Embracing the Harmony of Science and Faith

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Sermon Clips

### Quotes for Outreach

1. "Can science and faith coexist? What would you say? All right, that was pretty good. Let's just close in prayer then and just thank the Lord for this time together. Now, there's a lot of people around you who would question that and say, hey, you might think that, but I don't really see it that way and that's not what I've heard. And so, for many, this can be one of the big stumbling blocks on the way to faith." [33:38]( | | )

2. "Science and faith, I really believe, leads us to question there must be someone behind all of this. If I were to ask you who was the most brilliant scientist of the last century, besides yourself, what name comes to mind from the last century? Albert Einstein? Is that fair? This guy right here, I'm very jealous of his hair. It looks like he actually combed it that day." [01:05:27]( | | )

3. "Science can strengthen our faith and faith can increase our wonder and awe as we look into and explore God's world. And so, science and faith, we said, are actually friends if we allow them to be. One of them can strengthen the other." [01:04:32]( | | )

### Quotes for Members

1. "Nature can give us a sense of the greatness of God, right? And also, maybe how small we are. How small we feel in comparison. You just go, like, you've seen those pictures, you know, from the astronauts from outer space, and you just go, wow. Like, the earth feels like it's just a little ball, and I'm a little dot, and one... know what the Bible says? Just as nature reveals the awesomeness of God, it also confounds our imagination to know that he cares about us." [46:23]( | | )

2. "The teleological argument says, it just looks like there's been design. Even an atheist like Stephen Hawking, the late Stephen Hawking, said in one of his later books, he wrote this. He said, the laws of science, as we know them at present, contain many precise ratios like the size of the electric charge of the electron and the ratio of the masses of the proton and the electron. The remarkable fact is that the values of these numbers seem to have been very finely adjusted to make possible the development of life." [55:39]( | | )

3. "The cosmological argument. Nothing. Nothingness can't just explode into being and create what we see. Richard Dawkins, in his book, I mentioned him earlier, The God Delusion, admits this is a problem. He says, Darwin's theory works for biology, but not for cosmology or ultimate origins. And he says, cosmology is waiting on us, Darwin. In other words, what he's saying is this. He says, while science has told us how things have developed in the world and taken shape, we still don't know where it all began or what caused it in the beginning." [49:15]( | | )

4. "Friends, today, we see things imperfectly, right? We don't understand everything in our world. We have doubts. If that's you, welcome to the club. But let me say this. Can I urge you, don't let questions about science get in the way of knowing Jesus. Let's keep on seeking Jesus until that day when we see things with perfect clarity." [01:08:18]( | | )

5. "Science, first of all, allows us to understand better our creator. There's two ways that we get a revelation of God. There's special revelation, which is the word, and there's natural revelation, which is the world. Special revelation, the Bible. Natural revelation, biology, all the rest of science. Both of them can work hand in hand to help us know our creator better. Both of them are God's gift to us." [58:45]( | | )

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