..READ
ARTICLE BELOW FIRST
.I really liked this article and consider the ideas very
plausible....however......it makes the same assumptions that all religions and
even Science makes.....a "beginning" to Existence and a God
"external" to Creation. I believe the inherent "need"
for a "beginning" clouds our concept of what Existence really is.
Atheists claim there is no God. If you limit God's Existence to being
external and "supernatural" like all religions...THEY ARE
CORRECT. If God dwells and works though His Creation and His
PERFECT Laws as revealed in the "Flesh" by Jesus Christ 2000 years ago.....atheism
becomes an illusion because when we see Creation...WE ARE SEEING GOD. The
rejection of God logically makes atheists deny Existence itself and even "themselves."
Atheism is therefore an oxymoron.
Hypernaturalism:
Integrating the Bible and Science
March 24,
2014
By Guest
Writer
Though
the views of naturalism and supernaturalism often pit science and religion
against one another, hypernaturalism is proposed as an alternative that
combines divine power and natural law. It is hoped that such a synthesis of
science and faith can help religious people become more accepting of science,
and place Christianity in a logical framework that the scientifically minded
can accept.
Much of
the modern “creation debate” devolves into two competing perspectives:
naturalism and supernaturalism. Naturalism, often considered the scientific
point of view, states that the universe and all life-forms came into being via
undirected, natural processes. Supernaturalism, considered the religious view,
argues that a supernatural God created the entire universe and life itself.
We
believe there is a third point of view that can unite religion and science. We
call it hypernaturalism.
Defining
Terms
Hypernaturalism
might be considered a form of progressive creationism. We define it as the
extraordinary use of natural law by the God described in the Bible.
Hypernaturalism postulates that when God created the universe ex nihilo (from
nothing), He also created the laws of nature. He integrated natural law into
the created order to make a universe with what has been called “relative
autonomy.”1
God the
Creator is necessarily outside of the universe He made—hence, He is able to
control the forces of nature. Natural law is God’s servant. God has the
authority to use the forces of nature to implement His will. Hence, through
hypernaturalism, many of God’s miracles can be explained as a combination of
divine power and natural law. When God acts hypernaturally, He employs natural
law and natural phenomena in an extraordinary way to bring about His will. This
encompasses extraordinary timing (including both duration and start and stop
time), an extraordinary selection of location, and/or extraordinary magnitude
(including severity and intensity). An event is not necessarily hypernatural
because it is extraordinary; it is hypernatural if God exercises extraordinary
control for a particular purpose (since His miracles always have purpose).
Hypernaturalism
vs Supernaturalism
Hypernaturalism
differs from supernaturalism, which might be compared to the philosophy of
young earth creationism. If God acts supernaturally to effect His will, He
operates outside of natural law by overriding the laws of physics, such as
gravity and the second law of thermodynamics.
The usual
Christian understanding of a miracle is that God supernaturally brings about
something that is otherwise impossible. An omnipotent God can surely do
this—but hypernaturalism could provide an even greater demonstration of God’s
power. A supernatural miracle overriding the forces of nature shows that God
has greater power than nature—yet it could also imply nature is God’s
adversary. Such a depiction was typical of ancient myths, in which pagan
deities representing forces of nature competed to prove who had greater power.
By
contrast, a hypernatural miracle demonstrates that God created the forces of
nature to serve His purposes. This is evident in Genesis when God commanded
Earth and the waters to “bring forth” vegetation and animals, respectively, and
nature complied (Genesis 1:11, 20, 24, KJV).
Before
the scientific revolution, when humankind could observe but not explain natural
phenomena, it seemed logical to believe God acted supernaturally. People
believed rainfall (or lack thereof), fertility, and other natural phenomena
were God’s supernatural will at work. Today we recognize natural laws and can
explain many miracles as God’s extraordinary use of those laws.
Parting
of the Red Sea: A Hypernatural Miracle
The Bible
explicitly describes some of God’s miracles as the result of hypernatural
activity. An example is the parting of the Red Sea (Ex 14:21-28)—one of God’s
greatest and most important miracles. Scripture states that God brought this
about hypernaturally by causing an extraordinarily strong wind at an
extraordinary time in an extraordinary place:
Moses stretched out his hand over the sea;
and the LORD swept the sea back by a strong east wind all night and turned the
sea into dry land, so the waters were divided. The sons of Israel went through
the midst of the sea on the dry land…[Then] Moses stretched out his hand over
the sea, and the sea returned to its normal state at daybreak, while the
Egyptians were fleeing right into it (Exodus 14:21–22a, 27a, NASB, emphasis
original).
This
scene might describe a storm surge, a rather common phenomenon; storm surges as
high as 48 feet have been recorded.2 In 1990, meteorologist Allan Brunt found
such a storm surge plausible in the northward extension of the Red Sea.3
Alternately,
the parting could be likened to a “wind setdown” such as observed on Lake Erie
and in Florida. In 2010, atmospheric scientists Carl Drews and Weiqing Han
reported a suite of model experiments that demonstrated the plausibility of the
biblical account based on a wind setdown on an ancient coastal lagoon in the
Exodus area where a strong wind was recorded in 1882. They estimated that a
uniform 63 mph easterly wind would produce a land bridge “3-4 km long and 5 km
wide, and it remains open for 4 hours.”4
These two
peer-reviewed articles demonstrate that it is scientifically plausible that the
biblical narrative correctly describes a hypernatural miracle.
Manipulating
Probabilities
Another
aspect of hypernatural miracles is God’s power to manipulate nature by
overcoming ridiculously small probabilities within natural law. The story of
Joseph is one example. It was extraordinarily improbable that Joseph could go
from slave to prisoner to second-in-command of Egypt to savior of his
family—yet God made this happen without any direct evidence of His involvement
(Genesis 37–50, especially 50:19–20).5 The same is true of other stories such
as the anointing of King Saul (1 Samuel 10), the coin to pay Jesus’s temple tax
found in a fish (Matthew 17:24–26), and others. In this context, a straightforward
reading of the biblical text suggests that many miracles are indeed
hypernatural or, at least, potentially hypernatural.
In
closing we emphasize that hypernaturalism is not a new concept, nor is it God’s
only tool for interacting with the natural realm. Rather this is a restatement
of orthodox Christian beliefs in a modern context—one that we hope will allow
the religious and the scientific to find common ground while holding a high
view of both science and Scripture.
In future
articles we will elaborate on other aspects of hypernaturalism and examine the
details of specific hypernatural miracles.
*Article
updated March 24, 2014, 11:57 AM (PDT)
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