God After... VII: God After Hubble

God After...

July 7, 2024 • William A. Evertsberg • Genesis 1:1–5, Genesis 1:14–19

And even if the universe is 13.78 billion years old, that’s a lot younger than we used to think. We used to think the universe was always there. It’s called the Steady State Theory. The universe had no beginning. 


Edwin Hubble has given God something to do. I don’t know if God did it, as Genesis claims. The laws of physics don’t apply at the heat and density of that aboriginal infinitesimal singularity, but something caused the universe to inflate and stretch like a balloon. 


Even when I was a child, the creation story in Genesis troubled me. I said to myself, if light is created on the first day of creation, and the stars are created on the fourth day of creation, where did the first light come from? You can’t have light without stars, right? Wrong! Astronomers say that light first appeared in the universe 380,000 years after The Big Bang; the stars didn’t congeal, condense, and ignite until 200 million years after The Big Bang; for over 100 million years, there was light in the universe without stars.

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