When Science and Faith Team Up
When Science and Faith Team Up
Ever feel like science and faith are like oil and water? They just donât mix? Well, surprise! Theyâre more like peanut butter and jelly. For years, people thought you had to pick one. But the truth is, they fit together perfectly, both showing us a smart Creator.
Letâs dive in with some easy clues. Iâll keep it light, like chatting over coffee.
How Science Got Its Start
Back in the 1600s and 1700s, science took off big time. Why? Smart folks like Galileo, Kepler, and Isaac Newton believed the world followed clear rules. And rules need a rule-maker, God.
C. S. Lewis said it best: People became scientists because they expected laws in nature, and they expected those laws because they trusted in a law-giver.
Newton didnât ditch God after finding gravity. Nope! He saw it as a sneak peek into Godâs clever design. His big book, Principia Mathematica, is like a map of a universe built by a divine builder.
Clue 1: The Universe Had a Start
Science says our universe is growing bigger all the time. If you rewind the clock, everything. Time, space, stuff, shrinks to one tiny point. Thatâs the Big Bang.
But what started it? Science canât say, because itâs like asking what was before âbefore.â Thatâs a job for big thinkers.
Saying it came from nothing is silly, like a cake baking itself. The best answer? Something outside time and space lit the spark. The Bible says in Hebrews 11:3: âBy faith we understand that the universe was formed at Godâs command, so that what is seen was not made of what was visibleâ Boom!
Clue 2: The Universe Is Tuned Just Right
Think of the universe like a giant machine with a bunch of control knobs or dials that set how everything works. These arenât real knobs you can twist; theyâre the basic rules of physics, like:
- How strong gravity is (the pull that keeps your feet on the ground and planets orbiting stars).
- The power of the strong nuclear force (what holds atoms together so they donât fly apart).
- The cosmological constant (a fancy way to say the energy that makes the universe expand at just the right speed).
Imagine dials set perfectly for life. The chances of that happening by luck? Huge, like winning the lottery every day for a year.
This fine-tuning screams âplan,â not âoops.â Proverbs 3:19 says: âBy wisdom the Lord laid the earthâs foundations, by understanding he set the heavens in place.â Sounds on point!

The Big Jump: From No Life to Life
A tuned universe is neat, but how did life begin? Evolution explains how life changes over time (cool with me), but starting life from scratch? Thatâs tricky.
Evolution needs life to already exist to work its magic. Turning chemicals into a living cell? No oneâs done it in a lab yet. Itâs like expecting soup to turn into a chef.
DNA: Lifeâs Secret Code
Picture this: Inside every tiny cell in your body is DNA. Itâs like a super-long instruction manual made of 3.4 billion âlettersâ (tiny building blocks called bases: A, T, C, and G). But hereâs the kicker, itâs not just a bunch of chemicals hanging out. Itâs a full-on code, like a language that tells your body how to build and run everything, from your eye color to how you digest pizza.
If you uncoiled all the DNA from just one personâs cells and stretched it out, itâd go for 67 billion miles. Thatâs like 150,000 round trips to the moon! (Makes you wonder if God was showing off a bit, right? đ)
Now, think about computer code, those lines of instructions that make apps work. They donât write themselves; smart programmers do. So, who programmed DNAâs code? Itâs way more complex than any software weâve cooked up.
Enter John Lennox, a sharp thinker who spots this gem: The Bible kicks off in Johnâs Gospel with âIn the beginning was the Wordâ (thatâs âLogosâ in Greek, meaning a divine plan or reason). Itâs describing creation as something built on wordsâinformation and meaning.
Fast forward to today: Science shows us that life isnât just random stuff; itâs âword-based.â What does that mean? Simple, life runs on information arranged like words in a sentence. DNAâs letters form âwordsâ that spell out instructions for building proteins and keeping you alive. Itâs like the universeâs original programming language!
This match-up between the Bibleâs âWordâ and DNAâs code? Itâs not coincidence; itâs profound. Like finding out your favorite book was written by the Author of everything.

The Smart Guess: A Designer Did It
In life, complex things like books or engines come from smart minds. A chemist in a lab uses brains to make fancy stuff.
The worldâs wild complexity? Points to a super-smart Designer. This isnât filling gaps with God. Itâs seeing that codes and machines need creators.
Our Brains: Made to Figure It Out
We have a rule-following universe and code-based life. But the biggest puzzle? Us, humans who understand it all.
Einstein was amazed: âThe only incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is comprehensibleâ
Why can our brains, built for survival, grasp big math and space secrets? It fits if both the universe and our minds come from the same divine brain.
That Inner Voice: Right and Wrong
We all know some things are just wrongâlike hurting kids or what Hitler did. Itâs not opinion; itâs fact.
If weâre just animals, why judge? Lions kill without guilt. Morals as âjust what society saysâ? Then how call out bad societies?
A real, universal right-and-wrong points to a moral rule. Maker who put it in our hearts.
Like Godâs Mirror
Our smarts and sense of fair play make sense in the Bibleâs idea: Weâre made in Godâs image. That gives everyone value, no matter what.
It fights the idea that worth comes from what you do or own. Genesis 1:27: âSo God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created themâ Equal from the start.

From Far-Away Creator to Close Friend
Clues from space, life, and minds build a case for a smart, good God beyond us. But Christianity says: Heâs personal, and you can know Him.
Why? For a friendship. John 17:3: âNow this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent.â
The Tough Question: Why Bad Stuff?
If Godâs good and strong, why evil and pain? No easy answer.
Christianity doesnât explain it away. It shows a God who jumps in. The key picture? Not a king on a throne, but Jesus on a cross.
God suffered too. Heâs not far off; He gets our hurt because He felt it.
The Hope That Lasts
The cross isnât the end. Jesus rising again is. It proves death loses, and wrongs get fixed.
This hope changes now: Say no to junk, yes to good living. Titus 2:11-12: âFor the grace of God has appeared that offers salvation to all people. It teaches us to say âNoâ to ungodliness and worldly passions, and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age,â
Science and Faith: Partners in Crime
Science asks âhowâ. How stars shine, how DNA works. Faith asks âwhyâ. Meaning, purpose, hope.
Not enemies; best buddies for seeing the full picture.
The skies show Godâs glory, and science helps us read it.
If this sparks a âhmmâ in you, chase it. The Maker isnât hiding. Heâs calling.
The Holy Spirit are knocking on you, perhaps
Grace and peace,
Richard âď¸