I've been reading this thread with interest but still have this basic problem, which I've tried discussing with clergymen to no effect. Diana Athill started asking Rowan Williams about it on "Today" at Christmas but got nowhere with the waffling archbish.
The universe has existed for some 14 billion years, give or take, the Earth for some 4.5 billion. Life in the form of bacteria first appeared about 2 billion years ago. Land plants did not appear until about 430 million years ago; reptiles, 300 million years ago; and modern mammals, 75 million years ago. The first apes appeared about 35 million years ago, and the first apelike men, about 10 million years ago.
From around 600 million years ago to around 300 million, the most abundant creatures on Earth were trilobytes. Dinosaurs existed for around 160 million years.
Anatomically modern humans originated in Africa about 200,000 years ago, reaching full behavioural modernity around 50,000 years ago - the merest twinkling of an eye. At our present rate of going we shall be lucky to make it to I million years.
In the course of this process, there have been several mass, near-total, extinctions.
Our presence here is the result of billions of years of accidents. I won’t even start on evolution.
If there is a God, does He have a purpose? If so, is man central to it? You’d assume so, given that He gave His only-begotten etc. etc. Perhaps if you believe in God it is presumptuous to ascribe purposes to Him, but it does all seem rather a bizarre experiment if it is so.
Obviously, early man, whose knowledge was limited to his immediate surroundings, set about propitiating the various forces which affected his existence. Religion was an attempt to give some sort of order to his experience. Later in human history (and to this day in many places) it became a form of social and political control.
There’s a perfectly rational explanation for the existence of religion. Believing it is another matter entirely.
There are (I think is the case) about the same number of atoms in the universe as there were after the big bang. Some of these atoms are, briefly, us. I find that a perfectly satisfactory, and satisfying, explanation.
The universe has existed for some 14 billion years, give or take, the Earth for some 4.5 billion. Life in the form of bacteria first appeared about 2 billion years ago. Land plants did not appear until about 430 million years ago; reptiles, 300 million years ago; and modern mammals, 75 million years ago. The first apes appeared about 35 million years ago, and the first apelike men, about 10 million years ago.
From around 600 million years ago to around 300 million, the most abundant creatures on Earth were trilobytes. Dinosaurs existed for around 160 million years.
Anatomically modern humans originated in Africa about 200,000 years ago, reaching full behavioural modernity around 50,000 years ago - the merest twinkling of an eye. At our present rate of going we shall be lucky to make it to I million years.
In the course of this process, there have been several mass, near-total, extinctions.
Our presence here is the result of billions of years of accidents. I won’t even start on evolution.
If there is a God, does He have a purpose? If so, is man central to it? You’d assume so, given that He gave His only-begotten etc. etc. Perhaps if you believe in God it is presumptuous to ascribe purposes to Him, but it does all seem rather a bizarre experiment if it is so.
Obviously, early man, whose knowledge was limited to his immediate surroundings, set about propitiating the various forces which affected his existence. Religion was an attempt to give some sort of order to his experience. Later in human history (and to this day in many places) it became a form of social and political control.
There’s a perfectly rational explanation for the existence of religion. Believing it is another matter entirely.
There are (I think is the case) about the same number of atoms in the universe as there were after the big bang. Some of these atoms are, briefly, us. I find that a perfectly satisfactory, and satisfying, explanation.
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