The way we frame a question makes all the difference. For
example, atheists argue:
·
The more extraordinary the claim, the more
extraordinary the evidence should be… So to claim that gods, virgin births,
resurrections, and spirits living among us are ordinary, is to say that they
are common, routine, standard, or typical. But things that are ordinary are
uncontroversial because they are backed up by lots of empirical data and we
experience them frequently.
Now let’s re-frame the discussion:
·
The more extraordinary the claim, the more
extraordinary the evidence should be… So to claim that Big Bangs can create
order, unchanging natural laws, and a precisely tuned universe, and that life
can spring out of non-life, is to say that these occurrences are common,
routine, standard, or typical. But things that are ordinary are uncontroversial
because they are backed up by lots of empirical data and we experience them
frequently.
Meanwhile, it makes far more sense that everything was
caused and maintained by an eternal, transcendent, intelligent Being than by nothing
at all. Do we have just one stitch of evidence that the latter ever happens! In
fact, the latter is actually anti-science.
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