24 December, 2014

Merry Christmas to you from the Sydney Chapter for Reasons to Believe

 
For to us a child is born,
    to us a son is given,
    and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
    Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
    Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
Of the greatness of his government and peace
    there will be no end.
He will reign on David’s throne
    and over his kingdom,
establishing and upholding it
    with justice and righteousness
    from that time on and forever.
The zeal of the Lord Almighty
    will accomplish this.
 


After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King Herod, Magi from the east came to Jerusalem and asked, “Where is the one who has been born king of the Jews? We saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.”

 

 

Merry Christmas and may God bless you!

 

 

The Sydney Chapter for Reasons to Believe

 

 

27 October, 2014

November meeting for the Sydney Chapter for Reasons to Believe

The November meeting for the Sydney Chapter will be on the 14th November.

Details are:
 
DATE: Friday, 14th November
TIME: 8:00pm

To find out more, contact Sydney.Australia@reasons.org

03 September, 2014

Reasons Institute Now Offering Courses for Personal Enrichment


Reasons Institute Now Offering
Courses for Personal Enrichment

Have you ever wanted to take a Reasons Institute course, but didn’t have the time? Check out our new line of flexible on-demand classes. These courses have the same quality content, but with less time commitment. Just listen and learn; there are no written assignments or homework!
Topics include:
Questions? Contact us at (855) REASONS or via email at learning@reasons.org.
PS Are you a certified teacher or administrator through ACSI? These courses also count toward Continuing Education Units (CEU’s). If you would like more information about CEUs, we invite you to watch a short introductory video. Click on “Continuing Education Units (CEUs).”

John Lennox – Cosmic Chemistry






The John Lennox – Cosmic Chemistry seminar last Monday was excellent. Nine of us from the Sydney Chapter were able to get tickets to the event, and we really enjoyed hearing Professor Lennox speak.

Apparently the ABC filmed it to be shown on their Big Ideas program sometime in the future, so keep your eyes open for this on ABC iView or on air.



The Q&A session was particularly good, with many questions asked by the audience and with Professor Lennox's deep and considered responses.

What was really encouraging was to see that a good proportion of the 3000 plus audience (I would say around 50 to 60%) were younger people either in their late teens or of university age. That's very encouraging when it comes to thinking about the impact that such an excellent speaker has on that generation. At the book signing afterwards, the queue was again predominantly of this age group.

It must have been a grueling trip to Australia for him, with a 2 week whistle-stop run through Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and finally Sydney. He then was heading off to Canada the next morning after the Sydney event.

You can find out more about Professor Lennox and keep up to date on his speaking engagements by visiting his web site at JohnLennox


01 September, 2014

For a long life, have faith - Telegraph

An interesting article by James LeFanu appeared in the UK's Telegraph back on the 18th August.


For a long life, have faith
Religious faith remains by far the best predictor of a long, healthy life

It is encouraging for those reluctant or unable to engage in vigorous exercise that the splendidly named Dr Duck-chul Lee, of Iowa State University, should have found, as reported in this paper last month, that jogging for as little as five minutes a day should be beneficial, dramatically cutting the risk of dying early.

Still, as Richard Scott, a family doctor, notes in this month’s British Journal of General Practice, religious faith remains by far the best predictor of a long and healthy life.
 
When convalescing recently from a gruelling schedule of chemo and radiotherapy for a tumour of the bowel, Dr Scott, a Christian, read the scholarly Handbook of Religion and Health, whose survey of the research runs to 700 pages.
 
The positive influence of church attendance is well recognised, but the findings of this overview are, he observes, “quite extraordinary”, with faith reducing the risk of a heart attack by two-thirds and being associated with improved survival of a stroke or cancer.
 
For mental health, the statistics are even more dramatic: those with depression recover faster, and those with schizophrenia function better, while alcohol and drug misuse is reduced.
 
“Faith in God,” he says, “is relevant to all diseases yet studied.” That belief could be, as so many nowadays maintain, illusory, but the beneficial effect in conferring “greater happiness, morale, optimism and meaning in life” is indisputably for real.

********************************************************************************

If you are sceptical about the benefits of religious belief (i.e. Christian faith for the most part) just take a quick tour through the Health and Medicine section of ScienceDaily and you will find many articles that talk about the health benefits of religious (again Christian faith for the most part) belief. One of the most recent is here: Believers consume fewer drugs than atheists.

Alternatively, if you would like to read about it in a more lay friendly book (lets face it, the Handbook of Religion and Health is a bit pricy). The can I recommend Beyond Well Being.


 

14 July, 2014

Scientists discover that atheists might not exist, and that’s not a joke - from Science 2.0

It's been a while since the blog has had a new post. So I thought I would share something that Jack, one of the Reasons to Believe apologists overseas, passed on today. It's from a blog called Science 2.0, and is about how we think.
 
You can access the Science 2.0 post here:
 
 
It's a very interesting and thoughtful piece and my thanks to Nury Vittachi of Science 2.0 for posting it.
 
I find the following statement in particularly thought provoking:
 
This line of thought has led to some scientists claiming that "atheism is psychologically impossible because of the way humans think," says Graham Lawton, an avowed atheist himself, writing in the New Scientist. "They point to studies showing, for example, that even people who claim to be committed atheists tacitly hold religious beliefs, such as the existence of an immortal soul." This shouldn't come as a surprise, since we are born believers, not atheists, scientists say. Humans are pattern-seekers from birth, with a belief in karma, or cosmic justice, as our default setting. "A slew of cognitive traits predisposes us to faith," writes Pascal Boyer in Nature, the science journal, adding that people "are only aware of some of their religious ideas".
Reading this reminds me of what Ecclesiastes has to say about what God has done for humanity (emphasis added):
 
Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NIV)
11 He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.
 
The heart here being the centre of a person, not the organ pump, and it is intimately linked to our very being.
 
The New Atheists have tried to claim that atheism is the default position of the human mind, but this notion is at odds with what we know about the human mind from a very young age, as has been well documented in a plethora of research. Richard Dawkins believes that faith in God is a form of brain abnormality. However, research shows clearly that this is not the case.
 
If you want more information on this, have a read of Born Believers by Justin Barrett.
 
Vittachi also notes the following naturalistic explanation for such human belief:
 
If a tendency to believe in the reality of an intangible network is so deeply wired into humanity, the implication is that it must have an evolutionary purpose. Social scientists have long believed that the emotional depth and complexity of the human mind means that mindful, self-aware people necessarily suffer from deep existential dread. Spiritual beliefs evolved over thousands of years as nature's way to help us balance this out and go on functioning.
 
Though on the surface this appears to be a reasonable explanation for the origin of belief in God, the "implication is that it must have an evolutionary purpose" is purely a naturalistic or materialistic reductionist belief. It presupposes that such a belief has a genetic basis. My background is in biology and not philosophy, but let me try to explain why I believe this materialistic reductionist explanation for the origin of religious belief becomes self refuting.
 
How so?
 
First off, much to the dismay of Richard Dawkins, no "god spot" has ever been found within the human brain and no genetic origin can be discerned for the origin of belief. On the contrary, research has shown that no "god spot" exists within the human brain (http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/04/120419091223.htm). Likewise Dawkins "meme" idea has lost all traction and has been relegated to a failed hypothesis.
 
Secondly, Alvin Plantinga has shown in Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism, that evolution cannot select for truth, only survivability. Any number of false assumptions may lead to survivability just as a true assumption may lead to survivability. I won't go into the details, as I will not be doing Plantinga's argument the justice it deserves and it will make this blog post waaaayyyy to long. Bottom line, you can YouTube Plantinga himself and listen to him speak on this.
 
 
 
Sufficed to say, evolution's end, so to speak, is survivability and not truth. There is no reason therefore to trust the product of something that is the result of undirected chance, i.e. an accident. As Professor John Lennox has said in a number of his lectures, "if your computer was the product of chance, would you trust it?"
 
Darwin himself eloquently lamented about this very problem arising from his theory:
 
"But then with me the horrid doubt always arises whether the convictions of man's mind, which has been developed from the mind of the lower animals, are of any value or at all trustworthy. Would any one trust in the convictions of a monkey's mind, if there are any convictions in such a mind?"
 
From Plantinga we encounter an additional problem regarding any evolutionary explanation for belief in God. If evolution puts such deeply held but false beliefs in our minds (let's remember here that evolution is being used to explain why I hold such deep belief in God), then how are we to trust our minds to reveal truth and sort out false ideas from true ones?
 
For the materialist, if evolution puts false ideas in our minds (again remember that the materialist is trying to account via evolutionary theory as to why I believe in God), then how are we to know what truth is, just as Darwin lamented. After all, I believe in the idea that ultimately I am a creation of God, and not the product of some random undirected process. If my conviction that ultimately I am a creation of God's doing is a false belief because, according to the materialist, my belief in God is a false notion planted there by evolution, how are we to discern which notions and beliefs in our minds are true, just as Darwin lamented. Can we trust which ones are false? How would we tell the difference?
 
At this point, the materialist should remember that some of these beliefs of human minds include the belief in evolution, the belief in naturalism, the belief in scientism, and the belief in materialism…
 
So there is simply no basis for belief in Vittachi's statement "...the fact that evolution would discard unhelpful beliefs and foster the growth of helpful ones."
 
And so any evolutionary argument for our universal belief in God falls down due to evolution's inability to arrive at truth and the fact that there is no genetic basis for discerning truth. Plantinga notes that if evolution is true, then naturalism is false.
 
It's not just Christians who point this problem out. Thomas Nagel in his now (in)famous book Mind and Cosmos: Why the Materialist Neo-Darwinian Conception of Nature Is Almost Certainly False, understands the power of Plantinga's argument.
 
Nagel is no lightweight when it comes to being either a philosopher or an atheist. As an intellectual, he puts Dawkins to shame. Nagel goes on to note in his book that the purely reductionist, materialistic NeoDarwinian worldview is hopelessly inadequate to account for mind, rationality and morality. Nagel finds the mind irreducible to mater in motion. He hopes for some teleological law to solve his dilemma, as he states that he doesn't like the alternative option, i.e. God. Needless to say, his book upset more than a few people in the materialistic camp.
 
To finish off this rather long post, I thought I would end on an amusing statement by Vittachi. He writes:
 
God, if he is around, may be amused to find that atheists might not exist.
Nice to see a sense of humour in a topic that often sees belligerent dialogue between both sides of the debate in the blog-a-sphere. My thanks to Nury Vittachi for writing it.

20 May, 2014

Professor John Lennox is coming to Sydney - Cosmic Chemistry, Do Science and God mix?

 
City Bible Forum is hosting a series of lectures by Professor John Lennox on the topic of Science and God.
Don't miss Oxford University Professor of Mathematics John Lennox as he distills the turbulent debate about science and faith in God. These events are ideal for the skeptically minded, the scientifically curious and the believer who likes to wrestle with questions of science and belief.

If you have never heard Professor Lennox speak before, you will not be disappointed!

You can find out more at: http://citybibleforum.org/city/news/tickets-john-lennox-sale#.U3W2ueJnr1Q.facebook
 
Tickets are now on sale for Cosmic chemistry: do science and God mix? in Melbourne, Adelaide, Perth, Brisbane and Sydney.

17 May, 2014

Sydney Chapter Meeting this Friday, 23rd May

The Sydney Chapter is meeting this coming Friday night, 23rd May.

Location: North Epping, Sydney NSW
Time: 7:30pm for an 8:00pm start
Contact us via email at Sydney.Australia@reasons.org for location details or if you want to find out more about the Chapter.

30 April, 2014

What happened when Dr Ross visited Australia

 
Andrew Corbett, Pastor of Legana Christian Church in Launceston, Tasmania, has been a long term friend of Reasons to Believe. He has been instrumental in helping to bring Reasons to Believe speakers out to Australia. Andrew has posted on his blog an account of Dr Hugh Ross recent visit.
 
It's a great account of his visit to Tasmania. Andrew received a lot of criticism for bringing Dr Ross out to speak. Interestingly, Andrew notes that when he queried those who were challenging him about Dr Ross, "in every instance (and I did not have time to challenge every opponent) when I asked if these opponents if they had actually read a Hugh Ross book or attended one his talks, the answer was: no. This was extremely disturbing."
 
Indeed it is disturbing. The danger of not reading the Bible in consideration of its original context, and of not understanding a few basics about the original language it was written in (Hebrew and Aramaic for the Old Testament, and Ancient Greek for the New Testament) is that incorrect interpretations of the text can occur. Gerald Schroeder warned of this danger, when in Genesis and the Big Bang, he wrote:
 
In recent times an unusual orientation has arisen among many who are eager to evaluate the relevance of the Bible to daily life. There is a misconception that an understanding of the text comes to one as a natural heritage, as if we are bequeathed it genetically along with the instinct to breathe or the ability to reason. The most simplistic meanings are assumed to be adequate and the study of commentaries thereon is considered superfluous.
(Genesis and the Big Bang, p.19)
 
Dr Ross has spent years studying the Biblical text in its context, and he is instrumental in helping Christians to have confidence that science and Christian faith are deep friends and not enemies.
 

18 April, 2014

May you have a blessed, happy and safe Easter

Everyone at the Sydney Chapter for Reasons to Believe would like to wish and pray that you have a blessed, safe and happy Easter.


Salvador Dalí (Spanish, 1904–1989). Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus), 1954. Oil on canvas

One of the most attested to facts of Christ's life that comes from outside of the New Testament is the fact of Christ's crucifixion. Josephus and Tacitus, both contemporary historians living around the time of the 1st Century, point to Christ being crucified during the reign of Tiberius whilst Pontius Pilot was governor of Judea.

Jesus death and resurrection are celebrated by Christians at this time, because these events are rooted in time and space as part of history. They are real events that occurred 2,000 years ago in Judea. The life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ means that humanity has hope. A deep and abiding hope. But as Paul say's in 1 Corinthians 15: 12-20 (NIV).

12 But if it is preached that Christ has been raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? 13 If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. 14 And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. 15 More than that, we are then found to be false witnesses about God, for we have testified about God that he raised Christ from the dead. But he did not raise him if in fact the dead are not raised. 16 For if the dead are not raised, then Christ has not been raised either. 17 And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ are lost. 19 If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied.
20 But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.

If you doubt that we can trust after 2,000 years the Jesus indeed has been risen from the dead, click here for a whole stack of free resources that will help you in your search towards the truth on this most important of historical events.

Have a blessed and happy Easter. God bless.

12 April, 2014

Next Chapter Meeting will be Friday, 23rd May

The Sydney Chapter will be meeting on Friday night, 23rd May.

Location: North Epping, Sydney NSW
Time: 7:30pm for an 8:00pm start

Want to find out more, contact us via email at Sydney.Australia@reasons.org

09 April, 2014

The Genesis Flood and the Noah movie



What most people have heard or read about Noah and the ark from childhood storybooks onward strikes them as utterly preposterous. Not only does the story seem to contradict multiple disciplines of science, but it also seems to contradict the Christian doctrine of an all-knowing, all-loving God. With that in mind, RTB has dedicated a page of resources to help foster positive, respectful dialogue with truth seekers.

The Biblical account of Noah's Flood can be found in Chapters 6 to 9 in the book of Genesis in the Bible. Head on over to BibleGateway and read what the Bible has to say for yourself.

If you a curious about the scientific evidences for the Genesis Flood, head on over to the Reasons to Believe Flood page. There you will find a wealth of free resources to help you. Still curious? Then check out Navigating Genesis which has several chapters dedicated to evidences for the Genesis Flood.

Dr Hugh Ross heads to Australia

Save the Date. Hugh Ross is visiting Australia this Easter!
Wednesday, April 16 through Sunday, April, 27! Dr. Hugh Ross is headed to Australia and will be speaking in multiple locations, including the greater areas of Launceston, Perth, and Brisbane! Sadly, Dr Ross will not be visiting Sydney. However, if you are able to get to one of the venues, this will be well worth attending. In my opinion, Australia is starved for a lack of good apologetics, especially in the arena of science & faith. These events are not to be missed if you can get there.
Launceston: April 16–20
Key Event: How Does Science Prove the Existence of God?
Date: Friday, April 18
Location: Launceston Easter Community Festival—Albert Hall
45 Tamar St.
Launceston TAS 7250
Map/Directions
Perth: April 22–23
Key Event: An Astronomer’s Quest – Dr. Hugh Ross’s Personal Story
Date: Sunday, April 23
Location: Uniting Church in the City—Wesley Church
97 William St.
Perth WA 6000
Map/Directions
Brisbane: April 26–27
Key Event: Sunday Service
Date: Sunday, April 27
Location: Catalyst Church
142 Pine Mountain Rd.
Brassall QLD 4305
Map/Directions
Visit our events page for details on the various events at each location.
For more information, email rtbevents@reasons.org or call (855) REASONS.


 
 

07 April, 2014

Navigating Genesis: Hugh Ross


A Scientist’s Journey through Genesis 1–11 
 
“Everyone knows the Bible teaches scientific nonsense”—that’s the commonly held misconception. When pushed for examples, skeptics point to the early part of Genesis, with stories of creation, the flood, and 900-year life spans as “proof.”

Examining recent scientific discoveries, astronomer and pastor Dr. Hugh Ross explores the opening chapters in Genesis and shows how they hold some of the strongest scientific evidence for the Bible’s supernatural accuracy. Navigating Genesis expands upon Ross’ earlier book The Genesis Question (1998), integrating the message of both the Bible and science—without compromise—giving skeptics and believers common ground for dialogue.

I've just received my copy of Navigating Genesis in the mail and I am very keen to read it. It was only released a few weeks ago. I read The Genesis Question by Dr Ross about five years ago and it was very well written and researched. Navigating Genesis now updates The Genesis Question with even more up to date research. I recommended The Genesis Question to many of my friends over the years. Navigating Genesis, I have no doubt, will also become highly recommended.

The animals float two by two, hurrah...

That's the title of a new research paper released on the 3rd April by students at the University of Leicester.

From the university's own press release:

This month, the classic biblical tale of Noah’s Ark will receive a Hollywood makeover with the release of the movie Noah - and Physics students at the University of Leicester have found that the ark would have indeed been able to float with all of the animals on board.

A group of fourth year master’s students from the Department of Physics and Astronomy have calculated that Noah’s ark, built to accommodate at least two of every animal species, would have floated using the dimensions ordained in the Bible.

In the book of Genesis, chapter 6:13-22, Noah is commanded to build an ark to survive a flood. Noah is provided exact dimensions for the boat which should be: 300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide and 30 cubits high and should hold Noah, his family, and at least two of every species of animal for the duration of the flood.

Using these dimensions, Archimedes’ principle and suitable approximations, University of Leicester Physics students Oliver Youle, Katie Raymer, Benjamin Jordan and Thomas Morris tested the instructions and were surprised with their results.

The students found that the ark could carry up to 35,000 individual animals. Well within the number of animals estimated by Dr Hugh Ross (see Let Us Reason: Noah's Floating Zoo).

The full paper, ‘The animals float two by two, hurrah!’ can be found at: http://physics.le.ac.uk/journals/index.php/pst/article/view/676/475

The paper is very short, at only two pages, and easy to read.

The RTB website has a wealth of information on the Genesis Flood account. If you want to delve deeper into this topic, got to the Reasons to Believe website and type in 'Noah', or 'the Flood' into the search engine.

Chapter meeting this Friday, 11th April at 8pm

The Sydney Chapter will be meeting this Friday night, 11th April.

Location: Epping, Sydney NSW
Time: 7:30pm for an 8:00pm start

Want to find out more, contact us via email at Sydney.Australia@reasons.org

The Sydney Chapter for RTB

From its inception nearly five years ago, the Sydney Chapter has been meeting on a roughly bi-monthly basis, though sometimes we extend out the schedule to three months between meetings.  We always meet on a Friday night at a members’ home. Members have found that Friday evenings provide the best way to minimise disruption to busy family life.

As chapter members hale from a half-dozen different churches scattered across the city, this means that members can attend their own church's home Bible-study groups, midweek services, outreach and support events without suffering from meeting burn out. It also provides the presenters with the much needed time in our busy schedules to research and prepare interesting topics to present to the group.

The members feel that by meeting in a home setting, hospitality and the informal homely environment offers the best way for people to feel unintimidated in asking questions and engendering good discussion, whilst getting to know each other and visitors much better.
 
The arena of the science/faith apologetics is a difficult one for the average person to grasp, and feeling free to ask questions and to discuss counter points is the best way we have found to enact the principles espoused in 1 Peter 3:15-16.

Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience…

If you would like to get in contact with the Sydney Chapter, you can reach us at the following email address: Sydney.Australia@reasons.org

Our page on the Reasons to Believe web site can be found here (http://www.reasons.org/participate/chapters-and-networks/sydney).

Who are Reasons to Believe?

The mission of Reasons to Believe is to spread the Christian Gospel by demonstrating that sound reason and scientific research—including the very latest discoveries—consistently support, rather than erode, confidence in the truth of the Bible and faith in the personal, transcendent God revealed in both Scripture and nature.

The website for Reasons to Believe can be found at (www.reasons.org).

Find out more at (http://www.reasons.org/about/our-mission)