Amazing Facts with Doug Batchelor

Can You Prove God Exists?

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

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Series Code: AFDB

Program Code: AFDB000055S


00:02 male announcer: This presentation is brought to
00:04 you by the friends of the Amazing Facts Ministry.
00:10 Doug Batchelor: Evidence continues to mount that the
00:11 mystery of life can only be explained by some intelligent,
00:15 miraculous intervention.
00:17 Now more than ever, modern science confirms the extreme
00:21 complexity of life.
00:23 With 21st-century microscopes, for instance,
00:26 scientists understand that even the simplest cell is,
00:30 in effect, a virtual factory containing thousands of
00:33 exquisitely designed pieces of molecular machinery,
00:37 far more complicated than the International Space Station,
00:40 and functionally as complex as a small city at rush hour.
00:45 As we delve deeper into the cellular realm,
00:47 science reveals a virtual Lilliputian world so intricate
00:51 that if he could look through a modern microscope today,
00:54 Darwin himself would likely to admit the theory
00:57 of evolution was absurd.
00:59 In spite of the mounting evidence that only a divine
01:02 miracle can produce life, the modern world still refuses to
01:06 accept the Bible account that God suddenly created
01:09 life by speaking.
01:12 And it's that same power of his Word that is recreating millions
01:16 of hearts around the world today.
01:18 So, join me now as we look at some of the fascinating Bible
01:21 facts about the incredible evidence
01:24 of God's creative design.
01:30 Doug: I remember hearing a story about
01:32 a 2nd-grade teacher of an art class.
01:34 She told her young students, "You're now
01:36 free to draw whatever you want."
01:39 She gave them their paints and they began
01:41 to paint, and she'd go from one to another and give 'em
01:44 a little advice and ask what they were doing.
01:46 And she came over to this one boy and
01:47 he was really goin' at it.
01:48 He was painting furiously.
01:50 You ever seen a kid when he's into it?
01:51 And his tongue... kinda out of his mouth.
01:54 And she was lookin' at what he was doin',
01:56 and couldn't make heads or tails out of it,
01:58 and she said, "What are you painting?"
02:01 He said, "I'm painting God."
02:03 She said, "Well, nobody knows what God looks like."
02:09 He said, "Exactly, now they will."
02:14 And our message today is talking about a very important subject:
02:19 "Can You Prove That God Exists?"
02:24 "Can You Prove--?"
02:25 This is the big question.
02:26 This is one of the most important things
02:29 that people could ever talk about.
02:32 Now, you may have heard of the Large Hadron Collider.
02:37 The biggest and most expensive scientific experiment
02:40 in the world is located 300 feet beneath the countryside
02:45 on the border of Switzerland and France.
02:48 And I've been in that region before.
02:49 It is a 17-mile-long tunnel.
02:56 They used the same boring equipment they used for making
02:58 the Chunnel between France and England to bore this tunnel.
03:03 It's an instrument, but it is composed of a tunnel 17 miles
03:07 in a circle, filled with the most powerful electric-magnet
03:14 accelerators that scientists can muster.
03:18 It's operated by the European Organization
03:20 for Nuclear Research.
03:23 And the aim of it all is they're looking for the mystery of the
03:29 smallest part of matter that holds everything together.
03:34 They call it, named after some of the people who
03:36 theorized it, the Higgs boson.
03:39 It's nickname is--who knows? The God particle.
03:44 They've built this multi-billion-dollar instrument
03:50 to discover the God particle.
03:53 Well, they conducted a number of experiments between 2005
03:58 and 2017, and they say they believe that they've found it.
04:03 With 99% accuracy, they believe they've discovered the smallest
04:08 subatomic particle that allows all other particles
04:12 in the universe to bond together.
04:15 And they say, "If it wasn't for that particle,
04:17 nothing would exist."
04:19 And therefore, they call it, "The God particle."
04:22 Man searching for God in the smallest matter.
04:28 But is there a God?
04:32 Now, we're in church, so, you know, it's sort
04:34 of a rhetorical question here.
04:37 Do we believe there's a God? And if so, why?
04:40 How do you prove it?
04:41 Now, some of you have maybe seen some of the very
04:44 beautifully produced BBC nature programs by David Attenborough.
04:51 And because he often talks about evolution,
04:53 some assumed he was an atheist.
04:58 But when asked if he was an atheist,
04:59 he said, "No, of course not."
05:03 And they said, "Well, you know, all that you
05:04 said about nature and evolution."
05:09 They says, "You're saying you believe in God?"
05:10 He said, "Well, I'm just sayin' it would be foolish for me to
05:13 say because," he said, "the universe is so big,"
05:17 and I'm paraphrasing.
05:18 "The universe is so big.
05:21 It's millions of lightyears across.
05:24 What we see is just so small, and we've learned
05:28 so much in recent years.
05:30 For us to say we know there is no God with the little
05:35 perspective of the universe that we have now is like an ant on
05:39 top of a termite hill saying, "I now understand the universe."
05:44 Which I thought was a humble and appropriate response.
05:48 So, could be why the Bible says, "It's the fool who says,
05:52 'There is no God,' with some certainty."
05:55 At least we should say, "Well, we don't know," or,
05:59 "I may not know," or at least admit you don't believe,
06:01 or say, "I don't want to believe."
06:04 The Bible even says, if you want to use the Bible,
06:07 it says, "You can look outside the Bible to believe in God."
06:10 Psalm 19:1: "The heavens declare the glory of God;
06:13 and the firmament shows his handiwork."
06:16 You can look up and see evidence for God.
06:20 Recently, Eric Metaxas, he wrote a bold article
06:23 for "The Wall Street Journal" titled "Science Increasingly
06:27 Makes the Case for God."
06:29 And he comes up with about seven different points where,
06:33 in just the natural world around us,
06:36 in the planet, in the solar system,
06:39 we see evidence that there must be a design,
06:42 or they'd be no life on earth.
06:44 First point, our planet is as exactly the right distance
06:49 from the sun so the temperatures on our planet
06:51 are conductive to life."
06:53 If we were a little close to the sun, we'd burn.
06:56 There's no life on Mercury. It's too hot.
07:00 We would be molten.
07:01 You get too far from the sun, and you're a ball of ice,
07:05 like some of the moons of Jupiter.
07:08 And so we're just precisely the right distance so the oceans
07:13 don't boil away, neither do they all freeze.
07:19 There's a very precise balance.
07:22 We are the perfect distance from our moon,
07:24 and it has the perfect orbit to create moving tides and
07:28 circulation of the air to avoid the stagnation of the seas.
07:32 And many plants and animals reproduce based
07:34 on the lunar orbit.
07:37 If the earth was a little too close to the moon as it swept
07:40 around the planet, we'd have this one continual tidal wave,
07:44 a perpetual tsunami wiping everything out.
07:47 But it's just the right distance where there's a gentle motion
07:50 of the tides that circulates the oceans
07:53 and helps create the climate.
07:54 And just, it's incredible the delicate balance that
07:57 the planets have on earth.
08:01 Metaxas argues: "This incredibly rare,
08:05 outlandishly unexpected process, given all the facts needed to
08:09 occur in just the right confluence of circumstances that
08:14 at least our solar system must have been
08:16 specifically designed and calibrated to give rise to us.
08:20 Otherwise, the odds of us coming to be would be so
08:24 infinitesimally small that it's unreasonable to believe it
08:28 could have happened by chance."
08:31 And not just that there would be a planet with a piece of life,
08:35 but look at the incredible diversity of life that coexists.
08:39 You start doing the math on that.
08:41 I'm getting ahead of myself 'cause math
08:43 is one of the reasons too.
08:45 Dr. Arno Penzias, still alive today,
08:49 Nobel prize winner for the discovery of microwaves,
08:51 he said, "Astronomy leads us to a unique event,
08:56 a universe which was created out of nothing and delicately
09:00 balanced to provide exactly the conditions
09:03 requires to support life.
09:05 In the absence of an absurd, improbable accident,
09:09 the observations of modern science seem to suggest,
09:12 underline, one might say, there is a supernatural plan."
09:16 Science really tells us.
09:18 You know, I always think it's funny if it wasn't so sad when
09:22 you see a different nature program and they speak as
09:27 though Mother Nature has a mind.
09:29 "Look at how nature has designed this to happen
09:33 and that to happen."
09:35 And I'm going, "Does nature think?
09:36 You're saying that there is something out there
09:38 that's thinking and planning."
09:40 Clearly, there's a plan involved.
09:42 But they say, "Don't call it 'God.'
09:44 Whatever you do, don't call it 'God.'"
09:47 But obviously, I mean, just think about how
09:50 evolution could explain the intricacies of our bodies and
09:56 how a piece of skin would eventually start, through
10:00 exposure to light, turning into an eyeball.
10:03 Even Darwin said the eyeball mystifies him.
10:05 He can't find any scenario or scheme
10:07 where it would develop itself.
10:09 And that's just one of many.
10:11 Abiogenesis, or informally, the idea of life arising from
10:15 non-living matter such as simple organic compounds,
10:18 has never ben observed.
10:20 There is not a single solitary--no matter what you've
10:23 heard, there is not a single solitary case anywhere in the
10:27 observable world where we have seen life arising from non-life.
10:34 You cannot take a piece of rock and plant it and
10:39 get a sunflower plant.
10:42 Even a seed.
10:43 You can't make a seed, something simple.
10:46 Now, when they first started teaching this idea
10:48 of spontaneous generation, and the idea that life arises
10:51 from non-life, they'd look at a cell and say,
10:53 "Oh, you know, it looks like a little bit of--"
10:55 They were looking under primitive telescopes,
10:57 and all they saw was what you see in an egg.
11:00 They saw there's this wall. There's a protoplasm.
11:03 There's a nucleus.
11:04 And they said, "Maybe that could happen by itself."
11:06 But now, with their super microscopes,
11:11 they look at a cell, and there's a virtual city of factories
11:17 and activity and chemical reactions that are taking place,
11:22 and all these machines that are in there.
11:24 I'm using "machines."
11:26 They're biological, but they're moving around,
11:27 and they swim, and they propel themselves, and they talk.
11:30 They have language where they're talking to the
11:32 other machines and saying, "We need a little more of this.
11:34 No, less of that."
11:35 The cell has got so much going on.
11:37 The idea that lightning might hit a piece of water and develop
11:40 one of those is beyond absurd.
11:44 Biology in plants and animals is a miracle that
11:52 makes it very clear that there was a design involved.
11:55 There had to be a Creator.
11:56 And you are composed of billions of those little things
11:59 that are all talking to each other.
12:03 And do you realize you could have
12:04 one single fertilized cell--?
12:08 The moment after fertilization takes--
12:09 you got one cell of life.
12:11 Do you realize, in that one microscopic thing,
12:14 it's saying, "This is gonna be Bill.
12:17 He's gonna have red hair. He's gonna have green eyes.
12:21 His teeth are gonna be strong. His heart is gonna be average.
12:25 He's gonna be roughly this tall, and he's gonna
12:29 be quicker than most."
12:30 I mean, just all this interesting information,
12:33 "And Bill's gonna have freckles."
12:34 And it's all contained in the DNA of one single cell.
12:39 All that information's stored.
12:42 "God said, 'Let the earth bring forth living creature according
12:46 to its kind: cattle and creeping things and beasts of the earth,
12:49 each according to their kind.'"
12:50 Do we observe evolution in the world?
12:54 Yes, microevolution, Darwin saw microevolution.
13:00 He saw finches on Galapagos that developed their beaks
13:03 differently so they could eat different kinds of food,
13:05 but they were all finches.
13:07 There is not a single example you can see anywhere in the
13:11 world of macroevolution, where a cat turns into an alligator,
13:17 'cause they are different kinds.
13:18 There are little cats and there are lions.
13:21 They're all cats. See what I'm saying?
13:25 Doug: Don't go anywhere, friends.
13:26 We'll be back in just a moment with the
13:27 rest of today's presentation.
13:29 Where do we really come from?
13:32 Are you the byproduct of random chance, or
13:35 are you a unique creation with a special purpose?
13:38 Today, many would have us believe that we're nothing more
13:41 than the offspring of primeval ooze.
13:44 But the Bible and science say something very different.
13:49 But how can you know for sure whether evolution
13:52 or Genesis are true?
13:54 What does the fossil record really say?
13:56 And what about Noah's flood?
13:58 To shed more light on this and answer these questions,
14:00 "Amazing Facts" wants to send you a special free resource,
14:04 and it's called "How Evolution Flunked the Science Test."
14:07 This brief book puts the propaganda of evolution
14:10 on the defensive by exposing the
14:12 shocking loopholes in their theory.
14:14 This powerful tool will help you to harmonize science and faith
14:18 so that you can boldly stand on the Word of God.
14:21 To get your free copy, call the phone number on the screen and
14:24 ask for offer number 169 or visit the web address.
14:28 And after you read this incredible resource,
14:31 be sure and share it with a friend.
14:33 Let's return now to today's presentation and learn some
14:36 more amazing facts from the Word of God.
14:40 Doug: Then you've got mathematics.
14:43 Now, I'll admit, I'm a little bit out of my league now because
14:46 it wasn't my best field going through school.
14:49 I did very well in history, but not so good in math.
14:53 But I do remember Isaac Newton, who was considered among the
14:56 greatest mathematicians
14:58 as well as physicists of the 17th century.
15:01 Other physicists sought his help in finding mathematical
15:04 equations that would help predict the workings
15:06 of the solar system.
15:08 He found these answers in mathematical laws,
15:12 and he did that in the laws of gravity based
15:14 on his discovery of calculus.
15:17 All the space missions depend on Isaac Newton's science of
15:22 calculus to predict how they can orbit these vehicles and use the
15:27 gravitational pull of a certain amount of
15:30 mass to then sling them back.
15:33 Whether it's a satellite going off,
15:35 like the Voyager 1 and 2 that have now left our solar system,
15:38 they basically were able to sling themselves using the
15:42 force of gravity after orbiting these planets.
15:46 Or the lunar missions that return back to earth,
15:49 all those mathematical equations,
15:52 they give us great dependability to say,
15:54 "This is the law.
15:55 This is how the law works. It does not vary.
15:57 It does not alter."
15:59 And, I mean, for me, deep math is what we call the
16:03 multiplication table, but it still works there.
16:07 Seven times seven, that's one I still remember because you need
16:10 it for Bible prophecy, is always forty-nine.
16:14 Do you know, it is the same in any language of the world.
16:19 Doesn't matter your culture, doesn't matter your religion,
16:22 7 times 7 is 49.
16:24 And so, there is actually great interest in math as explaining
16:29 God because math is much deeper than the multiplication table.
16:33 The argument is that mathematical laws,
16:36 in order to be properly relied upon,
16:38 must have attributes that indicate an origin in God.
16:42 They are true everywhere. That means they're omnipresent.
16:45 They're true always. They are eternal.
16:47 They cannot be defied or defeated.
16:49 That means they're omnipotent.
16:51 They're rational and they have language characteristics.
16:54 That makes them personal. Notice what I just said.
16:57 Math is omnipresent, omnipotent, eternal.
17:02 It's omniscient, it has a personal relationship.
17:05 It sounds like it expresses the mind of God.
17:08 Albert Einstein said, "The most incomprehensible thing
17:13 about the universe is that it is comprehensible."
17:19 I mean, even in the math that God has written.
17:20 Then you've got the concept of good and evil.
17:26 Actually, this is the point that many people turn to to say,
17:27 "There can't be a God."
17:29 They say, "If there was a God, why do so many
17:30 innocent people suffer?
17:31 If God is all-powerful, all-knowing,
17:33 why's there so much evil in the world?
17:35 And evil in the world proves there is no God."
17:37 And I'd say, "No, actually, evil proves there is a God,
17:40 not that God is evil.
17:41 But the reason you know that there is
17:43 evil is because God is good.
17:45 How do you know a line is crooked unless
17:48 you knew what straight was?
17:51 The reason you are even able to identify evil is because there
17:56 must be a definition for good.
17:58 And what is that definition?
18:01 You know, the Bible says, Jesus said,
18:03 "Only God is good."
18:05 Matter of fact, in English, we get the word "God" from "good."
18:09 When you tell a person, "Good morning," it used to originally
18:13 be, "God morning," 'cause "God" and "good"
18:17 are synonymous together.
18:21 So, in order to protest against evil,
18:24 a person must first have some transcendent idea
18:27 of what is good.
18:29 People around the world agree that evil
18:31 must be restrained and punished.
18:32 Even atheists agree with that, most of 'em.
18:35 Why?
18:37 If it is survival of the fittest,
18:40 then what would it matter?
18:45 Why is there any right or wrong? Is there any purpose to life?
18:50 Why would atheists teach in a university?
18:55 What good is knowledge?
18:56 They say, "Oh, it's good to be informed."
18:57 Why?
19:00 How do you have any definition of what "good"
19:01 and "bad" is unless there is some moral value,
19:04 unless there's a God?
19:05 Do you see what I'm saying?
19:07 So, all of it is gonna eventually come back to there
19:10 needs to be an original model for morals,
19:14 for right and wrong, and that's gonna indicate that
19:16 there's a God, there's a Creator.
19:18 I was driving home from work two days ago,
19:21 and during rush hour, and I came upon,
19:24 at a light, a group of Geese.
19:28 There were probably a dozen of 'em that were--I pulled out my
19:31 camera and snapped this.
19:33 It's very busy traffic.
19:36 You can see, there was actually three--one
19:38 of 'em's not in the picture.
19:40 Three adult geese where shepherding probably eight
19:43 or ten baby geese through very busy traffic.
19:48 Now, at this point, you see the light is red.
19:49 The light wasn't red the whole time.
19:51 And yet, what do you think the cars did?
19:54 Why did the cars stop and let these dumb goose cross the road?
19:59 Doesn't evolution teach survival of the fittest?
20:03 Shouldn't we prove that we, with our cars,
20:05 are more intelligent than they are and just,
20:08 you know, render them extinct?
20:12 Why did everybody wait?
20:13 And I bet some of them were atheists.
20:17 They waited for the goose to cross the road.
20:20 [laughing]
20:22 Because you know what?
20:23 Everybody has sort of a built-in intrinsic understanding.
20:27 There is a self-evident truth of certain things
20:31 being right and wrong.
20:34 And we all knew intrinsically it would be wrong to hurt those
20:40 innocent creatures, and especially when you saw
20:42 the parents putting their lives on the line
20:44 to try and get their flock across the road.
20:48 Winston Churchill said: "Men occasionally stumble over the
20:50 truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as
20:53 though nothing had happened."
20:55 The evidence is there if a person wants to know,
20:57 "Is there a God?"
20:59 And man, I think, is an example of that.
21:04 "What a piece of work," Shakespeare said,
21:06 "what a piece of work is man!
21:07 How noble in reason, how infinite in faculty,
21:10 in form and moving how express, how admirable,
21:13 in action how like an angel, in apprehension how like a
21:16 god--the beauty of the world, the paragon of animals!"
21:21 Humans think in the abstract.
21:23 We're able to record and communicate,
21:25 now digitally record.
21:28 We're free moral agents. We've got personalities.
21:30 We're virtually unpredictable, unlike goldfish and ants.
21:36 People are so unique because the Bible says,
21:40 Genesis 1:26: "God said, 'Let us make man in our image,'"
21:45 clearly, man is the dominant species on the planet.
21:47 You can see what he's made from, the heavens.
21:51 "Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea,
21:54 and the birds of the air, and the cattle,
21:55 and over all of the earth."
21:58 Man has learned more in the last 200 years.
22:03 We didn't know about microbes and microwaves and radio waves
22:07 and light waves, and there's so much that we've learned,
22:10 to think that, just in this one generation.
22:14 God also has made us for a relationship,
22:19 which is proof of God, and God wants to have
22:21 a relationship with us.
22:22 Jeremiah 31:3: "The Lord has appeared to me of old,
22:26 saying, 'Yes, I have you with an everlasting love;
22:29 therefore with lovingkindness I have drawn you.'"
22:33 But do you know what some of the best evidence is?
22:36 It's in Jesus.
22:39 I know he is a biblical character,
22:41 but history also records Jesus.
22:44 You will find him recorded in history.
22:47 In our recent tour of Israel, our guide was an expert on
22:51 Flavius Josephus, who quoted that Jesus was a real character
22:56 who lived in a real time who was crucified.
22:59 Now, if a person doesn't believe,
23:04 and they're just believing a lie,
23:05 and the apostles got together and said,
23:07 "Here, I'll tell you what.
23:09 Let's create our own religion.
23:10 Maybe we can use it to raise money.
23:11 And let's say this guy really rose from the dead,
23:14 and let's say he did all these miracles.
23:16 Let's make this whole thing up."
23:18 You know, if you get a few people that know that there
23:20 is a conspiracy, it doesn't last long.
23:22 Somebody leaks, somebody caves in.
23:27 I remember a few years ago meeting Chuck Colson.
23:30 He was part of the Nixon Watergate scandal.
23:34 He was one of the insiders.
23:36 And there was a conspiracy, and they admitted it.
23:39 And Colson, who was also an attorney,
23:41 he went to jail for his crime.
23:43 He was converted in jail.
23:44 And he tells how, as soon as they realized--they all said,
23:51 "We'll stand for the president.
23:52 We're gonna deny everything."
23:54 But as soon as they realized they were goin' to jail,
23:56 and the attorney generals began to interview 'em,
23:58 it didn't take very long for one of 'em to say,
24:00 "I'll turn on all the others if you'll spare me."
24:03 They were so ready to lie, and tell the truth,
24:07 whatever they had to do to save their skin.
24:09 They all ended up turning and confessing.
24:12 But with the apostles, they never changed their story.
24:18 They were stoned. They were beaten.
24:19 They went into strange countries.
24:21 They were tortured.
24:23 They came away from the torture and they kept saying the same
24:25 thing, that Jesus was the Son of God,
24:28 even to the point of being beheaded like Paul,
24:33 or crucified like Peter.
24:35 If it was a made-up story, all the evidence would say,
24:40 "Wow, that is the best trick that's ever been pulled in
24:43 civilization, that they could keep it together."
24:46 Every one of 'em put their lives on the line that
24:48 "we were witnesses of these things."
24:51 And that's how John ends the Bible.
24:53 He says, "I, John, saw. These things are true."
24:57 So, if you believe the Bible, there's no question.
25:00 But even if you're just gonna look at history,
25:03 Christ said, "The things that I teach,
25:06 they'll never be forgotten.
25:08 It's gonna go into all the world."
25:10 How did he know that? He was an uneducated carpenter.
25:14 It happened, didn't it? So, in Christ.
25:17 The idea that someone would live a perfect,
25:19 sinless life and show so much love,
25:23 that's further evidence that God is a living God.
25:26 And so, friends, I would like to submit to you that--you know,
25:30 I would like to close actually with a Scripture:
25:33 "Lord, you have been our dwelling place
25:35 in all generations.
25:37 Before the mountains were brought forth,
25:39 or ever you have formed the earth and the world,
25:42 even from everlasting to everlasting, you are God."
25:47 God is eternal. Amen, friends?
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27:28 announcer: What if you could know the future?
27:32 What would you do?
27:33 What would you change?
27:35 To see the future, you must understand the past.
27:41 Get this intriguing documentary hosted by Pastor Doug Batchelor
27:45 explores the most striking Bible prophecies that have been
27:48 dramatically fulfilled throughout history.
27:51 Kingdoms in Time.
27:53 For more information visit KingdomsinTime.com.
27:58 ♪♪
28:03 announcer: And thank you for your continued support
28:05 as we take the gospel of Jesus Christ to the world.
28:09 We hope you'll join us next week as we delve deep into the Word
28:12 of God to explore more amazing facts.
28:15 ♪♪
28:25 announcer: This presentation was brought to you by the
28:27 friends of the Amazing Facts ministry.


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Revised 2020-12-30