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"Name a Natural Explanation Later Replaced by a Supernatural Explanation"
Depths of Pentecost ^ | November 24, 2018 | Philip Cottraux

Posted on 11/25/2018 12:47:12 PM PST by pcottraux

“Name a Natural Explanation Later Replaced by a Supernatural Explanation”

By Philip Cottraux

I see this one pop up on Twitter from time to time, followed by atheists bragging that they’ve never met a theist who can answer it. Unfortunately, I’ve been unsuccessful tracking down its origin. In some tweets I’ve seen it connected with Sam Harris, but sifting through countless quotes as well as his book The End of Faith (this was a torturous experience) turned up nothing.

Like most atheist “gotchas,” this one is riddled with false presumptions. I can already hear skeptics getting to the end of this blog and shouting “Ah ha! You still failed to provide one!” The trap here is that you can’t really answer a question with a wrong premise. It’s like someone demanding you explain why 2+2=5, then when you inform them 2+2 doesn’t =5, they accuse you of dodging the question.

Theists need to be careful not to yield to the snuck premise of questions like these. It tries to present all religion as ancient superstition that’s inevitably going extinct while science (which in their minds is synonymous with atheism) triumphs.

The first (and sometimes only) real-world example they go to is that people believed evil spirits were causing the Black Plague and would wear bags of plants to ward them off. Medical science has obviously proven more effective at figuring out how to prevent the spread of disease. Voila! A supernatural explanation giving way to a natural one, which is making the world a better place, right? If I couldn’t find an exact quote from Sam Harris, he at least writes obsessively about this.

To their credit, atheists have done a phenomenal job of deceiving people about history. But before I unpack this, let me try to clarify certain definitions. Despite their insistence on referring to religion as “superstition,” this is actually an inaccurate term. Belief in the supernatural is not the same thing as superstition per se. The same is true of the word “magic.” Broken down, “super-natural” simply means “beyond nature,” a very broad term implying something exists beyond the natural world.

Now let’s dissect “superstitious.” The Latin word stitio refers to excessive fear or dread, insinuating a drive to compulsive rituals. So to be exact, “superstition” doesn’t refer to belief in the supernatural, but excessive dread and use of ceremonies or rites to control the supernatural. So while a superstitious person certainly believes in the supernatural, one can believe in the supernatural but not be superstitious.

You might answer that prayer is no different from a superstitious ritual (this was Sigmund Freud’s stance). However, the Biblical concept of prayer is very different from avoiding black cats. We are presented with a God who is open to communication with us, but whose way is perfect. In the Lord’s prayer, Jesus instructs us to seek His will to be done on earth as it is in heaven. This is very different from chants a person thinks will bend the will of the supernatural to human desires; it is a process of relinquishing control. It doesn’t entail obsessively repeating rituals, but trusts that no matter what happens, God will straighten everything out in the end. Now, we can pray for things we desire, such as being healed of a disease, but in the end true prayer is praising God no matter the outcome.

While we’re getting our definitions straight, let me also delve into atheism a little further. At its heart are the twin philosophies of materialism and naturalism. They sort of mean the same thing, but if you want to get technical, materialism is the belief that physical matter is all there is in the universe, while naturalism claims only the laws of nature is exist. It’s important to make that distinction because contrary to what atheists would have you believe, scientific progress is not synonymous with atheism; rather naturalism is a philosophy.

Another false presumption with this challenge, as well as the people who can’t answer it, is that God only works through supernatural means. Which means if there’s a natural explanation, there is no God. I profoundly disagree: natural explanations only shed light on how God moves. After all, did He not create the laws of physics? Theologically, God working without violating natural laws is called divine providence, which is just one instrument in His tool belt. We call it a miracle when those laws are violated (which atheists swear cannot happen).

With all this in mind, let’s now examine the challenge: “name a natural explanation later replaced by a supernatural explanation.” The false premise is that there have been nothing but supernatural explanations replaced by natural explanations as science marches forward. To call this a gross oversimplification of history would be an understatement.

As I study science, I’m shocked at the degree to which atheists have lied about and rewritten history. In many cases, they were even opposed to major scientific discoveries, then claimed credit when such breakthroughs become irrefutable. And years of public school indoctrination has led to gargantuan misconceptions among the general population.

The best example is the Big Bang. Many Christians cringe when they hear that phrase, as if it’s synonymous with names like Darwin. But the real history of the Big Bang theory is quite different. Although Edwin Hubble is credited with discovering that galaxies are moving further apart in 1918, indicating that a great explosion started the universe, the idea was first proposed two years earlier by a Catholic priest in Belgium, Georges LeMaitres. Atheists beforehand believed the universe was motionless and eternally pre-existing. Astronomer Fred Hoyle first coined the phrase “big bang” as a term of ridicule for LeMaitres’ proposal. But after Hubble’s observation, no one was laughing. Albert Einstein even professed profound irritation at the discovery for its “divine implications.”

The Big Bang is significant because it demonstrates that the universe is not only expanding, but has a cause. If you rewind time back to its beginning, all the galaxies and matter condense down to one single point. The question is what caused the explosion that drove it all outward.

This resurrected the ancient kalaam argument for theism, also known as the “first cause” argument. The simple and profound logic goes as follows: 1. Everything that begins to exist has a cause. 2. The universe exists. 3. Therefore, the universe has a cause. The question it presents is what caused the universe, and here’s the problem for naturalists. Time, space, and the laws of physics or chemical reactions didn’t exist until after the Big Bang. Therefore, the cause was by definition 1. Eternally pre-existing (not bound by time), 2. Not bound by the laws of physics and (exempt from space) and 3. Immaterial. The cause of the universe is by definition super-natural.

The First Cause argument is so powerful that it’s universal across religions, unchanging from the dawn of man to today. Do you think it’s a coincidence that every religion contains an eternal supreme deity that rules over all others? Even in polytheism, there is still a king-god from whom all other secondary gods sprang. For ancient Egypt is was Atum. For the Greeks, Zeus. For Hinduism, it’s the Brahman. In Islam, Allah. The kalaam philosophy is so pernicious there’s evidence of it dating back at least 8,000 years and even remote people (such as the Bantu tribes of Africa or the jungle natives in South America) have been easily converted to Christianity because of it.

But the Big Bang is just one example. Since atheists think advancements in medical science after the bubonic plague makes a strong case for naturalism, let’s talk about cellular biology. The building blocks of DNA are far more complicated than Darwin could have ever imagined. If you printed out the genetic code of one cell, it would fill up a stack of paper as high as the Washington Monument (it’s worth noting that the first geneticist to successfully map the human genome, Francis Collins, is a Christian). The overwhelming mathematical odds against life coming into existence by itself has made any natural explanation a tough pill to swallow. Even in its most primitive form, the leap from non-life to life is beyond impossible to make, to put it mildly. Yet here we are.

Another significant find is the discovery of black holes. A friend of mine on Twitter, Dr. Sarah Salviander, is an astrophysicist and former atheist, now born-again Christian. The Lord reaches everyone in different ways, and studying black holes is what convinced her there is a God. I don’t want to speak for her, of course, but my personal observations are as follows:

Stars are essentially huge balls of glowing hot energy being released from the core by nuclear fusion. Gravity from the core is in a tug of war to hold that power in. When the energy finally runs out, gravity wins the battle and sucks in everything in a colossal crunch. The core becomes so dense even light cannot escape its grasp. Scientists estimate there are about a billion black holes wandering across the universe, devouring everything in their path.

What’s freaky is that as the black hole sucks matter into its event horizon, the laws of physics no longer apply (meeting our established definition of “miraculous”). The event horizon is likely a gateway to alternate dimensions as reality as we understand is flipped upside down (though you would never survive the journey as gravity crushed you slowly and painfully). While the idea of parallel universes used to be laughable a few decades ago, they are now considered scientifically probable. The process behind this is almost exactly the same as the Big Bang, the start of our universe, meaning that we could well be inside an event horizon ourselves.

Now, before critics twist my words into a straw man (“he’s saying when we die, our souls go into black holes!”) let me explain. I’m only saying that back holes have made the scientific possibility of metaphysical realms much likelier. Therefore, we cannot dismiss the idea of a place outside the universe where God, heaven, and dare I say, hell is. Higher planes of reality outside our human senses do exist. Far from the “invisible man in the sky” atheists ridicule, this description of God as an intelligence beyond the physical universe operating the laws of physics and probability is actually quite Biblical. Psalm 113:4: The Lord is high above all nations, and his glory above the heavens.

So in summary, once the premise of “Name a natural explanation later replaced by a supernatural explanation” is straightened out, we see that scientific discoveries of the Big Bang, the complexity of DNA, and black holes have all given strong support to supernatural origins and catastrophically damaged naturalist philosophy. There’s one more thing I want to add to this before concluding. I spent over two years researching Biblical archaeology and even taught a 12-part series at my church (a few of those are on my YouTube channel, which you can access on the videos page). I can’t possibly sum it all up here, but to briefly cover some of the basics:

-There’s strong evidence for an Exodus at the end of Egypt’s 13th dynasty in the late Bronze Age.
-Excavations from the ruins of Jericho and other Canaanite settlements show strong evidence for Joshua’s conquest.
-There’s strong evidence for historical kings of the Old Testament, even going back as far as Saul and David.
-The Dead Sea scrolls and New Testament papyri discoveries lend credibility to the accurate preservation of the Bible over the centuries.
-The evidence is overwhelming for a real historical Jesus whose life is accurately described by the four gospels, especially with regards to His death and resurrection. It’s impossible to rise from death, especially one as violent as crucifixion; but if He really came back to life, it proves He was exactly who He claimed to be.

To conclude, I want to present my own counter to the question of naming a natural explanation replaced by a supernatural explanation. From the time of Christ to today, imagine how many people during that time have claimed a miracle has happened.

I’ll write more about this at a later time, but the placebo effect is when you feel better because you think you’ll feel better. It’s a powerful trick of the mind, and while scientific studies show it is more potent than previously thought, it has limitations. For example, if doctors tell a patient they have terminal cancer and only have a few months to live, positive thinking has shown to slow its growth and extend their life briefly. Steve McQueen and Bob Marley are two famous examples of this. But the placebo effect cannot shrink tumors or cure cancer. It also cannot open blinded eyes or deaf ears (I‘ve seen all these happen).

In the course of the almost 2,000 years from the time of Jesus to the Pentecostal revivals that broke out in the early 1900s to today, how many described miracles are we looking at? Thousands, perhaps? Hundreds of thousands? Millions?

Odds are, not all of them are real. Many probably are examples of placebo effects or false claims. But even if all of them are fake except one, one is all it takes. If one miracle has ever happened in human history, then all of atheism is a lie.

My question is what sort of game are you playing with eternity with those kinds of odds?


TOPICS: Apologetics; Humor; Religion & Science; Theology
KEYWORDS: apologetics; christianity; faithandphilosophy; notasciencetopic; religions; science
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To: Hardastarboard
Absolute, irrefutable proof that God exists is that liberals don’t believe in him.

No argument.

I've noticed that at least the vocal internet atheist community tends to be far-left. Also true among big name atheists like Dawkins or Hitchens (I can't get over how much Hitchens criticized Mother Theresa while praising Che Guevara).

21 posted on 11/25/2018 4:59:11 PM PST by pcottraux (depthsofpentecost.com)
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To: mlo; The Toddler
Let me try to sum it up shorter and simpler.

The atheist challenge is "Name a natural explanation later replaced by a supernatural one." It's a gotcha question trying to make it appear that religion is an ancient superstition (that used to believe disease was caused by evil spirits) while atheism and scientific explanations are solving the world's problems.

Before I could answer it, I had to unpack the false premises, and there were a LOT...hence all the paragraphs.

In the end, I presented scientific discoveries like the Big Bang, origin of life, and black holes as solid evidence for the supernatural (but I had to define what supernatural means first.

I concluded with a counter-challenge, that if one supernatural event has ever happened, even if the rest are fake, then all of atheism is a lie.

22 posted on 11/25/2018 5:04:03 PM PST by pcottraux (depthsofpentecost.com)
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To: pcottraux; BTerclinger

"Name a Natural Explanation Later Replaced by a Supernatural Explanation"

I don't know what's going on in the realms of theological debates, but that statement has the Book of Esther written all over it.

Now supposedly the name of God is nowhere in the Megillah, but rather that His hand is plainly evident in the intricate coordination of all the seemingly random events that led to the miraculous grand finale. In a story about casting lots, there are no odds.

It was Mordecai the *Jew* sitting at the gate who had the bead on everything going on in the kingdom, and who was pivotal to the plot moving this way or that.

Which brings me back to natural explanation replaced by the supernatural.

Regarding the Hebrew letters, the letter hei is formed from the letter dalet and the letter yud. That's simply the tradition that's "out there", as is obvious from its form:

yud: י dalet: ד

hei: ה

So in the Megillah there's

1) a Jew as the central figure
2) God "never mentioned"

To say that God is missing from the narrative is as absurd as the storyline itself, because what's up with the letters:

Jew:

יהודי

YHVH (the Tetragrammaton)

יהוה

There are no coincidences. It goes a long way in explaining the visceral hatred certain types have toward Jews, regardless of the level of religious observance. Any Jew merely walking around is evidence for the existence of God. "Jew" = Divine Presence.

This particular Jew was named Mordecai, whose name etymology tracks to Marduk, Mars.

It "just so happens" that InSight is scheduled to land on Mars tomorrow.

Hmmm, thinking..

23 posted on 11/25/2018 6:50:54 PM PST by Ezekiel (All who mourn(ed!) the destruction of America merit the celebration of her rebirth.)
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To: pcottraux

What could be more arbitrary than to determine, since a phenomena is consistent over a long period of time, it is either “natural “ or “supernatural?”


24 posted on 11/25/2018 7:27:22 PM PST by Fester Chugabrew (Lock. Her. Up.)
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To: pcottraux
I read The Case for Christ, in which journalist-turned-pastor Lee Strobel laid out the case, through numerous detailed interviews with highly educated Christian authorities -- true servants of Christ themselves -- as to why Jesus Christ's life, death and resurrection were real. His book helped to lead me to accept Christ as my Savior on January 17, 2018.

Your article here helps to buttress my faith. Thank you.

25 posted on 11/25/2018 7:44:12 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks ( The US Constitution ....... Invented by geniuses and God .... Administered by morons ......)
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To: pcottraux

There is also a scientific study around that indicates, through examination of mitochondrial DNA, that ALL OF US were descended from a single human couple (one man, one woman) some 100,000 to 200,000 years ago. The same thing, according to them, applied to 9 out of 10 animal species currently on this earth. This study would certainly lend credence to the story of Noah’s Ark, meaning we could literally actually ALL BE DESCENDANTS of Noah and his Wife (or, more accurately, Shem, Ham and Japheth)! Praise the Lord!


26 posted on 11/25/2018 7:47:20 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks ( The US Constitution ....... Invented by geniuses and God .... Administered by morons ......)
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To: ifinnegan
Thanks. I enjoyed this essay, but he did meander about a fair amount.

Hi Philip. I see that you are the author. I’m glad to be able to chat with you directly.

Believe it or not, this was the heavily edited version. The original clocked in at 3,200 words...I managed to trim it down by a thousand or so (my usual blogs are at around 1,500). I think my subject for this week was more complicated than I anticipated. :)

This is awkwardly written. It makes it seem that Hoyle made his Big Bang joke after LeMaitre’ proposal (1916) but before Hubble’s observation which you state as 1918.

I think I got my dates wrong, too. Double-checking, it looks like the whole LeMaitres-Hubble thing didn't happen until the mid-20s. Well, that's what happens when you're really worked up about a topic.

27 posted on 11/26/2018 7:52:25 PM PST by pcottraux (depthsofpentecost.com)
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To: Ezekiel

Thank you for the interesting info...I honestly didn’t know that!


28 posted on 11/26/2018 7:52:57 PM PST by pcottraux (depthsofpentecost.com)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
I read The Case for Christ, in which journalist-turned-pastor Lee Strobel laid out the case, through numerous detailed interviews with highly educated Christian authorities -- true servants of Christ themselves -- as to why Jesus Christ's life, death and resurrection were real. His book helped to lead me to accept Christ as my Savior on January 17, 2018.

Your article here helps to buttress my faith. Thank you.

I am very glad to hear that! The Case for Christ is a must-read. You might notice a follow-up book by Lee Strobel, "The Case for a Creator," showed up in my sources. I've got a thick collection of his books that are tremendous resources. Also, if you haven't I highly recommend J Warner Wallace's works. "Cold Case Christianity:" He was a homicide detective and hardcore atheist who decided to apply everything he knew about the science of forensics to the gospels, treating them like eyewitness testimonies in a criminal case--and became a Christian because of it.

His follow-up, "God's Crime Scene," takes the same approach to creation (treating the universe itself as a crime scene and using detective work to figure out if there's a creator). Really good stuff!

29 posted on 11/26/2018 7:58:02 PM PST by pcottraux (depthsofpentecost.com)
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