ALUmnus wrote:Would I be wrong to say that general relativity could be entirely true while the big bang theory is not?
I'm certainly no physicist, but based on what I've studied, yes. The two are pretty inextricably linked.
ALUmnus wrote:The theory of general relativity has lead people to believe that the big bang explains the universe's origin, because that's what it seems to point to, but it doesn't necessarily prove it.
I do concede that you have a point here. General relativity did not and does not prove the big bang theory. It did, however, lead to a lot of things that did solidify the big bang theory as part of the standard model. That's why I was asking to reconcile general relativity with "our" views on science instead of something like the cosmic microwave background radiation. I don't think there's any reconciling that. At least nothing I've seen so far attempts to touch it.
ALUmnus wrote:God has done a lot of things that we don't understand that science would deem impossible. All things are from Him, including science, right? So I, personally, don't see anything in science, a vast majority of it theoretical, that would cast doubt on what I believe the Bible says. I know that seems like a cop-out and insufficient for a lot of people, that God can do anything therefore any reason I give is possible, but you would have to seriously limit God to place Him and all He's done inside the box of science (or even the smaller box of man's knowledge of science).
I really appreciate this. I genuinely mean that. (And I really appreciate replying in general.) But yeah, this doesn't really work for me. It's fine from a theological perspective, but so far as science and logic goes, it doesn't really mean anything. Skeptics and scientists would be quick to point this out as a "God of the gaps" argument. As much as that upsets us folks, they have a point. We on the side of Christianity have had a habit of using this argument for a very long time, and 100% of the time it's come back to make us look like fools. I mean, we (the church) made Galileo spend the last ten years of his life under house arrest instead of acknowledging his proof that the Earth revolved around the Sun instead of the other way around. We kind of have a long history of that sort of thing based on the argument that we can't explain the things of God. So, please understand that I mean no offense at all, I just can't accept that as an answer. I firmly believe that we can understand the mechanics of our world with quite a bit of certainty. God gave us a pretty incredible tool inside of our heads.
RubberMallet wrote:plus we are having to reevaluate the length of time the red shift actually represents. they used to think it was constant but now believe it fluctuates.
I haven't encountered anything about this. Do you have any links? I'd be very interested to read them. Thanks.