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Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

How Do We Even Know There’s a God?

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 20 February 2023

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Pastor J.D. continues our Ask Me Anything series based on his new book, Essential Christianity. The second question is, "How do we even know there's a God?"

Show Notes:



This new book, Exploring Christianity, looks at 10 key words in the book of Romans to help us explore the truth behind Christianity. In Romans 1:19-20, Paul makes it clear that God has made himself and his existence undeniable. He says, “What can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen since the creation of the world, being understood through what he has made.”
Now (like a lot of the book of Romans), there’s a lot of meat there, but Paul’s basic claim is that God has made the basic truths about himself known to every person who’s ever lived. He’s left his fingerprints in various places, if we have eyes to see them.
Philosophers helpfully grouped these fingerprints into four primary categories, and then unhelpfully gave them complicated names. I’m going to use those complicated names, but don’t let them trip you up. The concepts are pretty simple. I figure if we can memorize the name of our $14, 16-ingredient drink at Starbucks, we can learn these. And, if you happen to find yourself in a philosophical discussion about the nature of God at the Waffle House late one afternoon and drop in one of these multisyllabic masterpieces, it’s sure to increase your standing in the debate.




These are four ways that the apostle says God reveals himself in creation:


* The Cosmological Fingerprint


This one goes back all the way to Aristotle. It’s the question of why there is something rather than nothing, and where did the original something come from? 




If the world began 14 billion years ago with a Big Bang, where did the materials that caused the Big Bang come from? 
You can’t keep going back in infinite regress into nothingness. 
Eventually something has to come from somewhere. “Nothingness” can’t just explode. 
In his book God Delusion, Richard Dawkins admits this is a problem. He says, “Darwin’s theory works for biology, but not for cosmology (or, ultimate origins).”  And, “Cosmology is waiting on its Darwin.” 
In other words, he thinks that while they have explained how life took shape on the earth, he admits they still have no idea where life itself, or the materials that produced life, came from.
We need a theory, he says, as to why anything exists, because it is self-evident that nothing x nobody can’t equal everything. 
But don’t worry,” he says in the book, one day we’ll find it. (Which is a textbook example of a blind, hopeful leap of faith.)




* The Teleological Fingerprint


Not only do we have the question of why there is something rather than nothing, but our creation appears to be very finely tuned.

The more we learn about this, the more amazing it becomes. 
Scientists say that life on earth depends on multiple factors that are so precise that if they were off by even a hair, life could not exist. They call it the Goldilocks principle: things are “just right” for human life. 
The makeup of the atmosphere is very exact, yet it’s the difference between life and death. If some of those levels were even slightly off—for example, if the level of oxygen dropped by 6% we would all suffocate; if it rose by 4%, our planet would erupt into a giant fireball. And we’d all die.
Or, if the CO2 were just a little higher or a just  little bit lower (say...

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, everybody, welcome to Ask Me Anything. I'm here with Pastor J.D. Greer. Good rhyming by me there.

0:24.9

And I'm Matt Love, your host. And we are in the second week of a series. We are going through some of the questions from Pastor J.D.'s new book, Essential Christianity, The Heart of the Gospel, in 10 words.

0:37.1

And we're really excited about this book from

0:39.2

Pastor J.D. A great resource for anybody that is trying to understand and unpack how do I kind of

0:46.0

think about my, like what Christianity means for me in really simple and helpful terms. Also a really

0:51.2

good book, I think, for going through with your friends that are either

0:54.4

new believers or not believers yet that are exploring Christianity. I was actually talking to one

0:59.9

of our church planters who is excited to use this book. He's near our college campus, and he feels

1:04.4

like this could be a great resource for them as they try to engage and minister to college students.

1:10.6

So you can get this book at the goodbook.com right now.

1:14.9

But we're going to go ahead and dive in with our second question,

1:17.6

which is, again, just a really key question to be able to answer.

1:22.9

Even if you believe that it's true, how do we know that there's a God? And how would we talk about that with

1:29.6

somebody else? So, J.D., how do we even know there's a God? Well, like we talked about in the

1:33.7

previous podcast, this book is really trying to follow Paul's high points of logic in the book of

1:38.6

Romans and then just put him into the context of 21st century Americans because his logic is incredibly relevant to how

1:46.9

we think. He anticipates the questions we have. In fact, I had an unbelieving friend. She's a

1:51.8

professor at UNC Chapel Hill. She's become a friend of our family. She actually became a Christian

1:56.4

in the course of me writing this book. And so I had to read parts of it before she was a Christian.

2:01.1

And she said, you know, what's amazing is how a first century writer write something that addresses the questions that 21st century people are still asking.

2:10.6

And one of those questions that he gets right into at the beginning is, how do we know what we know about God?

2:16.3

I mean, God is invisible.

...

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