We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

A life once spent is irrevocable. It will remain to be contemplated through eternity… The same may be said of each day. When it is once past, it is gone forever. All the marks which we put upon it, it will exhibit forever… Each day will not only be a witness of our conduct, but will affect our everlasting destiny… How shall we then wish to see each day marked with usefulness! It is too late to mend the days that are past. The future is in our power. Let us, then, each morning, resolve to send the day into eternity in such a garb as we shall wish it to wear forever. And at night let us reflect that one more day is irrevocably gone, indelibly marked.
Adoniram Judson

Without theological vision, a vision that wrestles with what it means to be God’s people, in God’s world, under God’s rule, the church inevitably loses both its identity as God’s possession and its purpose as the people and place where God’s glory is displayed in the gospel and God’s praise is declared.
Michael Lawrence

More on the Big Bang theory

More on the Big Bang theory

More On The Big Bang Theory

How can an increase of order (or
“information”) be produced in a system (whether open or closed) by any kind of random process (Big Bang included)? All experience, as well as any probabilistic or mathematical analysis, indicates that RANDOM changes lead only to a DECREASE of order (entropy, information, if you will).

Look up Classical, Statistical and Informational Thermodynamics. “It is certain that the conceptual connection between information and the Second Law of Thermodynamics is now firmly established.” -Tribus and McIrvine, “Energy Information,” Science Digest. “(there are many ways) of stating what is called the Second Law of Thermodynamics….all of them are equivalent although some very sophisticated mathematics and physics is involved in showing the equialence.” -Isaac Asimov, “In the Game of Energy and T.D. Journal of the Smithsonian Institute.

Both the First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics point away from evolution. They point to Creation.