly ...
... exist, whether people think so or not.1 Moreover, God refuses to be confined to some private sphere, but is constantly present and active in everything public. He is constantly at work, in his providential government of the world. He ...
... exist outside of the physical aspect, and what things are sacred. The secularist is not really secular, that is, independent of religion, but makes a religious commitment—although it is a negative commitment to the nonexistence of ...