The Noctuam Society
  • Home
  • The Truth About 2012
  • Blog

    Have you noticed that the Big Bang theory often brings up atheism vs. the Bible?  
   It is sort of twisting it to say that they completely support each other, but it is also twisting it to say that they DON'T support each other.
I'm about to explain why, and keep in mind that I am not saying either of these views are correct, just saying that they don't really
disprove each other. (Although have you noticed that "Big Bang" in the Big Bang theory is always capitalized, like "G" in God?)
   So the first thing that happened during the Big Bang, was of course the "Big Bang," where these particles exploded into existence out
of who-knows-where (this is where the "belief" part comes along), and first out of this explosion came photons (photons=light), and out
of these photons was created the rest of the universe. And in the bible it is day 1, when light/photons were created, and it created
darkness also (yin/yang, no concept of darkness without light, ya know?). In the Bible the end of the day was when God named them
both, in all the antique cheese-ball seriousness of the King James Bible, "And God saw the light, that it was good, and God divided the
light from the darkness. And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night; and the evening and the morning were the
first day."
    Sounds pretty much the same doesn't it? There was light, and the earth was formed from the light (although, yah, this is a bit of a
stretch since the earth is mentioned BEFORE the light in Genesis, but it doesn't really say that it was created before, its only before
in mentioning), and the heavens and earth were created. And of course there is the time frame-modern science doesn't agree with
this all happening in a day. But this only takes a realization of what time is. I think we can all agree, for the sake of this conversation,
that "night and day" come from the earths rotation. When it becomes light (which God named day) we are facing the sun. When it
becomes night, we are facing away from the sun. "Day" to us is one rotation of the earth. So what is day to God? God doesn't live on
earth, he lives in "heaven," i.e. somewhere up there above us in the constellations, where we can't be sure that there is a planet that
rotates exactly like earth does. Then if you get complicated, (But what if God did go by earth days, anyways), there is the next part of the
Big Bang theory.
    Eventually the forces (gravity, electromagnetism, all that universe driving stuff) caused the particles to be created and eventually they
all came together because of these forces, whirling into balls which eventually turned
Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.