by jimwalton » Fri Jun 21, 2019 8:52 am
I don't happen to think aliens exist, but if we found out they did, it wouldn't do anything to my faith. Christianity is fine with or without them. What astronomers are currently telling us is that if we find life elsewhere in reach of our tools, it would likely be microscopic and more like a virus than anything else. It wouldn't shake my faith in the least. God's sovereignty and power are certainly not limited to this small planet.
The odds of discovering intelligent alien beings is so very small as to be virtually impossible. Knowing the principles of physics, the speed of light, universal constants, and the numerous obstacles to traveling the universe, if there were intelligent life out there (1) we could never get to them, (2) they could never get to us, and (3) even communication over those vast reaches of space is beyond our technology. As Stephen Hawking warned, however, if there really were a civilization that advanced that would be capable of reaching us and staying in communication with their home, we should be far more afraid than excited.
You're right, however, that the Bible is human-centric, and that's for obvious reasons. It's the story of God's interaction with us humans on Earth. But the Bible is also cosmic in scope. Here are a few points of interest.
1. The discovery intelligent alien beings would not make the Bible irrelevant. The Bible is about God's revelation of himself to Earth's population, but the reach of Scripture is cosmic in scope (Col. 3.16). Whether or not there are intelligent aliens, the Bible's claims of God's sovereignty over all creation includes them.
2. It is true that Genesis, and the whole Bible for that matter, is geocentric. The writer wasn't speaking of life anywhere else, and that's OK.
3. The discovery of such beings would not reduce human significance. Science is not a good tool for evaluating human significance anyway. Human beings are embedded in God's story as significant. The discovery of other population groups would not change that truth.
4. The discovery of intelligent aliens would not change our view of God's incarnation in Jesus. It happened in our history; we know that God took on human form on Earth, regardless of what other life may exist elsewhere.
5. The discovery of intelligent aliens would not change our view of Jesus's death on the cross. Christ died to redeem human sin. We trust that God would deal with aliens in appropriate ways: (a) maybe they are not sinful and don't need redemption; (b) maybe they sinned and God revealed to them a way for them to have relationship with Him; (c) maybe they sinned, but God revealed to them Christ's redemptive work on Earth; (d) maybe they sinned, and God appear in their worlds to deal with it. In any case, none of it changes what Jesus did for us.
6. The discovery of life elsewhere in the universe wouldn't have any effect on my faith. It neither shakes my faith nor disproves the Bible. We have to follow truth wherever it leads. If there's life elsewhere in the universe, then there is. I would have to assume that God has provided some mechanism to reveal himself there as He has here.
I don't happen to think aliens exist, but if we found out they did, it wouldn't do anything to my faith. Christianity is fine with or without them. What astronomers are currently telling us is that if we find life elsewhere in reach of our tools, it would likely be microscopic and more like a virus than anything else. It wouldn't shake my faith in the least. God's sovereignty and power are certainly not limited to this small planet.
The odds of discovering intelligent alien beings is so very small as to be virtually impossible. Knowing the principles of physics, the speed of light, universal constants, and the numerous obstacles to traveling the universe, if there were intelligent life out there (1) we could never get to them, (2) they could never get to us, and (3) even communication over those vast reaches of space is beyond our technology. As Stephen Hawking warned, however, if there really were a civilization that advanced that would be capable of reaching us and staying in communication with their home, we should be far more afraid than excited.
You're right, however, that the Bible is human-centric, and that's for obvious reasons. It's the story of God's interaction with us humans on Earth. But the Bible is also cosmic in scope. Here are a few points of interest.
1. The discovery intelligent alien beings would not make the Bible irrelevant. The Bible is about God's revelation of himself to Earth's population, but the reach of Scripture is cosmic in scope (Col. 3.16). Whether or not there are intelligent aliens, the Bible's claims of God's sovereignty over all creation includes them.
2. It is true that Genesis, and the whole Bible for that matter, is geocentric. The writer wasn't speaking of life anywhere else, and that's OK.
3. The discovery of such beings would not reduce human significance. Science is not a good tool for evaluating human significance anyway. Human beings are embedded in God's story as significant. The discovery of other population groups would not change that truth.
4. The discovery of intelligent aliens would not change our view of God's incarnation in Jesus. It happened in our history; we know that God took on human form on Earth, regardless of what other life may exist elsewhere.
5. The discovery of intelligent aliens would not change our view of Jesus's death on the cross. Christ died to redeem human sin. We trust that God would deal with aliens in appropriate ways: (a) maybe they are not sinful and don't need redemption; (b) maybe they sinned and God revealed to them a way for them to have relationship with Him; (c) maybe they sinned, but God revealed to them Christ's redemptive work on Earth; (d) maybe they sinned, and God appear in their worlds to deal with it. In any case, none of it changes what Jesus did for us.
6. The discovery of life elsewhere in the universe wouldn't have any effect on my faith. It neither shakes my faith nor disproves the Bible. We have to follow truth wherever it leads. If there's life elsewhere in the universe, then there is. I would have to assume that God has provided some mechanism to reveal himself there as He has here.