No. Science would suggest that such a miracle was a physical impossibility. But merely because an event is a "physical impossibility" does not mean that it did not occur. The problem, my FRiend, is that many people use Science to prove the Bible false. There was a poster on this thread who said that while he believed in God, he did not believe that Jesus walked on water. His disbelief was apparently grounded in Science. He used his scientific knowledge to disprove (in his own mind) the miracles in the Bible.
Belief in Miracles, such as walking on water, turning water into wine, and creating the earth in 6 days, requires that we acknowledge that God is not bound by physical laws and that his miracles are not made false by empirical or circumstantial evidence which suggests either that they could not occur or that they did not occur.
Yes, and you'll not find your "proof" therefore in physics.
Neither will you.
Reading Jesus will not help us know physics.
Then why do Christian students pray before their Physics finals?
That's as silly as using the Bible to prove science false.
why do Christian students pray before their Physics finals?
I used to pray that I would do my best before I went to bat in little league.
But I still took batting practice.
Hopefully Christian students study their school textbooks before the exam. :)
All excellent points, P-Marlowe. Where have you been on all these threads?!?!? Hope to see a lot more of you in the future.
All the best—GGG
“...we acknowledge that God is not bound by physical laws and that his miracles are not made false by empirical or circumstantial evidence...”
Exactly. We have the reasoning ability to deduce from observation that God has brought us into being via an evolutionary process. I put no such bounds on God as to presume that his creation method would be in deniable opposition to all of the evidence that he has left behind.