Has science disproved the miracles associated with Jesus Christ?
No. Science depends upon
observation and replication. Miracles, such as the Incarnation (Christ's virgin birth) and
the Resurrection, are by their very nature unprecedented events. No one can replicate
these events in a laboratory. Hence, science simply cannot be the judge and jury as to
whether or not these events occurred.
The scientific method is useful for
studying nature but not super-nature. Just as football stars are speaking outside their
field of expertise when they appear on television to tell you what razor you should buy,
so scientists are speaking outside their field when they address theological issues like
miracles or the Resurrection.
Actually, there is good reason to
believe in the biblical miracles.
MANY WITNESSES WERE STILL
ALIVE WHEN THE RECORD WAS PUBLISHED. One highly pertinent factor is the brief
time that elapsed between Jesus' miraculous public ministry and the publication of the
gospels. It was insufficient for the development of miracle legends. Many eyewitnesses to
Jesus' miracles would have still been alive to refute any untrue miracle accounts (see 1
Corinthians 15:6).
MEN OF NOBLE CHARACTER.
One must also recognize the noble character of the men who witnessed these miracles
(Peter, James, and John, for example). Such men were not prone to misrepresentation, and
were willing to give up their lives rather than deny their beliefs.
HOSTILE WITNESSES PROVIDED
NO DISPUTE. There were also hostile witnesses to the miracles of Christ. When
Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, for example, none of the chief priests or Pharisees
disputed the miracle (John 11:45-48). (If they could have disputed it, they would have.)
Rather, their goal was simply to stop Jesus (verses 47-48). Because there were so many
hostile witnesses who observed and scrutinized Christ, successful "fabrication"
of miracle stories in His ministry would have been impossible.
Science, Nature and Scripture
I believe that nature and Scripture,
properly interpreted, do not conflict. God has communicated to humankind both by general
revelation (nature, or the observable universe) and special revelation (the Bible). Since
both of these revelations come from God -- and since God does not contradict Himself -- we
must conclude that these two revelations are in agreement with each other. While there may
be conflicts between one's interpretation of the observable universe and one's
interpretation of the Bible, there is no ultimate contradiction.
We might say that science is a
fallible human interpretation of the observable universe while theology is a fallible
human interpretation of the Scriptures. If the secularist challenges the idea that science
can be fallible, remind him or her of what science historian Thomas Kuhn proved in his
book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions -- that is, science is in a
constant state of change. New discoveries have consistently caused old scientific
paradigms to be discarded in favor of newer paradigms.
Here is the point:
It is not nature and Scripture
that contradict; rather, it is science (man's fallible interpretation of nature) and
theology (man's fallible interpretation of Scripture) that sometimes fall into conflict.
Hence the secularist cannot simply dismiss certain parts of the Bible because
"science and the Bible contradict."
Author: Dr. Ron Rhodes of Reasoning from the Scriptures Ministries.
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