“Multiverse” theory simply requires too much faith

The “multiverse” theory was proposed by scientists who refuse – despite all the evidence – to believe Genesis 1:1. Their hypothesis purports to explain away the astronomical odds against life existing without the incredible fine-tuning we witness both on our planet and in the surrounding galaxy ~
 

Video via PragerU

It is amazing that otherwise rational people choose to believe in the multiverse, especially when it is very clear that they think that this is the logical, reasonable conclusion to reach. This is the sort of thing that the Apostle Paul wrote about in Romans 1:21. Once men reject God, then their foolish hearts allow them to engage in all sorts of futile speculations to give them reason for that rejection. This verse is preceded by verses 18–20, which is the declaration that the world around us reveals that there is a Creator, a Creator that must be very powerful. This in turn is an echo of knowledge of God indicated by the heavens found in Psalm 19:1–6. The heavens do declare God’s glory, and no amount of speculation about a multiverse can change that.

Source: Answers in Genesis

 
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Related:
Should Christians believe in a Multiverse? 7 Reasons against ~

(N)ot only is the multiverse “pure metaphysics”[1] as Christian apologist William Lane Craig puts it, but many scientists seem blind to the fact that they are engaging in metaphysics – not physics – when proposing the multiverse as a “scientific” answer to a number of the problems their theories have. They have fallen into the same error that philosopher of science and apologist John Lennox chides theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking for: engaging in metaphysics while failing to recognize he is doing so.

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