Mysteries of Creation (2)



Gases and dust
“And the earth was without form, and void…” (Gen1:2a)
Scripture suggests and science affirms that the primeval particles of matter were in the form of gases and dust before they bonded together to form the celestial bodies and all things else in the universe.
In 1796, French astronomer Pierre Laplace advanced the “nebular hypothesis” in his book Exposition of the System of the Universe. He proposed that the stars, the sun, and the planets formed from nebulae – swirling clouds of interstellar gases, dust, and minerals
According to the theory, refined over the past 200 years, dynamic interactions cause a spinning cloud to flatten into a disk as gravity pulls much of the materials into the center, which begins to contract. The contraction raises the pressure and temperature at the core until it develops into a “protosun.” The outer parts of the disk, on the other hand, cool down. Mutual attraction causes solid pieces and ice crystals to agglomerate and form asteroids, planetesimals, and rocky inner planets like Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, while farther out gases and dust freeze into great ice balls that become outer gaseous planets, such as Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.

“Blackbody” of space
“…and darkness was upon the face of the deep (Gen1:2b).
Space, at the outset, was simply an empty darkness. Did God create darkness? Or was darkness the mere absence of light? The Scriptures tell us that the Creator also made darkness: “I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things” (Isa 45:7).
Towards the end of the 1800s, physicists observed that, at very low temperatures, efficient emitters and absorbers of radiation appeared black. They thus called a perfect emitter or absorber of radiation a “blackbody.”33
The rate of absorption depends on the size of the exposed surface area – the larger the area, the greater the absorption. The immense darkness of space therefore is the ultimate “blackbody.”

The Spirit of God
“And the Spirit of God moved…” (Gen1:2c)
The presence of physical space presented a medium for motion to take place in. The first recorded motion in space is that of God’s Spirit.
What, daresay, is Spirit? The Spirit of God moved, so It must have possessed energy. Or was It itself energy?
And what in turn is energy? Physicists say energy can be scientifically detected, measured, and managed, but nobody really knows what it is. Yet, everything in the universe is energy. In fact, energy fills the entire universe. Scientists generally accept the existence of an “energy field thought to pervade the cosmos.”34
Matter, moreover, is simply congealed or solidified energy.

Energy into matter.
Albert Einstein’s famous formula (E=mc2) for his theory of relativity equates energy “E” to mass “m” (matter). In short, energy and matter are interchangeable. Energy can be transformed into matter, and vice-versa. Perhaps, not too surprisingly, the psalmist knew this in spiritual terms 3,000 years ago: “Thou sendest forth thy spirit, they are created” (Ps 104:30). Did God’s Spirit, which is energy, produce matter?
A New York Times article of Aug. 21, 1990, concurs: "According to quantum theory… potential existence can be transformed into real existence by the addition of energy. (Energy and matter are equivalent, since all matter ultimately consists of packets of energy.)"35
Hawking elaborates: “There are something like ten million million million million million million million million million million million million million million (1 with 85 zeroes after it) particles in the region of the universe that we can observe. Where did they all come from? The answer is that, in quantum theory, particles can be created out of energy in the form of particle/antiparticle pairs.”36
Particles of matter are created from energy. Or, perhaps we should say, Divine Energy?

God entered space-time?
Did God enter the space-time domain in the form of His Spirit? How can the Infinite Nothingness be inside the finite space-time framework?
God apparently manifested an essence of Himself as the Spirit in the material universe. The Infinite Nothingness, having no physical form or dimensions, would not have entered the limitations of space-time that He had created. Doing so would have subjected Him to the laws of nature that He Himself had set in operation.
A part, such as space-time, cannot possibly contain the whole, in this case the Infinite Nothingness. It would have been like trying to put a tree into its seed.

Electromagnetic properties.
Eliphaz, Job’s friend, encountered a spirit: “Then a spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up” (Job 4:15). Since the passing spirit caused the hair on the body of Eliphaz to stand, the unseen entity must have had the effect of static electricity.
Is an ordinary spirit similar to the Spirit of God? God is the Father of spirits: “…shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of spirits…” (Heb 12:9b). It follows, then, that the Spirit of God, the spirits of His sons, the angels, and the spirits of men are similar in nature -- energy with electromagnetic properties.

Water in space
“And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” (Gen1:2c).
Water in space before the creation of the earth? Aristotle recorded in his book, Metaphysics, that Thales, the earliest Greek philosopher, believed that the source of all things was water.37

Elementary element.
A molecule of water (H2O), as we learned in school, is made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Hydrogen, which means “water-maker” (hydro-gen) in Greek, is the most abundant element in the universe. A hydrogen atom is the lightest, simplest, and most basic of all atoms, consisting of just one proton as the nucleus and one electron orbiting around it.
In 1948, Russian-born physicist George Gamow, who produced the first evidences for the Big Bang with his students Alpher and Herman, worked out the nuclear reactions that could have occurred during the first few minutes of the explosion.38 They found that, after about one second, protons would have formed. In the next three minutes, when the temperature of the universe was about 300 million degrees Kelvin,39 protons and neutrons would have formed hydrogen, as well as the other light elements -- primarily helium, and some lithium, beryllium, boron.40 The initial nucleosynthesis stopped when there were approximately 78% hydrogen and 22% helium by weight, or 93% hydrogen and 7% helium abundances.41
Their calculations have since been confirmed through spectroscopic observations. “Atomic hydrogen clouds are the most widely distributed in interstellar space and, together with molecular hydrogen clouds, contain most of the gaseous and particulate matter of interstellar space...”42 Hydrogen today comprises some 73% of the visible mass of the universe,43 while helium constitutes approximately 23%.44 The Sun alone burns about 40 million tons of hydrogen per second.

Most abundant element.
How did Moses, who wrote the book of Genesis around 3,500 years ago, know that water, or at least its main component hydrogen, was the very first and most abundant element in the universe? Peter reiterated this scientific fact in his general epistle about 1,500 years later: “But they deliberately forget that long ago by God's word the heavens existed and the earth was formed out of water and by water” (2 Peter 3:5-6, NIV).
Just as the Bible says, science has discovered that there were “waters” (hydrogen) in space before the earth took shape!
Curiously, this information is in the Hebrew word for “heavens” – shamayim. The Hebrew term for “waters” is mayim, while sham means “there” or “in it.” Hence, shamayim can be read as: “there (sham) are waters (mayim) -- in the heavens (shamayim)”! Could this be a mere coincidence?

Light created
“And God said, Let there be light: and there was light” (Gen 1:3).
In the deep darkness of the “blackbody” of space, the Creator next brought into existence… light! 
An unimaginably brilliant flash of light must have burst forth, filling all of primordial space. George Gamow was led to say: “One may almost quote the Biblical statement, In the beginning there was light, and plenty of it.”45
Early men knew the sun lighted up the world. It was inconceivable to have light in the heavens without the sun, as well as the moon and the stars. So, even as late as at the time of Moses, to be told that light was created before the sun must have stretched their imaginations to the brink of incredulity; or, worse, unbelief.

Light from “water.”
Scientists know all too well that hydrogen atoms are typical sources of photons -- light. When four hydrogen atoms combine into a helium atom through the process of thermonuclear fusion, the energy released is transformed into light and heat.
Thus, the Sun generates radiant energy -- light – through the nuclear conversion of hydrogen into helium. In a hydrogen bomb explosion, hydrogen atoms fuse to produce a blinding blast of light and energy.
Science once again confirms the truth of the Biblical account. But… just what is light?

Electromagnetic radiation.
Technically, “light” is the generic term used for any and all kinds of electromagnetic radiation. In waves of electric and magnetic energy consisting of elementary particles called photons, light results when atoms gain surplus energy by absorbing photons from other sources or by being struck by other particles. As the atoms give up the extra energy, photons are emitted as light.46
There are many forms of radiant energy, but seven forms are well known: radio waves, microwaves, infrared rays, visible light, ultraviolet rays, x-rays, gamma rays. Radio waves have the longest wavelengths, measured in meters; gamma rays shortest at 0.000000001 cm. In the color spectrum, red has the longest wavelengths at 0.000075 cm, with violet the shortest at 0.000035 cm. Regardless of their wavelengths and frequencies (number of times waves are repeated within a given period), all forms of electromagnetic radiation travel at the speed of light.
Gottfried Leibniz, 17th century German philosopher-mathematician, observed that a ray of light always chose a path that took it fastest to a destination,47 a phenomenon known as the “principle of least action.” Why do they do that when they can just, let us say, drift? Max Planck, the eminent German physicist, could not help saying, “Photons… behave like intelligent human beings.”48

The speed of light.
Men had always believed that light was instantaneous. In 1676 Danish astronomer Olaf Roemer announced that the irregular behavior of the eclipse times of Io, Jupiter’s inner moon, could be accounted for by a finite speed of light. The English astronomer James Bradley independently confirmed in 1729 the finite speed of light. In 1983, the speed of light was officially declared a universal constant of nature at 299,792.458 kilometers (about 186,282 miles) per second.
According to Albert Einstein’s special theory of relativity, the velocity of light is the ultimate speed limit. Only objects without mass can travel at that speed. Photons, having no mass, traverse space without any loss of energy. Changes in their wavelengths or frequencies do not affect their velocity. At the speed of light, time stops. Light, including all forms of electromagnetic energy, thus exists in a timeless state. The fact that light is outside the realm of time has been proven in thousands of experiments at hundreds of universities.49
Light speed decelerating? From 1929 to 1940, Raymond Birge, physics department chairman at the University of California, Berkeley, and arbiter of atomic constants (such as the speed of light), several times recommended decreasing the value for the speed of light.50 In 1979, an Australian college student, Barry Setterfield, charted 163 measurements of the speed of light using 16 different methods since Roemer. He found that in general the older the observation, the faster the speed of light.51
                                   
Measurements of the Speed of Light
Year
Experimenter
Speed (km/s)
(+/- km/s)
1657
Roemer
307,600

1738
(Not named)
303,320
310
1861
(Not named)
300,050
60
1875
Harvard
299,921
13
1880
Michelson
299,910
50
1883
Newcomb
299,860
30
1883
Michelson
299,853
60
1926
Michelson
299,796
4
1950
Bergstrand
299,792.7
.25
1952
Froome
299,792.6
.7
1967
Grosse
299,792.5
.050
1974
Blaney et al.
299,792.459
.0006
1976
Woods et al.
299,792.4588
.0002
1977
Monchalin et al.
299,792.457.6
.00073

With statistician Dr. Trevor Norman, Setterfield showed that, even with the technical crudeness of early experiments, the speed of light was discernibly higher 100 years ago, and as much as 7% higher in the 1700s. Canadian mathematician Alan Montgomery has published a computer analysis backing the Setterfield-Norman findings, indicating that the decay of the speed of light “closely follows a cosecant-squared curve, and has been asymptotic since 1958. If he is correct, the speed of light was 10-30% faster in the time of Christ; twice as fast in the days of Solomon; four times as fast in the days of Abraham, and perhaps more than ten million times faster prior to 3000 B.C.” In 1987, Russian cosmologist V.S. Troitskii calculated that the speed of light was originally about 1010 (ten billion) times faster at time zero.52
Other scientists have published works asserting that light speed was as much as 10 to the 10th power faster in the early stages of the Big Bang than it is today.53 For his part, Setterfield estimates that the speed of light was infinite 6,000 years ago.
Light speed accelerated! The London Sunday Times reported on June 4, 2000: “In research carried out in the United States, particle physicists have shown that light pulses can be accelerated to up to 300 times their normal velocity of 186,000 miles per second… The work was carried out by Dr. Lijun Wang of the NEC research institute in Princeton, who transmitted a pulse of light towards a chamber filled with specially treated cesium gas. Before the pulse had fully entered the chamber it had gone right through it and traveled a further 60 (feet) across the laboratory. In effect it existed in two places at once, a phenomenon that Wang explains by saying it traveled 300 times faster than light.” In effect, light leaped forward in time! 
The Italian National Research Council has reportedly approximated Wang’s results by making microwaves travel 25% faster than light.54 In fine, all the studies agree: the speed of light is not constant. Light can travel slower or faster than the presently accepted “speed of light.”
Many are excited over the possibilities. Others are bothered. If the findings hold true, they would shatter Einstein’s theory of relativity, which states that the speed of light is an inviolable universal constant.

The Big Bang
The “Big Bang” is the most widely accepted theory of the origin of the universe. After the Hubble discovery in 1927 that all the other galaxies were speeding away from the Earth, George Gamow proposed in the 1940s that all matter in the universe was once compressed in an extremely hot and compact point that suddenly exploded, with the expanding matter forming the galaxies. (The Bible depicts that event in more unequivocal terms: "I am the LORD, who makes all things, Who stretches out the heavens…” -- Isa 44:24a, NKJV.)
In early 2006 NASA announced the findings of a team of U.S. and Canadian scientists indicating an exceedingly rapid inflation at the birth of the universe. “Data collected from a new satellite map of the 13.7 billion-year-old universe backed the concept of inflation, which poses that the universe expanded many trillion times its size in less than a trillionth of a second.”55
Only photons could have traveled at that incredible speed. The Big Bang was an immense explosion of photons – light. Robert Jastrow wrote: “Now we see how the astronomical evidence leads to a biblical view of the origin of the world. The details differ, but the essential elements in the astronomical and biblical accounts of Genesis are the same: The chain of events leading to man commenced suddenly and sharply at a definite moment in time, in a flash of light and energy.”56

Light into matter.
The rapidly dispersing light (photons) transformed into matter in accordance to Einstein’s equation (E = mc2)! Just how did it happen?
Schroeder points out that “as long as radiant energy (E) is more powerful than a specific threshold needed to make a particle of matter, that energy can change spontaneously and become a particle of nuclear matter (m).” (“Threshold” refers to the minimum temperature of “quark confinement,” “approximately a million million times hotter than the current 3oK black of space,” when quarks bond together to form protons and neutrons, converting energy into matter.)57
Science writer George Sim Johnston is amazed: “Twentieth-century physics… describes the beginning of the universe in virtually the same cosmological terms as Genesis. Space, time and matter came out of nothing in a… burst of light entirely hospitable to carbon-based life.”58
Surprisingly, the Jews in olden times knew this: “Mehitabut ha'orot, nithavu hakelim” ("From the condensation of the lights, were the vessels brought into being") – an old Jewish saying.59
Lab-created matter. The title of an article in the 1997 Encarta Yearbook is a grabber: “Scientists Create Matter Out of Light.” It tells of experimental physicists bombarding heavy atoms (made up of many protons and neutrons) with high-energy radiation in the form of X-rays. Collisions between the X-ray beam and the atoms created pairs of electron (matter) and positron (antimatter) particles.
In other trials at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in Palo Alto, California, scientists accelerated a beam of electrons at close to the speed of light, then directed a pulse of high-energy laser light at the electron beam. When a photon collided with an electron, the photon ricocheted onto other photons from the laser with such force that the ensuing energy produced an electron-positron (matter-antimatter) pair. The physicists recorded over 100 pairs in several months.

Big Bang problems.
The Big Bang Theory violates many laws of physics. For instance, the second law of thermodynamics (entropy) states that all systems proceed from an orderly state to one of disorder. In short, all things break down and deteriorate. How could the orderly universe be the result of the Big Bang -- an explosion, which is a form of destruction?
It was highly improbable for the rapidly expanding universe to have produced highly concentrated and rotating bodies, as well as solar systems and clusters of galaxies. Moreover, can fast-moving objects accompany slow-moving objects? Many quasars with very high redshifts cluster with galaxies having low redshifts. Apparently moving at different velocities, they should have dispersed a long, long time ago.  
In the disorder of the Big Bang, something (or, perhaps, Someone?) introduced order so that the universe could form.

33.Danny Faulkner, “Do Creationists Believe in ‘Weird’ Physics?”, The New Answers Book 2, 2008, pp. 328-329
34. Andrew Chaikin, “Are There Other Universes?”, Science Tuesday, 05 February 2002, Internet 35.“New Direction in Physics: Back in Time”
36. Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time, 1988, p. 171
37.Thales, World Book 2005 (Deluxe)
38. Big Bang Theory, Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004
39. Gerald Schroeder, The Science of God, 1997, p. 190
40.Big Bang Theory, Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004
41.Schroeder, op. cit., pp. 189-190
42.Cosmos, Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Student and Home Edition
43.Hydrogen, Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia Deluxe 2004
44.Helium, Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Student and Home Edition
45.Quoted by Migene Gonzalez-Wippler, A Kabbalah for the Modern World, 1977 edition, p. 37
46.Light, World Book 2005 (Deluxe)
47.Cited by Gonzalez-Wippler, op. cit., p. 9
48.Op. cit., p. 11
49.Schroeder, op. cit., p. 171
50.Helen D. Setterfield, “History of the Light-Speed Debate,” Personal Update, July 2002, p. 10
51.Chris Bennett, Speed of light slowing down?, July 31, 2004, WorldNetDaily.com
52.Chuck Missler, Cosmic Codes, revised 2004, pp. 343-345
53.Dr. Joao Magueijo of Imperial College in London, Dr. John Barrow of Cambridge, Dr. Andy Albrecht of the University of California at Davis, and Dr. John Moffat of the University of Toronto
54.Jonathan Leake, London Sunday Times, June 4, 2000
55.“Astronomers detect new clues on universe’s expansion,” The Philippine Star, March 19, 2006
56.Robert Jastrow, God and the Astronomers, 1978, p. 14
57.Schroeder, op. cit., p. 187
58.George Sim Johnston, Reader’s Digest, May 1991, p. 31
59.“Spiritual Time, Space, Mass, Light and Energy,” A Study of the Book of Revelation, updated 8/20/00, Internet

(Excerpted from Chapter 3, Conundrums of Creation, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)