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Written by Greg L Bahnsen
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Thursday, 08 December 2011 12:16 |
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It is one of those embarrassing historical ironies that modern science could not have arisen except in the atmosphere of a Christian world-and-life view. Nevertheless, the scientific community today persists in playing the prodigal by assuming an antagonistic stance against the Christianity of divine revelation. Hypnotized by Darwin’s evolutionary scheme and enchanted with the products of scientific technology, modern man has granted science a secularized godship and bows before it in fetish idolatry.
The pitting of science against revelation is certainly odd. For, a certain state of affairs is needed for the scientific endeavor to be meaningful or fruitful. The scientist must believe that the state of affairs is conducive to science, or he would not venture into the scientific enterprise. He must believe that there is a world of things and processes that can be known and that he himself sustains a relationship to this world that allows him to know these objects and events. But then, what reason can the scientist give for his belief that the state of affairs is actually conducive to science? Why is the world such as it is and not otherwise?
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Last Updated on Thursday, 08 December 2011 12:38 |
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Written by C H Mackintosh
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Saturday, 26 November 2011 19:43 |
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Some, we are aware, would fain persuade us that things are so totally changed since the Bible was penned, that we need other guidance than that which its precious pages supply. They tell us that society is not what it was; that the human race has made progress; that there has been such a development of the powers of nature, the resources of science and the appliances of philosophy, that to maintain the sufficiency and supremacy of the Bible, at such a point in the world's history as the nineteenth century of the Christian era, can only be regarded as childishness, ignorance, or imbecility.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 26 November 2011 19:55 |
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Written by Andre Immelman
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Friday, 23 September 2011 06:09 |
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A very interesting development that began to unfold in Italy this past week, has rightfully managed to attract widespread attention as well as concern from the scientific community around the world. Because of what is really at issue in the case, it is also something that ought to be of much interest to all thinking Christians…
On Tuesday, seven scientists accused of failing to predict an earthquake that killed more than 300 people in the Italian town of L’Aquila in April 2009, went on trial in Rome where they have been charged with manslaughter.
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Last Updated on Friday, 23 September 2011 06:27 |
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