The Programming Model Of Creation
How God Can Speak the Worlds into Being
Publisher Description
The Programming Model of Reality
How God Can Speak the Worlds into Being
Excerpt from the book:
"Most ideas that propose how God created the universe begin with the basic entities, such as light, energy, and matter, already created. The creation of the basic entities themselves (“out of nothing” as the Hebrew word “bara” in Genesis 1:1 indicates) is left as a matter of faith: that God can do it, even if we have no idea how. This remains a good, solid foundation and will always be true: that God is able to do more than we know; that His limitless resources and abilities are accepted by us through our trust of His Word, through faith which He gives us (Ephesians 2:8-10).
However, the last half-century has offered us a new window into the realm of “creating things out of nothing” (Ex Nihilo), by using thoughts expressed as command words. So this model runs to the opposite extreme. Rather than avoiding the questions of “how matter and energy were created”, this model embraces them. It starts its proposals for “how God created” at the earliest point: from the existence of God alone. It then proposes how God could have created all things, even the basic entities, simply by using words.
Topics covered include:
How we view our own reality.
A presentation of the model.
How energy and matter can be generated.
How the Scientific Method works for our reality.
The Age of the Earth.
The Fraud of Evolution.
The Person of Jesus.
Uses a readable, entertaining and thought-provoking style. Suitable for high-school age and up.
Customer Reviews
Excellent analysis!
As an IT professional, I found this book well thought out and consistent. From a Creationist standpoint, it falls directly in line with what is observed. Good read and one that tends to stay with you as you look at this world.
The Programming Model of Creation
The author presents a fresh view of reality from the mind of the Great Programmer. Along the way, he exposes the illegitimacy of the evolutionary paradigm. My spirit thrilled at the picture he painted of the method by which we relate to God. Two caveats: a few of his colloquialisms border on the mildly offensive and his frequent use of exclamation marks gives the impression that his writing is propaganda. The impression is a false one. Well done!
Very biased and narrow minded book.
Only presents evidence that favors his argument, had the potential to be a good book but it's just completely one-sided