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The secular story of man's origins is a simple equation: slime + time = the world as we know it. Sometime in the primordial depths of history, an amoeba-like being crawled out of the sludge and into posterity. Sludgy-boy was the father of all that is, and through limitless permutations and evolutions his little one-celled self became the majestic Living World with its kingdoms, genera, and species.

God's Word tells a different story. In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth. God made man, the planets, Earth, rivers, the ozone layer, electricity, bullfrogs, and volcanic activity. It's a strange inversion from the story atheists and naturalists like to tell—where they posit the simplest form gave birth to increasing complexity, Christians believe the most complex Being in the universe created a plethora of simpler living things out of absolutely nothing.

But arguing "Creationism" vs. Evolution is not the soul or substance of science. If atheists want to waste their breath, effort, and money trying to "prove" a phony theory, let them. Not that we shouldn't counter their claims, but we have to keep in mind that the battle is spiritual, not scientific and not even merely ideological.

To contrast, real science—observation, hypothesis, theory, and correction—glorifies God by attributing to Him the honor and praise for everything learned about the world, its inhabitants, and its mechanics. For Christians, it should be a joyful and positive pursuit, not simply a retort against secular rebellion. Man is commanded by God to subdue the Earth, to care for it, develop it, and use it, and our duty is to see that done in ways that honor Him.

It's essential that we not think of phenomena in isolated terms. The laws of physics aren't true by themselves, they're true because God decreed them and sustains them. The planets and stars don' crash into each other because mathematical equations keep them on trajectory; God keeps them on their appointed paths, and the equations only describe their movement.

Technology is often equated with science, but technological development is only one aspect of science. It's more broad than we tend to think, too—it's not just electronics and iProducts, it includes the wheel, shovels, stickframe construction, and gas stoves. Our responsibility is to make and use technology in ways that don't negatively affect the rest of God's creation, that help others, and that glorify the Creator of all things.

The world is a fascinating and wonderful place. Christians have more basis than anyone for saying this, since it isn't simply a randomized collection of cells and life forms but the creative work of God. Our study of science and nature should reflect this knowledge, and guide us in our research and development. Our prayer is that increased scientific knowledge will translate to increased thanksgiving and praise of the Maker of all things.

Review by C. Hollis Crossman
C. Hollis Crossman used to be a child. Now he is a husband and father, teaches adult Sunday school in his Presbyterian congregation, and likes weird stuff. He might be a mythical creature, but he's definitely not a centaur. Read more of his reviews here.

 

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25 Items found Print
Active Filters: History of Science & Mathematics, 7th grade (Ages 12-13), Hardcover
2000 Years of Space Travel
by Russell Freedman
from Holiday House
for 7th-10th grade
in History of Science & Mathematics (Location: SCI-HIS)
Apollo on the Moon
by Henry S. F. Cooper, Jr.
from Dial Press
for 6th-Adult
in Vintage History & Biographies (Location: VIN-HIS)
$5.00 (1 in stock)
Curies and Radium
Immortals of Science
by Elizabeth Rubin
from Franklin Watts
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in Vintage History & Biographies (Location: VIN-HIS)
Encyclopedia of Science and Technology
by James Trefil
from Routledge
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in Science Reference (Location: SCIREF)
$4.50 (1 in stock)
Evolution of Useful Things
by Henry Petroski
1st edition from Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
for 7th-Adult
in Everyday Life in History (Location: HISV-EVERY)
First Transatlantic Cable
Landmark #88
by Adele Nathan
from Random House
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in American Landmark Books (Location: VIN-LAND)
Great Inventions
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in Inventions & Discoveries (Location: SCI-INV)
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Ideas That Changed the World: Transportation
by Philip Wilkinson and Michael Pollard, Illustrated by Robert Ingpen
from Chelsea House Publishing
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in How Things Work (Location: SCIREF-HOW)
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Man of the Monitor
by Jean Lee Latham
from Harper & Row
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Medical Technology: Inventing the Instruments
by Robert Mulcahy
from The Oliver Press, Inc.
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Men of Science and Invention
by Michael Blow
from American Heritage Publishing Co.
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Mission Control, This Is Apollo
by Andrew Chaikin, Victoria Kohl
from Viking Press
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Mr. Bell Invents the Telephone
Landmark #30
by Katherine B. Shippen, illustrated by Richard Floethe
from Random House
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Nibbling on Einstein's Brain
by Diane Swanson
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So You Want To Be an Inventor?
by Judith St. George & David Small
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Space Shuttle: A Photographic History
by Philip S. Harrington
from Browntrout Publishers
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Story of Atomic Energy
World Landmark #48
by Laura Fermi
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Talking Wire: The Story of Alexander Graham Bell
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Thaddeus Lowe: America's One-Man Air Corps
by Mary Hoehling
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Way Things Work Now
by David Macaulay & Neil Ardley
3rd edition from Houghton Mifflin
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in How Things Work (Location: SCIREF-HOW)
$35.00
We Were There on the Nautilus
We Were There #35
by Robert N. Webb, illustrated by Frank Vaughn
from Grosset & Dunlap
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in We Were There Series (Location: VIN-HIS)
Wheels: A Pictorial History
from World Publishing Company
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Women in Science
by Rachel Ignotofsky
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Wright Brothers
Landmark #10
by Quentin Reynolds
from Random House
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Young Man in a Hurry
by Jean Lee Latham, illustrated by Victor Mays
from Harper & Row
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