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Not
at all. Science has many Christian roots. Most of the early scientists
were Christians (Copernicus, Galileo, Pascal, Isaac Newton, Carl
Linnaeus, Johannes Keppler, Robert Boyle, Louis Pasteur, Jean
Henri Fabre, Michael Faraday, John Ambrose Fleming, etc.). These
great scientists operated within a Christian framework.
An interesting fact is that the vast majority
of all scientific development has come out of western civilization,
which has Christianity as its basis. Christianity views God as
rational and trustworthy, which implies that His creation is rational
and orderly and thus can be examined. Nature in the Christian
view (as compared to non-Christian worldviews) was no longer an
object of fear and worship.
The idea of laws of nature came from Christianity.
And the concepts of subduing nature and being stewards of nature
are right from the first book of the Bible--Genesis.
As D. James Kennedy suggests (see resource
list), science could not have begun in the Buddhist or Hindu
worlds. The essence of those religions is that the physical world
has no reality. Scientific inquiry requires the assumption that
the world is real. Nor could science have begun in the Muslim
world because that worldview is dominated by fatalism, and fatalism
is antithetical to the concept of progress.
Misconceptions about the Bible have been
around for a long time. For example, one misconception is that
the Bible teaches that the earth is flat, or that it is the center
of the universe. A closer examination of Scripture shows otherwise.
The idea of a flat earth from the Bible is rooted in the biblical
language of "four corners" in Isaiah 11:12 and Revelation
7:1, and "four winds" in Jeremiah 49:36 and Matthew
24:31. The Hebrew and Greek words translated "corner"
are also translated as "quarter" and are best understood
as "directions" or "headings." The Bible's
usage obviously refers to the four directions as measured from
the particular focal point of interest and is the standard convention
used in surveying and mapping to this day. Moreover, in Isaiah
40:22 the Bible uses the term the "circle of the earth,"
also translated "sphere of the earth" as is evident
from the context.
It can be said that Christianity has produced
more literate and educated people than any other movement in the
history of mankind. In our own country, all but 3 of the first
126 colleges established in the United States were built in order
to propagate the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
The Bible was not written as a science textbook.
But, when the Bible does reveal truths related to science, the
Bible can be trusted. Indeed, the Bible demonstrates scientific
knowledge and concepts far before mankind had developed the technological
base for such knowledge.
Biologist William J. Cairney (in the book edited
by John Warwick Montgomery, see resource
list) discusses many such biblical pre-science evidences in
the fields of human health, disease control, agriculture, etc.
He states, "These rules of sanitation and diet stand on a
foundation requiring considerable knowledge of epidemiology, microbiology,
physiology, plant pathology, and animal pathology, all of which
require a technological base not available until the last hundred
years or so of human history."
Henry Morris (in Appendix 8 of his Defender's
Study Bible, see resource list) lists numerous other pre-science
evidences in the Bible.
So-called conflicts of science and the Bible
are often conflicts between interpretations of the facts. While
there are questions for which there are as yet no explanation,
there is no fundamental conflict between science and Scripture.
(See also the Evolution or Creation
section of our web site.)
More importantly, while we live in a time of
change and of great scientific discovery, what we discover about
the human heart is that it has not changed at all. Matters
of human nature, emotions, relationships, and ultimate meaning
remain the same. It is in Scripture that we find enduring truths
as appropriate for modern man as for ancient man.

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