Does Science Obviate Religion?

A debate last week provided strong opinions, but no final answer

Last Monday at New York's Pierre Hotel, outspoken atheist Christopher Hitchens and physicist/theologian Monsignor Lorenzo Albacete met to tackle the question of whether or not science makes belief in God obsolete.

According to the forum's hosts, Newsweek editor Jon Meacham and Washington Post columnist Sally Quinn, religion riles its vilifiers when it makes truth claims without evidence -- at least evidence that would hold up in a court of science. The conflict seems to stem from a difference in understanding as to what evidence and truth truly are.

This discrepancy of perspective was clear in a statement made by Monsignor Albacete: "Religion is a different form of knowledge that has its own evidence."

"The credibility of the gospels is crucial," he said. "Faith without evidence: I don't know what that is."

When rattling off his gripes with religion during the question-and-answer session, Hitchens argued that believers seem to love God out of a requirement, not out of freedom. "The compulsory love of someone you must fear is something of a celestial North Korea," said Hitchens.

But Monsignor Albacete discovers truth in religion's ability to connect with his daily life. "If I can't relate doctrine to why I care about what I care, then it is all just theoretical matter and you can substitute the Great Lizard for Christ for all I care."

Humans have always tried to find patterns and explanations for why things are the way they are. And religion can provide a relevant avenue for doing so, just as science does.

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'Now faith is being sure of what you hope for and certain of what you do not see' Heb 11v1.

...the most unscientific statement in the new testament. How can you be sure of what you hope for and certain of what you don't see? You can't. It is not testable. Is it an invitation to the gullible? And yet researchers do exercise just this type of faith in their search for knowledge at times.

Science and religion can't empirically prove or disprove God's existence one way or the other...never have, never will. The circular arguments are just a frustrating exercise in trying to determine who is smarter.

If the Bible is correct then God is beyond His creation. The Faith of Hebrews 11 is the vehicle used to relate to a Holy God from a fallen world. There is no way science can say anything about this one way or the other. It is a matter of personal conviction.

But the fact remains, Either Jesus is who He says He is....or he isn't. Either Jesus did what the Gospels said He did....or He didn't.

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