|
Ron Hughes: Dr. David Humphreys is a scientist and he is also a
Christian. David, explain to us, as a scientist, how you seek
out objective truth.
Dr. Humphreys: Remember, Ron, a scientist is still a human
being. You know, we sometimes put science on a bit of a
pedestal as if this was the seeking of objective truth and the rest
- of the search for truth, the non-scientific ways - are somewhat
tainted.
And the fact is, science is somewhat limited in the sense it's
dealing with mechanisms and material causes and physical laws.
But one thing that it has in common with Christianity, which excites
me, is based on the fact that it's not a matter of opinion.
That there is some objective evidence for it out there. That
I'm not, as a scientist, entitled to invent any old baloney that I
want to invent or any old theory without it having a basis.
And in science that basis is generally observation of the world
around us and experiment. We look at the facts; the things
that we can see and handle; the observable reality is the basis for
truth it's not speculation. Although, scientists do speculate
and there are theories, but those theories have to be somehow
justified in experiment.
But it's not so different, you know, for me as a Christian.
I don't believe that religious truth is a matter of opinion. I
believe they are both like a rock to be uncovered - this is the analogy
I use. It's not like a melting pot where we say, hey, as a
scientist or as a Christian, I'm just going to go around and ask
people what they think, put all the opinions together, and somehow
we'll dole out the truth.
What we do in the Christian Faith is look at revelation, look at
history and we say, hey, this is the ground of belief, this is the
rock that we uncover.
Christianity, Ron, presents itself as faith based on empirical
reality. It's the same word you use about science. I
mean, something real out there. The basic story of the
Gospel is: God so loved the world that He gave His one and
only Son.
God did stuff! I mean, He really created the world;
we can see it around us, we enjoy it. But He also got into
what the Bible describes as redemption. I mean, that is absolutely
concrete. God has got a certain character that He loves us,
and He showed that. He actually showed that by coming, giving
His Son - who actually died. And all those are historical
things that can be verified, that happened in space and time.
They're not gobble-de-gook, they're not mythical invention. It
turns out to be a reality.
So, in both science and Christianity, although it's a different
type of evidence, we look for evidence, we look for objective
reality. We don't follow the whim of people's personal
opinion.
And that's very important today. 'Cause, you know, today,
people say this is a 'post-modern age.' Meaning, you know,
that absolute truth is not really the foundation of discussion, that
things are a bit up for grabs and that one person's opinion is as
good is another. But we don't feel that in science. We
say, 'hey, what's the evidence?' And I don't feel that that
can be substantiated to in the religious realm. After all, I'm
a follower of Jesus Christ who said, "I am the way, the
truth, and the life." And there was a bold,
dogmatic, exclusive claim there that He substantiated, of
course, by His life and works.
So, in both realms the rock of objective fact has to be sought.
|