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Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Liberty of Conscience (WCF Ch. XX)

 Liberty of Conscience (WCF Ch. XX)

  • Christian liberty is a gift purchased by Christ. Believers are freed from the guilt of sin, God’s condemning wrath, the curse of the moral law, bondage to Satan, and the dominion of sin. This liberty includes free access to God and willing obedience rooted in love rather than fear. While such liberty was known under the Old Covenant, it is expanded under the New in freedom from the ceremonial law, greater boldness before God, and fuller experience of the Spirit.

  • God alone is Lord of the conscience. No human authority may bind the conscience with doctrines or commands that are contrary to, or beyond, God’s Word in matters of faith and worship. To require blind submission or implicit faith in human teaching is to undermine true Christian freedom and the proper exercise of reason.

  • Liberty of conscience does not authorize error or coercion. To believe or obey man-made rules as though they were divine commands is a betrayal of Christian liberty. Genuine freedom is preserved only when conscience remains subject to Scripture alone.

  • Christian liberty is never a license for sin. Those who appeal to liberty in order to practice sin or indulge sinful desires contradict its very purpose, which is that believers, having been delivered by Christ, might serve God in holiness and righteousness throughout their lives.

  • Liberty and lawful authority are meant to uphold one another. Christian freedom does not justify resistance to lawful civil or ecclesiastical authority. Teachings or practices that oppose God’s order, undermine godliness, or disrupt the peace and unity of the Church may rightly be addressed through church discipline and, where appropriate, civil authority.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Chosen by God - Summary Chapter 1

Key issues Dr. Sproul raises in Chapter 1, “The Struggle,” while acknowledging the range of theological perspectives on predestination:


The emotional and pastoral tension: Sproul highlights that predestination is not merely an abstract doctrine; it touches fears about fairness, love, and human dignity. Many believers struggle because the teaching seems, at first glance, to conflict with God’s goodness or with genuine human choice.


Competing theological instincts: The chapter introduces the broad spectrum of Christian views—from strong assertions of divine sovereignty to approaches that emphasize human freedom. Sproul frames the discussion as an honest wrestling within the household of faith rather than a debate between believers and skeptics.


The question of justice and “fairness”: A central issue is whether election implies arbitrariness in God. Sproul insists that Scripture defines justice differently than modern intuitions, pressing readers to consider whether salvation is owed to anyone or is always an act of grace.


Scripture as the final authority (tota Scriptura): Sproul urges readers not to build theology from isolated passages or emotional reactions, but to submit both difficult texts on God’s sovereignty and equally clear texts about human responsibility to the full counsel of God’s Word.


Humility in doctrinal disagreement: While Sproul clearly defends the Reformed understanding of election, the chapter models a posture that recognizes sincere faith among those who differ, calling for careful listening, charity, and a shared commitment to Christ even amid unresolved tensions.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Provisionalism, Traditionalism, and Reformed Theological Perspectives

 

Provisionalist Emphases

  • Salvation is genuinely offered to all people — Christ’s atonement is sufficient for every person, and God sincerely desires the salvation of every hearer (John 3:16; 1 Tim. 2:4).
  • The gospel call is universally meaningful — When Scripture calls all to repent and believe, that call is not merely formal but truly available to each individual.
  • Human response is enabled but not coerced — God provides conviction, illumination, and grace, yet does not override the person’s capacity to respond in faith.
  • Election is understood in corporate or conditional terms — God chooses “in Christ,” and individuals partake of that election by faith rather than by an unconditional decree.
  • Faith is a real condition for salvation — While faith itself is made possible by God’s grace, it is not irresistibly imposed but freely exercised.

Traditionalist Emphases

  • Salvation originates entirely in God’s gracious initiative — No one seeks God apart from His prior work through the Word and Spirit (John 6:44).
  • The Spirit convicts and draws through the gospel — God uses preaching, Scripture, and conscience as means by which people are brought to genuine repentance and belief.
  • Responsibility and accountability remain intact — Human beings are morally responsible for responding to God’s revelation; unbelief is not blamed on divine withholding.
  • No one is saved apart from personal faith in Christ — Justification is by grace alone through faith alone, not by works, ritual, or heritage (Eph. 2:8–9).
  • Perseverance is grounded in continuing trust in Christ — Assurance flows from an ongoing, living faith that evidences itself in obedience and love.

Shared Non-Reformed Commitments

  • God’s character is both sovereign and just — Divine authority never contradicts God’s goodness, sincerity, or righteousness in calling sinners to repentance.
  • The gospel must be preached indiscriminately — Evangelism is meaningful because anyone who hears may truly come to Christ.
  • Salvation is Christ-centered from beginning to end — From conviction to conversion to perseverance, redemption is accomplished only through the person and work of Jesus.
  • Scripture is the final authority (tota Scriptura) — Doctrinal conclusions must account for both God’s sovereignty and the biblical reality that not all who profess faith are truly regenerate (Matt. 7:21–23; 1 John 2:19).

One Gospel, Three Frameworks: How Salvation Arises

Within conservative evangelical Christianity, sincere believers affirm the authority of Scripture, the necessity of grace, and the centrality of Christ. Yet they differ on how salvation is applied to individuals. Three broad frameworks often emerge: Provisionalism, Traditionalism, and classic Reformed soteriology. These views do not disagree about whether salvation is by grace through faith, but about how grace, human response, and divine sovereignty relate in bringing a sinner to Christ.


I. The Shared Foundation

All three affirm:

  • Salvation is grounded in Christ alone (John 14:6; Acts 4:12).
  • Justification is by grace through faith, not works (Eph. 2:8–9; Rom. 3:28).
  • The gospel must be preached to all people (Matt. 28:19–20).
  • Scripture is the final authority (tota Scriptura), even when passages appear in tension.

The difference lies not in the message of the gospel, but in the mechanism by which sinners come to believe it.


II. Provisionalism

Core Emphasis

Salvation is genuinely available to all; God provides sufficient grace for every person to respond to the gospel without coercion.

Key Distinctives

  • Christ’s atonement is universal in provision.
  • God desires the salvation of every person without exception.
  • Grace enables but does not determine the human response.
  • Election is commonly understood as corporate or conditional upon faith.

Representative Proof Texts

  • John 3:16 – God loved the world; whoever believes may have eternal life.
  • 1 Timothy 2:4 – God “desires all people to be saved.”
  • 2 Peter 3:9 – God is not willing that any should perish.
  • Titus 2:11 – Grace has appeared “bringing salvation for all people.”
  • Matthew 23:37 – Christ laments those who “were not willing.”

Contrast with Reformed Theology

  • Rejects unconditional election: God’s choosing is tied to faith in Christ rather than a prior decree.
  • Denies irresistible grace: God’s call may be genuinely resisted.
  • Sees universal gospel invitations as evidence of universal saving opportunity, not merely universal obligation.

III. Traditionalism (Non-Reformed Conservative Evangelical)

Core Emphasis

God initiates salvation through the Word and Spirit, yet human responsibility in responding to the gospel remains fully real and morally accountable.

Key Distinctives

  • Humanity is fallen and dependent on God’s gracious initiative.
  • The Spirit convicts through Scripture and proclamation, but does not override the will.
  • Faith is a real condition for salvation; unbelief is culpable.
  • Perseverance is tied to continued trust in Christ rather than an unconditional decree.

Representative Proof Texts

  • John 6:44 – No one comes unless the Father draws.
  • Romans 10:17 – Faith comes by hearing the Word of Christ.
  • Acts 16:31 – “Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved.”
  • Deuteronomy 30:19 – A genuine call to choose life.
  • 2 Corinthians 5:20 – God appeals through us: “Be reconciled to God.”

Contrast with Reformed Theology

  • Affirms divine initiative but denies that regeneration must logically precede faith.
  • Rejects a deterministic view of election while maintaining God’s sovereignty.
  • Emphasizes that gospel commands presume a real capacity to respond, even in human weakness.

IV. Classic Reformed Soteriology

Core Emphasis

Salvation arises from God’s sovereign, unconditional grace applied effectually to the elect, ensuring that all whom God intends to save will indeed come to faith.

Key Distinctives

  • Total depravity: Humanity is spiritually unable to come to God apart from regenerating grace.
  • Unconditional election: God chose individuals for salvation before the foundation of the world, not based on foreseen faith.
  • Particular redemption: Christ’s atonement is designed to secure the salvation of the elect.
  • Irresistible grace: God’s inward call effectively brings the elect to faith.
  • Perseverance of the saints: Those truly regenerated will be kept by God to the end.

Representative Proof Texts

  • Ephesians 1:4–5 – Chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world.
  • Romans 8:29–30 – The unbroken chain of foreknowledge, predestination, calling, justification, and glorification.
  • John 6:37, 44 – All whom the Father gives will come; no one comes unless drawn.
  • Acts 13:48 – “As many as were appointed to eternal life believed.”
  • John 10:27–29 – Christ’s sheep hear His voice and are eternally secure.

Contrast with Provisionalism and Traditionalism

  • Interprets universal gospel invitations as commands to repent, not as proof of equal salvific opportunity.
  • Understands human inability as moral and spiritual, not merely relational or informational.
  • Sees regeneration as causally prior to faith, rather than faith as the condition that triggers new birth.

V. Points of Tension: Where the Debate Centers

Question

Provisionalist

Traditionalist

Reformed

Who can respond to the gospel?

All, with enabling grace

All, under conviction by Word and Spirit

Only the elect, by effectual grace

Nature of election

Corporate or conditional

Not unconditional

Unconditional, individual

Grace

Resistible

Resistible

Irresistible

Extent of atonement

Universal in intent

Universal in scope

Particular in design

Order of salvation

Faith → New birth

Faith → Regeneration

Regeneration → Faith


VI. Theological Humility and Scriptural Tension

Each view must wrestle honestly with passages that seem to press in the opposite direction:

  • God’s sovereignty (Rom. 9; Eph. 1)
  • Human responsibility (Acts 17:30; John 5:40)
  • Universal invitations (Isa. 55:1; Rev. 22:17)
  • Warnings about false professions (Matt. 7:21–23; 1 John 2:19)

Faithful interpretation requires tota Scriptura: allowing Scripture to speak in its full range rather than selecting only the texts most congenial to one’s framework.


Sunday, January 4, 2026

When Brothers Turn on Brothers: Internecine Conflict and the Call to Tota Scriptura

 


The Necessity—and Limits—of Doctrinal Distinctives
Appreciating Agreement Without Erasing Difference
Tota Scriptura: Letting All of Scripture Speak
A Better Way Forward

Few things have done more harm to the public witness of Christianity than internecine conflict among those who confess the same Lord. Disagreements within the household of faith are not new; the New Testament itself records sharp disputes, earnest exhortations, and necessary corrections. Yet there is a difference between contending for the faith and consuming one another in the process. When believers turn doctrinal disagreement into personal attack - especially across denominational or theological lines - the result is not clarity but carnage.

This is particularly evident in debates among those within the broad evangelical and Reformed orbit: Reformed theologians, traditionalists, and provisionalists. These streams differ in significant ways, especially regarding soteriology, divine sovereignty, and human responsibility. To pretend otherwise would be dishonest. Doctrinal distinctives matter, and they matter because truth matters. However, the manner in which those distinctives are defended often undermines the very truth being proclaimed.

The Christian faith is not a vague spiritual sentiment; it is a revealed truth grounded in the self-disclosure of God in Scripture. Doctrinal boundaries are therefore unavoidable. The church must teach, clarify, and sometimes draw lines. To abandon doctrinal specificity in the name of unity is not unity at all but confusion.

Yet doctrinal clarity does not require doctrinal hostility. When distinctives become badges of superiority rather than tools for edification, they distort their purpose. Theological systems - whether Reformed, traditionalist, or provisionalist - are attempts to faithfully synthesize biblical data. None are Scripture itself. When systems are absolutized, those who disagree are no longer seen as fellow students of the Word but as adversaries to be defeated.

A healthier posture begins by recognizing that substantial doctrinal agreement already exists. Those across these traditions affirm the authority of Scripture, the deity of Christ, salvation by grace through faith, the necessity of repentance, and the call to holiness. These shared convictions are not marginal; they are foundational. To ignore them while magnifying secondary disagreements is to reverse biblical priorities.

Genuine theological charity does not require minimizing disagreement, but it does require maximizing understanding. Too often, caricatures replace careful listening. Reformed believers are accused of denying human responsibility; provisionalists are accused of denying divine sovereignty; traditionalists are dismissed as inconsistent or evasive. Such accusations may occasionally reflect real tensions, but they more often reveal a failure to appreciate the internal logic and biblical motivations of each position.

When believers take the time to understand one another, they often discover that disagreements arise not from a rejection of Scripture, but from differing judgments about how best to integrate its teaching. This realization should temper rhetoric and foster humility. It reminds us that our interlocutors are not enemies of truth but fellow servants striving - sometimes imperfectly - to be faithful to the same Word.

At the heart of these debates lies a shared commitment that must not be compromised: tota Scriptura. Faithfulness to God requires grappling with the whole counsel of Scripture, not merely the passages that fit comfortably within a preferred framework.

Scripture speaks with unmistakable clarity about God’s sovereignty. God “works all things according to the counsel of his will” (Ephesians 1:11). Salvation is described as God’s gracious initiative, not human achievement. Any theology that mutes these truths does violence to the text.

At the same time, Scripture is equally clear that not all professions of faith are genuine. Jesus Himself warns that some who call Him “Lord” will be turned away (Matthew 7:21–23). The apostle John speaks of those who depart from the faith as revealing that they “were not of us” (1 John 2:19). These passages cannot be dismissed as mere anomalies; they are part of the same inspired canon.

Tota Scriptura requires holding these truths together in tension, even when the tension is uncomfortable. Attempts to resolve the tension by denying either divine sovereignty or the reality of false professions inevitably flatten the biblical witness. Faithfulness does not demand that every mystery be solved, but it does require that no portion of God’s Word be silenced.

Internecine attacks flourish when confidence turns into contempt. The church does not need less conviction; it needs more charity shaped by conviction. When believers speak as though their theological opponents are intellectually dishonest or spiritually deficient, the body of Christ is wounded, and the watching world sees not truth adorned but truth disfigured

A better way forward begins with repentance - repentance for careless words, for pride disguised as orthodoxy, and for a willingness to wound fellow believers in the name of being right. It continues with a renewed commitment to Scripture in its fullness and to one another in love.

Christ prayed that His people would be one, not so that truth and love would be diluted, but so that they would be displayed. When those who affirm the same gospel learn to disagree without devouring one another, they offer a compelling testimony: that truth and love are not rivals, and that the Lord of Scripture is honored when His Word is handled with both reverence and grace.

I left the class this morning feeling as though, like Athanasius contra mundum, the PCA, as articulated by its Elders, presents itself contra non-Reformed. This appears to be an unfortunate result of Scripture-sniping rather than adhering to the tota scriptura we profess.



Friday, January 2, 2026

Westminster Confession of Faith (Chapter 18)

  

Simplified Summary of Chapter 18 (Assurance of Salvation)

  1. False vs. true assurance
    Some people wrongly convince themselves they are saved, but that hope will fail. True believers—those who genuinely trust Christ, love Him, and seek to obey Him—can know in this life that they are saved and can rejoice confidently in God’s promises.

  2. Assurance is certain, not guesswork
    True assurance is not a mere feeling or hopeful guess. It rests on:

    • God’s trustworthy promises

    • Evidence of real spiritual fruit in a believer’s life

    • The Holy Spirit confirming in the heart that one belongs to God

  3. Assurance may take time
    A believer may have real faith yet struggle for a long time before gaining assurance. Still, through ordinary means—Scripture, prayer, obedience—believers can grow into assurance. Seeking assurance strengthens joy, gratitude, and obedience rather than encouraging sin.

  4. Assurance can weaken but not disappear completely
    Even true believers may lose their sense of assurance for a time because of sin, neglect, temptation, or God’s discipline. Yet God never removes saving faith itself. The Spirit preserves them from complete despair and restores assurance in due time.


Five Key Differences: Calvinism vs. Arminianism (Chapter 18)

  1. Ground of assurance

    • Calvinism: Assurance rests on God’s unchanging promises and His sovereign work in the believer.

    • Arminianism: Assurance is often more dependent on the believer’s continued faithfulness and choice.

  2. Possibility of losing salvation

    • Calvinism: Assurance may fade, but salvation itself cannot be lost.

    • Arminianism: Many hold that true believers can fully fall away and lose salvation.

  3. Role of the Holy Spirit

    • Calvinism: The Spirit inwardly testifies and permanently seals believers.

    • Arminianism: The Spirit may assure, but that assurance can be undone if faith is abandoned.

  4. Nature of doubt

    • Calvinism: Doubt affects assurance, not one’s actual standing with God.

    • Arminianism: Doubt may reflect a real danger of losing salvation.

  5. Purpose of assurance

    • Calvinism: Assurance leads to humility, gratitude, holiness, and perseverance.

    • Arminianism: Assurance is often treated cautiously, to avoid presumption or complacency.

Monday, December 22, 2025

Kármán Line

 The Kármán line (often misspelled “Kaman”) is a conceptual boundary used to distinguish Earth’s atmosphere from outer space. Its significance is both practical—for law, engineering, and exploration—and physical, because it marks a regime where the governing constraints on motion change in important ways.


1. What Is the Kármán Line?

The Kármán line is defined as an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 miles) above mean sea level. It is named after Theodore von Kármán, a Hungarian-American aerospace engineer who reasoned that above a certain height, a vehicle would need to travel at orbital velocity to generate enough aerodynamic lift to stay aloft.

At this altitude:

  • The atmosphere is still present, but extremely thin

  • Conventional aircraft flight becomes impossible

  • Spaceflight dynamics dominate over aerodynamic flight

Different organizations use slightly different definitions (for example, the U.S. sometimes uses 50 miles / 80 km), but 100 km has become the international standard.


2. Why the Kármán Line Matters in Space Exploration

a. Transition from Aeronautics to Astronautics

Below the Kármán line:

  • Vehicles rely on aerodynamic lift

  • Motion is governed primarily by fluid dynamics

Above the Kármán line:

  • Lift is negligible

  • Motion is governed by orbital mechanics and Newtonian gravity

This distinction defines:

  • When a craft must behave like a rocket or spacecraft, not an airplane

  • Why rockets, not wings, are required for sustained spaceflight


b. Legal and Political Significance

The Kármán line is often used as the boundary of national airspace:

  • Airspace is subject to national sovereignty

  • Outer space is governed by international law (e.g., the Outer Space Treaty)

This has implications for:

  • Military overflight

  • Commercial space tourism

  • Satellite deployment

  • Liability and jurisdiction


c. Human Spaceflight and Recognition

Crossing the Kármán line is commonly used to define:

  • Who qualifies as an astronaut

  • Whether a mission is considered a spaceflight

Suborbital missions (e.g., early Mercury flights or modern space tourism) may cross this boundary without entering orbit, yet still experience space conditions.


3. What Changes Physically at the Kármán Line?

The Kármán line does not mark a sharp physical boundary, but rather a regime change. Several key physical transitions occur.


a. Atmospheric Density and Lift Collapse

At ~100 km:

  • Atmospheric density is less than one-millionth of sea level

  • Lift force becomes effectively zero

The lift equation:

L=12ρv2SCLL = \frac{1}{2} \rho v^2 S C_L

As air density (ρ\rho) drops:

  • Required velocity for lift increases dramatically

  • Eventually exceeds orbital velocity, making aerodynamic flight impossible


b. Orbital Velocity Becomes Dominant

At this altitude:

  • Orbital velocity ≈ 7.8 km/s

  • A vehicle must be moving sideways fast enough to “fall around the Earth”

Instead of “staying up” by lift:

  • Objects stay aloft by continuous free fall

  • Gravity still acts almost as strongly as at sea level (≈90%)

This marks the shift from supported flight to ballistic or orbital motion.


c. Drag Becomes a Perturbation, Not a Force

Below the Kármán line:

  • Drag is a dominant force

  • Energy loss is rapid

Above it:

  • Drag becomes a small perturbation

  • Satellites can remain in orbit for hours, days, or years (depending on altitude)

This is why:

  • Low Earth orbit satellites slowly decay

  • Reentry heating becomes severe only when descending back into denser layers


d. Thermal and Radiative Environment Changes

Near and above the Kármán line:

  • Heat transfer shifts from convection to radiation

  • Temperature becomes poorly defined due to low particle collisions

  • Exposure to solar radiation and cosmic rays increases

This demands:

  • Thermal shielding

  • Radiation protection

  • Vacuum-compatible materials


4. Human Physiology at the Kármán Line

At ~100 km:

  • Atmospheric pressure is effectively zero

  • Unprotected humans would experience:

    • Ebullism (boiling of bodily fluids)

    • Hypoxia within seconds

    • Rapid loss of consciousness

Thus:

  • Pressurized suits or cabins are essential

  • The line marks a hard boundary for biological survival


5. Philosophical and Scientific Significance

The Kármán line symbolizes humanity’s transition from:

  • Earth-bound motion, constrained by air and lift

  • To cosmic motion, governed by gravity, inertia, and vacuum

It is a reminder that:

  • Space is not “up” but sideways at immense speed

  • The challenge of spaceflight is not escaping gravity, but mastering orbital dynamics


6. Summary

AspectBelow Kármán LineAbove Kármán Line
Dominant PhysicsAerodynamicsOrbital mechanics
LiftPossibleImpossible
DragDominantMinor perturbation
MotionSupported flightFree fall
Legal StatusNational airspaceInternational space

In essence, the Kármán line marks the altitude where air no longer matters and motion becomes fundamentally orbital. It is not a wall in the sky, but a profound shift in how physics, engineering, law, and human ambition intersect as we move from Earth into space.

Physics of Christianity (Frank J. Tipler): An Overview

The aim of the book is not to reduce Christianity to physics, but to argue that Christian doctrines are logically and physically compatible with the deepest structures of cosmology—and, in some cases, even suggested by them.


1. Life and the Ultimate Future of the Universe

A central claim of The Physics of Christianity is that life is not an accidental byproduct of the universe, but something deeply embedded in its long-term evolution. Drawing on cosmology, information theory, and thermodynamics, the book argues that intelligent life can, in principle, persist arbitrarily far into the future—even in a universe approaching collapse or extreme expansion.

Theologically, this resonates with Christian eschatology: history is going somewhere, not drifting toward meaningless entropy. The future resurrection of the dead, eternal life, and the renewal of creation are framed not as poetic metaphors but as outcomes that are not ruled out by physics, and may even be demanded by certain boundary conditions of the universe.


2. God as the Cosmological Singularity

One of the most provocative ideas in the book is the identification of God with the final cosmological singularity—often described as the “Omega Point.” Unlike the initial singularity (the Big Bang), this final singularity is associated with maximal information, consciousness, and control over physical law.

In classical theology, God is:

  • Omniscient (all-knowing)

  • Omnipresent

  • Omnipotent

  • Eternal

Tipler argues that a final singularity could, in principle:

  • Contain all information that ever existed

  • Be present at all points in spacetime (via causal convergence)

  • Exercise effective control over physical processes

  • Exist beyond ordinary temporal limits

Thus, God is not a being inside the universe competing with physical causes, but the ultimate boundary condition of reality itself—consistent with classical Christian metaphysics.


3. Miracles Do Not Violate Physical Law

A key apologetic claim of the book is that miracles do not require violations of physical law. Instead, miracles are extraordinary events that occur through:

  • Boundary conditions

  • Extremely low-probability physical pathways

  • Higher-dimensional or future-determined constraints

In physics, laws describe what happens given certain conditions; they do not prohibit an intelligent agent from arranging those conditions. Just as a programmer can alter outcomes without breaking the rules of computation, God can act within the lawful structure of creation.

This reframes miracles as:

  • Lawful but non-random

  • Purposeful rather than chaotic

  • Compatible with scientific description


4. The Christmas Miracle: The Star of Bethlehem

The Star of Bethlehem is treated as a historical-astronomical phenomenon that could plausibly be:

  • A rare planetary conjunction

  • A nova or supernova

  • A comet with unusual timing and visibility

The book emphasizes that theological significance does not require astronomical impossibility. What matters is not that the star violated physics, but that it was:

  • Precisely timed

  • Interpreted meaningfully

  • Instrumental in guiding the Magi

Thus, divine action is seen as providential orchestration, not cosmic spectacle.


5. The Virgin Birth of Jesus

From a physical standpoint, the virgin birth is extraordinary but not logically contradictory. Biology already includes phenomena such as:

  • Parthenogenesis (in other species)

  • Highly controlled genetic expression

  • Development guided by information rather than chance

Theologically, the virgin birth signifies:

  • Jesus’ full humanity

  • His divine origin

  • A new creation rather than a modified old one

The book argues that if God can specify boundary conditions at the cosmic level, specifying genetic conditions at conception poses no conceptual difficulty.


6. The Resurrection of Jesus

The resurrection is treated as the central empirical claim of Christianity, not merely a spiritual metaphor. From the book’s perspective:

  • Death is a physical process involving information loss

  • Resurrection is the restoration of information

  • Physics does not forbid such restoration in principle

If the universe’s final state contains all information about past states, then bodily resurrection becomes physically conceivable. The resurrection of Jesus is thus presented as:

  • A real historical event

  • A preview of the ultimate fate of humanity

  • Consistent with a universe oriented toward maximal information recovery


7. The Grand Christian Miracle: The Incarnation

The incarnation—the Word becoming flesh—is described as the greatest miracle, not because it breaks physics, but because it unites:

  • Infinite and finite

  • Eternal and temporal

  • Creator and creation

In information-theoretic terms, the incarnation is the embedding of ultimate reality into a localized physical system. This echoes the Christian claim that God does not merely influence the universe from afar but enters it fully, personally, and vulnerably.

The incarnation thus becomes the deepest expression of divine rationality and love.


8. Anti-Semitism Is Anti-Christian

A strong ethical and theological claim of the book is that anti-Semitism is fundamentally anti-Christian. Christianity is inseparable from:

  • The Jewish Scriptures

  • The Jewish Messiah

  • The Jewish context of Jesus and the apostles

To reject the Jewish people is to reject:

  • The covenantal history God chose

  • The very identity of Christ

  • The moral foundations of Christian theology

The book frames anti-Semitism not merely as a moral failing but as a theological contradiction.


9. The Problem of Evil and Free Will

The book approaches the problem of evil through the lens of free will and future optimization. Genuine freedom requires:

  • Real alternative possibilities

  • The capacity for moral failure

  • A world with stable, predictable laws

Evil is not attributed to divine indifference but to the cost of creating beings capable of love, creativity, and moral responsibility. Moreover, if the universe’s final state includes:

  • Ultimate justice

  • Restoration of suffering

  • Full moral accounting

Then present evil does not have the final word.


Concluding Assessment

The Physics of Christianity is not a traditional theology text, nor a standard physics book. It is a bold attempt to show that:

  • Christianity is not anti-scientific

  • Miracles are not irrational

  • God is not a “gap-filler” in scientific ignorance

  • The Christian narrative aligns with a universe that is intelligible, purposeful, and future-directed

Whether one accepts all of its arguments or not, the book challenges the assumption that faith and physics must be enemies—and instead invites readers to see them as two lenses focused on the same ultimate reality.

Liberty of Conscience (WCF Ch. XX)