The Rumor Was Wrong
"In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth."
A new Christian probably absorbs, very early on, the cultural rumor that science and faith got divorced. The rumor goes like this: thoughtful, scientifically literate adults moved on from the Bible somewhere around the Renaissance, and now anyone still reading Genesis 1 has either not looked at the evidence or has chosen to look away.
The problem with the rumor is that it isn't true. The men who built modern science — Galileo, Kepler, Newton, Pascal, Faraday — were the very people who took Genesis 1 at face value. The conviction that the universe was *intelligible at all* was a specifically Christian conviction. A rational God had made a rational universe, and his image-bearers could be expected to discover it. That conviction launched the scientific revolution.
If you've been quietly carrying the worry that to follow Jesus you have to switch off the part of your mind that thinks carefully — hear this clearly. You don't. You never did. The earliest scientists didn't. The cosmos doesn't ask you to. And the historical Christian faith has never asked you to.
The first verse of the Bible is not a hostile claim against science. It is the foundational claim under which science became thinkable in the first place. *In the beginning, God.* Before there was anything to study, there was Someone who made it.
This week, start by letting that land.
Today's reading: Genesis 1
Genesis 1 is where the whole conversation starts. Before there was anything to study, there was Someone who made it. The first verse of the Bible is not a hostile claim against science — it is the foundation under which science became thinkable at all.
Reflect: Where in your story did you first absorb the rumor that science and faith are at war? Notice it; name it.