Pattern and process repeat themselves in creation. We're told that things on Earth are copied from things in the heavens. Can we use this truth to understand how Jesus turned water into wine?
January 23rd
"And God said," was energetically equal to the energy needed to cause the deep, the mass of the entire universe, to undergo nucleosynthesis. In a closed thermodynamic system this energy is still available.
January 22nd
The existence of the deep means that the process of creation does not require God to create anything from nothing. The first law of thermodynamics is not broken in the Biblical account of creation.
January 21st
The conditions described in Genesis 1:1-3 include a source of Hydrogen atoms (H+), the formula for nucleosynthesis (E=MC2), and give us the origin of the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMBR).
January 14th
If Christ became sin for us when God said "let there be light" and the lamb was slain from the foundation of the world, and Christ died on the cross at Calvary, was he offered once, or twice?
Unstable As Water
Water is inherently unstable. Anything created from it will also be unstable. That’s how SciPop can be wrong about human origins, but science can produce a marvel like the iPhone.
December 8th
Christ's sacrificial death on the cross and the darkness immediately after it picture creation in the moments before God said "let there be light" before nucleosynthesis, the fabled "Big Bang."
Propitiation
Propitiation is the price paid for our redemption. This was Jesus himself. He lived a sinless life and his sacrifice was sufficient to pay for the sins of the whole world.
Building Complexity
It's worth noting that the popular science (SciPop) paradigm requires conditions for the early stages of the universe (the Big Bang) that are met in the testimony of scripture.
The Traditional Understanding of “Let there be Light”
The first major split between Matty's Paradigm and Creationism is in answering the question: What's the source or nature of the light that the Lord created on the first day of creation?
