Keating, England: Two Jewish Physicists on Faith, Intelligent Design, and More

Brian Keating, Brian Miller, Evolution, Intelligent Design, Into the Impossible, Jeremy England, Judaism, Moses, origin of life, Orthodox Jews, physics, Physics, Earth & Space, Podcast, Return of the God Hypothesis, serpent, staff, Stephen Meyer, thermodynamics
The last 48 minutes or so are the most compelling as England, an Orthodox rabbi, talks about the reason for his “tending to reject” arguments for ID. Source
Read More

When “Science” Becomes a Cult

abortion, Bill Nye, biology, cult, dogma, double-talk, Douglas Axe, embryology, empirical science, Environmentalism, experimentation, Faith & Science, falsification, human rights, humanities, ideology, John Zmirak, Jonathan Wells, Marquis de Sade, materialistic philosophy, materialistic science, Moses, Nature (journal), nature rights, New Atheism, Pharaoh, political science, Politics, religion, sex, Simone de Beauvoir, The Stream, trust, Twitter, Wesley Smith
The problem comes when, in order to win our acceptance, double-talk is used to pretend that a cult is something other than what it is. Source
Read More

“Lifelikeness” Without Intelligent Design? Brian Miller Responds to Jeremy England

acoustic waves, Brian Miller, electricity, Energy, energy converter, enzyme, Every Life Is on Fire, Evolution News, Exodus, experimentation, faith, information, information theory, instructions, Intelligent Design, Jeremy England, lifelikeness, Michael Denton, microphone, Moses, origin of life, Orthodox Jews, particles, physics, rabbis, scripture, speakers, specifications, The Miracle of the Cell, thermodynamics, uncertainty, waveguide, wavelengths, webcam
Dr. England has a poetic and ingenious article reflecting on God’s commissioning of Moses to lead the Jews out from Egypt. Source
Read More

Jesus: The Greater Moses

Apologetics, Christianity, Jesus, Jesus Christ, Jesus the Only Way, JesusIsNotAFakeNews, Moses, New Testament, Old Testament, Ryan Leasure, theology, Theology and Christian Apologetics
By Ryan Leasure An untrained eye might miss it, but the Old Testament, properly read, points to Jesus. From Genesis forward, we see reference after reference to a coming Messiah who would one day crush the head of the serpent (Gen. 3:15). Certainly the covenants with both Abraham (Gen. 12, 15, 17) and David (2 Sam. 7) point to a coming Messiah, but it’s another covenant mediator I want to draw our attention to — Moses. Outside of Abraham, Moses is probably the most significant figure in the Old Testament, because it was through Moses that God gave his Law to the nation of Israel. As special as Moses was, though, God promised Israel that he would send another prophet who was going to be just as, if not more, significant than…
Read More