Science
and Miracles Go Together
Wednesday, April 3, 3013
Wednesday, April 3, 3013
“Seek the Lord and his strength; seek his presence continually!
Remember the wondrous works that he has done, his miracles”
1 Chronicles 16:11-12 (ESV)
Here’s how C.S. Lewis
explains the connection between science and miracles:
it’s brilliant!
"If
the laws of Nature are necessary truths, no miracle can break them: but then no
miracle needs to break them. It is with them as with the laws of arithmetic. If
I put six pennies into a drawer on Monday and six more on Tuesday, the laws
decree that... I shall find twelve pennies there on Wednesday. But if the drawer
has been robbed I may in fact find only two. Something will have been broken
(the lock of the drawer or the laws of England) but the laws of arithmetic will
not have been broken. The new situation created by the thief will illustrate the
laws of arithmetic just as well as the original situation.
But
if God comes to work miracles, He comes "like a thief in the night."
Miracle is, from the point of view of the scientist, a form of doctoring,
tampering, (if you like) cheating. It introduces a new factor into the
situation, namely supernatural force, which the scientist had not reckoned on.
He calculates what will happen, or what must have happened on a past occasion,
in the belief that the situation, at that point of space and time, is or was A.
But if supernatural force has been added, then the situation really is or was
AB. And no one knows better than the scientist that AB cannot yield the
same result as A. The necessary truth of the laws, far from making it impossible
that miracles should occur, makes it certain that if the Supernatural is
operating they must occur. For if the natural situation by itself, and the
natural situation plus something else, yielded only the same result, it
would be then that we should be faced with a lawless and unsystematic
universe... This perhaps helps to make a little clearer what the laws of Nature
really are... They produce no events: they state the pattern to which every
event... must conform, just as the rules of arithmetic state the pattern to
which all transactions with money must conform...The divine art of miracle is
not an art of suspending the pattern to which events conform but of feeding new
events into that pattern...
The
reason (some) find it intolerable is that they start by taking Nature to be the
whole of reality. And they are sure that all reality must be interrelated and
consistent. I agree with them. But I think they have mistaken a partial system
within reality, namely Nature, for the whole...The great complex event called
Nature, and the new particular event introduced into it by the miracle, are
related by their common origin in God... By definition, miracles must of course
interrupt the usual course of Nature; but if they are real they must, in the
very act of so doing, assert all the more the unity and self-consistency of
total reality at some deeper level."
An example of Lewis's logic is the miraculous conception of Jesus in the virgin, Mary, and the natural nine-month pregnancy which followed. Both had their origin in God. God's natural laws and His miracles go hand in hand.
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