No. The 'Big Bang' is a scientific hypothesis for the creation of the universe, not a religious tradition. It could be harmonised with divine creation in general, but not with the biblical creation stories.
Though one can claim to believe in a Divinely-caused Big Bang, this is often not the case. The general paradigm in which it and Evolution are taught, is one of mere random events.
Many think that science, and specifically Evolutionary astronomy and Biology, have proved that there is no God. They don't comprehend that even if Evolution was an unquestionable fact, it would not automatically follow that God isn't there.
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no it doesnt because god took 7 days to create the earth it didnt just happen.
Planets are a work of God's creation. Everything is God's masterpiece. God as powerful as he is, so powerful that our minds cannot comprehend it, simply spoke and all the planets were there. Read the Bible in Genesis 1They are stardust from the "Big Bang".
It's hard to believe in any of those, but all the scientists agree that something caused a huge explosion of mass to populate the universe. In my Opinion, I believe in the big bang theory, but my biggest question was: what started it off? For every bomb there has to be something to activate it, otherwise, it would explode while being created. So yes, you can believe in them or not, it's a matter of personal opinion.
It should also be noted that the Big Bang is a truth. Things such as red shift and the cosmological background radiation are proof that it happened. That is fact.How it happened exactly is still under research, but it is believed the answer lies in dark matter. See "A Universe From Nothing" on YouTube for an hour long lecture on the current hypothesis concerning dark matter, virtual particles and other phenomena about this subject.
Theists have always held that God was responsible for the creation of the universe. Stephen Hawkin now says that gravity was responsible for the "Big Bang" and therefore the creation of the universe. One way of looking at this is that God is gravity. Of course, theists would not accept this simplistic conclusion.
Current theory is the Big Bang
Firstly the story of creation is just that a STORY not a theory. The story of creation is told in the first book of the bible called Genesis. It was a way to explain the existence of the earth, its features and its inhabitants in ancient times when man didn't know any better. Now man has much greater knowledge of such things and we have the Big Bang Theory.
it seems to support the big bang theory, but the Bible says that God stretches out the heavens and this discovery supports that
1. Evolution theory 2. Creation theory 3. Big-bang theory
There are various scientific theories explaining the creation of the Earth, with the most widely accepted being the nebular hypothesis. This theory suggests that the solar system formed from a massive cloud of gas and dust about 4.6 billion years ago. Other theories include the giant impact hypothesis, proposing that the Moon was formed from debris after a collision with a Mars-sized body, and the gravitational instability hypothesis, suggesting that the Earth formed directly from the collapse of a molecular cloud.
Buddhists do not have a specific creation story like those found in other religions. Instead, Buddhism focuses on the concept of dependent origination, where all things arise due to causes and conditions. This aligns with the teachings of impermanence and interconnectedness in Buddhism.
The Big Bang, if you believe the scientists, God if you believe the story in Genisis. Most cultures have a different creation story; the aborigines of Australia have a beautiful story about the Dreamtime.
Read the Old Testament!Answer:The Jewish Bible is called the Tanach. The Christian Old Testament is based on the Tanach, however, it was altered to support the teachings of Christianity.This being said, according to the Torah portion of the Tanach, HaShem (The Creator) created the world and all that's in it. From the Jewish perspective, the story of creation tells us WHAT HaShem did, NOT HOW He did it. A large percentage of Jews find no conflict between the story of creation as found in the Torah and the big bang theory and theory of evolution.
Big Bang Cosmology deals with the start (not necessary a creation) of our Universe as a whole, not with our Earth.
No. Genesis is a book of the Bible, and is based on faith. The Big Bang Theory is a scientific theory based on astrophysic and cosmological calculations. That said, there are many who see some overlap to the creation and sequence of events the bible lays out in Genesis, and the BB theory.
The Creation of the world, is not known, it depends on what side of the story you believe in, God or the Big Bang which is the Scientific side, not the religious side, So rhe answer for this is not who but what made the world and even the Universe.
Judaism teaches that the story of creation tells us WHAT HaShem did in regard to creating the universe, NOT HOW He did it. For the most part, Jews (including religious Jews), find no conflict between the story of creation and the Big Bang Theory.
The bible was written way before anyone new about the big bang, so why is the creation written in the correct order? Also maybe Big Bang was God and the "days" which he made the earth were periods of time?