phil,
That's too deep for me. Who says that scientists don't have faith. They
have to have some kind of faith to even understand and spout off that stuff.
Vinny
----- Original Message -----
From: "Phil Scovell" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sunday, August 19, 2007 12:18 PM
Subject: God Defined
> God Defined. Checkmate.
>
>
> By Phil Scovell
>
>
>
>
>
> I am no scientist. I did dissect a frog in high school
> biology class, he was dead of course, but I doubt that ranks me up
> there with the great scientific minds of the world today. For
> that matter, I never cared for math all that much in the first
> place. I even dropped out of my second year of high school
> algebra the second I found out you didn't need two years of
> algebra to graduate at that time. I did become slightly more
> interested in mathematics in general when I studied, at the age of
> 13, for my amateur radio exam, and subsequent exams over the
> years, as I progressed up the latter.
>
> At the age of ten, I found electronics very interesting.
> When I discovered a friends TV repair shop in his basement, I
> began spending hours asking all kinds of questions as he worked at
> his bench. Seeing my definite interest, he began taking me on
> house calls and teaching me what he knew.
>
> One day he said, "Phil, you need to get your ham radio
> license with your interest in electronics." I didn't know what he
> was talking about so after that house call that night, he took me
> into his radio room, turned on all the equipment, and I was
> hooked.
>
> About this same period of time, my father became ill at work
> one day and three weeks later, he died unexpectedly. Six months
> following his death, I began having problems with my retinas and a
> year after my father's death, and more than a dozen eye
> operations, I was totally blind.
>
> I never forgot all the fascinating things about electronics
> and when we moved to Nebraska and I began attending the school for
> the blind, a student befriended me who just so happened to be
> studying for him ham radio exam. The school had a ham station set
> up and by age fourteen, I had my license.
>
> What's all this have to do with God? Haven't you ever
> wondered who and what God is? He has personality, this we know,
> as Christians I mean, and we read about His persona throughout the
> Scriptures but what is He? By that I mean, what is God made of,
> or spoken correctly, of what is God made? This question alone,
> to some is disrespectful and even irreverent. It may, in the
> minds of some, be sacrilegious and blasphemous. However, in my
> healing journey and walk with the Lord these past fifty years, I
> have learned that God isn't afraid of my questions. Why should He
> be? He knows all the answers.
>
> Generally speaking, we know what we are made of, that is, we
> know that all things are made of matter. Matter is essentially
> atoms. We can't see these tiny little solar systems but when
> they are collected together in one place, they make up the wooden
> desk I am seated at, the chair I am sitting on, the keyboard I am
> typing with, and as my computer runs, trillions of atoms or doing
> their thing in my office, streaming down the cable to a satellite
> dish, out into space, passing through a geosynchronous satellite
> thousands of miles above the earth, back down again to a ground
> based receiving satellite dish, and flows through all sorts of
> wires and cables and fiber optic lines, and continues its speed of
> light journey into your computer as you read this article about
> God. We can't see the with the naked eye, of course, but none of
> us have any problems believing we are sitting on a chair,
> watching television, listening to the radio, viewing the stars at
> night, or looking up into the sky and seeing clouds drifting by
> with the sun shining nearby. Scientifically, on the other hand,
> many find the concept of God impossible to believe. After all,
> seeing is believing? Yes, I know we can see some things which
> are invisible, such as atoms, if we used specially designed
> electron microscopes. Even many of the lights we see in the sky
> at night, which we call stars, are not even there any longer
> because some of the starlight we see were, I say were, emitted
> millions of years ago, we are told, and are flashing over the
> vastness of empty space from dead stars. Yet, because we are
> hundreds of millions of light years away, we are only seeing their
> left over light emissions before the stars, or suns, winked out of
> existence.
>
> Then there are black holes. No one has ever seen one but
> mathematically, it is believed they are there. This is what I
> was getting to. The scientist, although he cannot now, nor ever
> will be able, to see certain aspects of our universe outwardly, or
> inwardly, that is atomically and subatomically, still believes
> that certain things he cannot see exists based upon mathematical
> calculations. At first, therefore, scientists could not calculate
> something as complex as God but then came quantum mechanics.
>
> Not only am I not a scientist but I am not a teacher of any
> of the sciences. I am likewise not a theologian. So what you are
> about to read is only basic in nature from a layman's viewpoint
> and understanding of what he has read. It isn't even necessary
> you understand a single word I say but you can still know God on
> an intimate personal level that literally few people in the world,
> or even throughout history, have ever spiritually experienced.
>
> Let's get one question out of the way right off the bat. "Is
> God a hypermathematical equation?" The scientist, or the quantum
> physicist, might say such was possible, although I don't know if
> anyone has ever tried mathematically theorizing God's existence
> and composition, but that is only because he believes more in
> mathematically based theory than he does eternal knowledge. In
> other words, 1 times one can only be one. Of course, this same
> physicist believes in parallel universes all coexisting
> simultaneously. Some believe that everything a black hole sucks
> into its bottomless pit dimensions is crushed to barely above the
> level of matter, including light itself, and is then deposited at
> the end of the black hole into another universe. Mathematically,
> of course, it is theorized these parallel universes exist. Some
> have black holes, they say, and some don't. this is convenient
> because then matter is never destroyed but transferred to another
> universe. You see, a basic law of physics is that matter, or
> information, that is data, can never be destroyed, that is, made
> nothing. Some theorize that just such a black hole from another
> parallel universe belched out our present universe in which we
> live. Some even call this even "The Big Bang." I'm sure you've
> heard of that. In reality, there was a big bang once upon a time.
> when God said, "Let there be light," and there was light. Bang!
> Perhaps I digress. Let's get back to who God is or what he is.
>
> Recently, I heard this illustration from a scientist which I
> thought was apropos. He wasn't a Christian but I think he hit the
> nail on the head without even realizing it. He described quantum
> mechanics in this manner.
>
> Let's reduce the entire universe to a chest board with all of
> it's piece in place on the board ready for a game. If you have
> ever played chest against your computer, perhaps you have
> experienced the same thing a friend of mind did many years ago.
> This was back in the days when computers, home computers, were
> nothing more than game machines. Games were loaded into the 8K of
> memory by plugging in a cassette type like cartridge. My friend,
> one day, loaded his chest game. He had been playing against the
> computer for some time but was getting bored so he selected the
> highest level the software was capable of playing. He made his
> move and then sat and watched the screen. The computer, as
> primitive as it was in those days for home usage, just sat there.
> The screen indicated the computer was working, or thinking, about
> its move. He waited a few more minutes. Nothing changed. The
> computer, of course, was attempting to figure out every logical
> move possible to win the game. My friend went and got a cup of
> coffee and returned. Nothing had changed. He got up, after
> downing his coffee, and went and did some work around the house
> and yard and came back an hour later. The computer was still
> working on it's first move. He switched the computer off.
>
> comparing this, the scientist said, to a quantum mechanics
> computer, of which there are none, at this writing, in existence,
> but theoretically they claim one is possible, it would see the
> entire universe, with all of its visible and invisible, elements,
> collectively. Such a quantum computer could function totally
> independently on every single aspect of the chest match and
> logically to the completed end of the game. In other words, a
> quantum computer could never lose. It could be thinking,
> independently, and simultaneously, on every possible move
> unlimitlessly and it would all occur at the exact same time. In
> short, the quantum computer would never make a mistake and never
> be wrong. Sound like anybody you know? Now, the scientist said,
> we can expand this concept to the entire universe and to all the
> parallel universes since quantum mechanics and quantum physics.
>
> About this time, I began laughing as I listened to the
> explanation of the quantum physicist. When we moved beyond the
> DOS stage of computer functionality, multi tasking has become the
> normal. those of us using computers, run various programs all at
> the same time without even being aware of their presence. Sound
> like anybody you know? If there is a God, therefore,
> theoretically speaking, of course, and He has created everything
> and even maintains everything simultaneously, is should be clear
> God is infinite. Of course, such is exactly the case according to
> the Bible in Colossians 3:15-17 and I quote: "Who is the image of
> the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation:
> 16 for in him were all things created, in the heavens and upon
> the earth, things visible and things invisible, whether thrones or
> dominions or principalities or powers; all things have been
> created through him, and unto him:
> 17 and he is before all things, and in him all things consist."
>
> In mathematic quantum mechanics theory, therefore, does God
> exist? If so, how and what is He? He isn't a mathematic equation
> because he is infinite. Therefore, no mathematical calculation
> could compute God. The quantum mechanics characteristics of His
> existence merges theory with fact. His creation confirms His
> existence of real. What is he? He is like his creation, that is,
> man because He created us in His image. Who is God and of what is
> He made? 1 times 1 equals God.
>
>
> How Big Is God? The Size Of Your Mouth.
> WWW.SafePlaceFellowship.com
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