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About this book
What if the core arguments for atheism reveal that God actually exists?
With a rising dependence on science and rational thought in today's culture, religion is often dismissed as "outdated" or "illogical" and atheism is gaining a wider audience. But award-winning author Dr. Frank Turek provides a strong case for how atheists steal logic, reasoning, evidence and science from God in order to support their claims.
A result of careful study, Stealing from God exposes the intellectual crimes atheists are committing by taking a closer look at:
"An unassailable case for the truth of Christianity." âEric Metaxas, New York Times bestselling author
"Provides powerful and clear answers to questions of enduring importance for every thinking person." âDr. John Lennox, professor of mathematics at Oxford University
"Will change the way you think about the world and equip you to defend what you believe." âJ. Warner Wallace, author of Cold-Case Christianity
With a rising dependence on science and rational thought in today's culture, religion is often dismissed as "outdated" or "illogical" and atheism is gaining a wider audience. But award-winning author Dr. Frank Turek provides a strong case for how atheists steal logic, reasoning, evidence and science from God in order to support their claims.
A result of careful study, Stealing from God exposes the intellectual crimes atheists are committing by taking a closer look at:
- Causalityâhow did the universe originate?
- Reasonâwhat does atheism mean for truth?
- Information & IntentionalityâGod's signature in creation
- Moralityâobjective morality without God
- Evilâis evil a contradiction for atheism?
- Scienceâhow theism makes science possible
- And a powerful 4-point case for Christianity
"An unassailable case for the truth of Christianity." âEric Metaxas, New York Times bestselling author
"Provides powerful and clear answers to questions of enduring importance for every thinking person." âDr. John Lennox, professor of mathematics at Oxford University
"Will change the way you think about the world and equip you to defend what you believe." âJ. Warner Wallace, author of Cold-Case Christianity
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Information

Chapter 1Causality
NO ONE CREATED SOMETHING OUT OF NOTHING?
To doubt the law of causality is to doubt virtually everything we know about reality, including our ability to reason and do science. All arguments, all thinking, all science, and all aspects of life depend on the law of causality.
JOHN WAS STANDING at the front of the long question line at the University of Michigan. As a former Christian, now atheist, he was eager to challenge something I said during my I Donât Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist presentation. Over four hundred people were waiting.
I had just given three arguments for the existence of God. One of which was the Cosmological argument, which claims that if the universe had a beginning then it must have had a cause. It goes like this:
- Everything that has a beginning has a cause.
- The universe had a beginning.
- Therefore, the universe had a cause.
This argument isnât new. Philosophers in the Middle Ages championed this argument when they realized that today never would have arrived if there were an infinite number of days before today.[1] Since today is here, the universe must have had a beginning. However, until the twentieth century, most scientists thought the universe was eternal. Itâs now uncontroversial among scientists to admit that the universeâspace, time, and matterâhad a definite beginning, with a âbig bangâ in the distant past.
I say âuncontroversialâ because the scientific evidence now is so strong that even most atheists agree that the space-time continuum we call the universe had a beginning. For example, prominent atheist Stephen Hawking observes, âAlmost everyone now believes that the universe and time itself had a beginning at the big bang.â[2] Indeed, at Hawkingâs seventieth birthday celebration, cosmologist Alexander Vilenkin (who is an agnostic) said, âAll the evidence we have says that the universe had a beginning.â[3] The point of controversy isnât the beginning, but who or what caused the beginning.
Thatâs where John had a problem. He was protesting my suggestion that God was the cause.
But there are good reasons for positing God. If space, time, and matter had a beginning, then the cause must transcend space, time, and matter. In other words, the cause must be spaceless, timeless, and immaterial. This cause also must be enormously powerful to create the universe out of nothing. And it must be a personal agent in order to choose to create, since an impersonal force has no capacity to choose to create anything. Agents create. Impersonal forces, which we call natural laws, merely govern what is already created, provided agents donât interfere.[4]
For example, gravity as an impersonal force canât decide anything. It blindly does the same thing over and over again. A personal agent, on the other hand, doesnât necessarily do the same thing over and over again. He or she could do something unique, like decide to create something.
So we are left with a spaceless, timeless, immaterial, powerful, personal first cause. That sounds an awful lot like a theistic God.
John wasnât buying it. Yet, instead of offering evidence for a cause other than God, John resorted to faith. Echoing atheist Richard Dawkins, John forcefully declared into the microphone, âWe have to give science more time! If we give science more time, one day we will find a natural cause for the universe.â
âThat sounds a lot like faith,â I said. âYou have faith that science will one day find a cause.â
Given our advances in science and technology, Johnâs faith may seem reasonable. After all, hasnât science continually pushed God out of the picture by finding natural causes for so many phenomena previously thought to be the direct result of divine action? Why shouldnât we expect the same for the universe?
While I agreed with John that we should always challenge scientific conclusions and seek to improve our understanding, that doesnât mean the scientific method will be able to find a natural cause for every effect. The universe is the biggest example.
Since nature had a beginning, nature canât be its own cause. The cause must be beyond nature, which is what we mean by the term âsupernatural.â
John was quick to charge me with committing the âGod of the gapsâ fallacy. When we canât figure out a natural cause, we plug God into that gap in knowledge and say that He did it. Thatâs not only wrong, itâs âlazy,â as many atheists assert.
But thatâs not whatâs going on here. I explained that we are not basing our conclusion on a mere âgapâ in our knowledge. Those of us who conclude that a theistic God is the cause of the universe are not arguing from what we donât know (a gap), but what we do know. Since space, time, and matter had a beginning, we know that the cause canât be made of space, time, or matter. In fact, the conclusion that there is a spaceless, timeless, immaterial, powerful, personal first cause flows logically from the evidence itself.
If anyone is committing a fallacy, it is the atheist. Call it the ânatural law of the gaps fallacyââhaving faith that an undiscovered natural law will one day explain the beginning of the universe.
And thatâs exactly what John did. He went back to insist that through science we will one day find a natural cause for all of nature.
I said, âJohn, we will never find a natural cause for all of nature.â
âWe will!â he insisted.
âNo, John, we canât in principle. If nature had a beginning, then the cause canât be something natural because nature didnât exist. Nature was the effect, so it canât be the cause. The cause must be something beyond nature, or supernatural.â
I used this comparison to help communicate the point: âWhen you say, âGive me more time and Iâll discover a natural cause for the universe,â thatâs like me saying, âGive me more time and Iâll discover that I gave birth to my own mother! Itâs impossible in principle, John.ââ
Perhaps I did a bad job of explaining it because he still wasnât persuaded. On the other hand, there is a difference between proof and persuasion. One can prove a point, but that doesnât mean that a particular person will be persuaded by it. At least John agreed that the universe needs a cause. Other atheists are suggesting that it doesnâtâthat somehow the universe popped into existence out of nothing without a cause.
That was the assertion of an atheist at Texas A&M, where I was again presenting the Cosmological argument. I summed up the argument this way: âSince the universe had a beginning, it must have had a beginner. The evidence leaves us with one of the following two options, either:
- No one created something out of nothing, which is the atheistâs view, or
- Someone created something out of nothing, which is the theistâs view.â
I then asked rhetorically, âWhich view is more reasonable?â With that, an atheist blurted out, âOption one is more reasonableâno one created something out of nothing!â
Option oneâIs he serious?
Letâs look at option two first. Option two says that someone created something out of nothing. Now, that is a miracle. But at least there is a miracle workerââsomeone.â Option one is a miracle with no miracle worker. Thatâs clearly absurd.
I said to the audience at A&M that night, âTo show you how seriously we believe in the law of causalityâthat everything that comes to be has a causeâthere is no one here tonight who is worried that a hippopotamus has just appeared uncaused, out of nothing, in your dorm room and is currently defecating on your carpet!â
Dr. William Lane Craig asks an excellent question: If atheists are going to claim that things can pop into existence uncaused out of nothing, then why doesnât everything do so? Why donât iPads, Teslas, atheist books, and pizzas pop into existence out of nothing? If youâre hungry for a pizza right now, does it make more sense to order one or just wait and hope? Talk about faith.
Now, where would anyone get this idea that the universe could pop into existence out of nothing without God? From physicist Lawrence Krauss.
Explaining Nothing
If Richard Dawkins is the atheistâs rock star of biology, Lawrence Krauss is the atheistâs rock star of physics (maybe only second to Stephen Hawking). An engaging speaker, Dr. Krauss is a theoretical physicist and professor at Arizona State University. While admitting that he canât definitely disprove God, Krauss describes himself as âan anti-theist, as my friend Christopher Hitchens was.â[5] He âcelebratesâ that by his estimation there is no evidence for God. So itâs not just that Dr. Krauss doesnât believe in Godâhe doesnât want there to be a God.[6]
Itâs fortunate for him then that heâs solved an absolutely puzzling question for atheists: If there is no God, why is there something rather than nothing? At least thatâs what the title of his book implies: A Universe from Nothing: Why There Is Something Rather than Nothing. But the devil is in the details.
What are the details? Krauss says the cause of the universe is not Godâit is ânothing.â He cites happenings at the quantum level to dispense with the need for God. (The quantum level is the world of the extremely small, subatomic in size.)
âOne of the things about quantum mechanics is not only can nothing become something, nothing always becomes something,â says Dr. Krauss. âNothing is unstable. Nothing will always produce something in quantum mechanics.â[7]
Now, whenever you hear something that just doesnât sound right, you ought to ask the person making the claim, âWhat do you mean by that?â In this case, the precise question to Dr. Krauss would be, âWhat do you mean by ânothingâ?â
It turns out that Dr. Kraussâs definition of ânothingâ is not the ânothingâ from which the universe originated. The initial starting point of the universe was not a quantum vacuum, which Dr. Krauss keeps referring to in his book. The initial starting point of the universe was nonbeingâliterally no thing, zip, zero, nada.
A quantum vacuum is somethingâit consists of fields of fluctuating energy from which particles appear to pop in and out of existence. Whether these particles are caused or uncaused is unknown. It could be that they are caused but we simply canât discover or predict how that happens. There are at least ten different plausible models of the quantum level, and no one knows which is correct. What we do know is that, whatever is happening there, it is not creation out of nothing. Moreover, the vacuum isnât eternal. The vacuum itself had a beginning and therefore needs a cause.
Lest you think I am mad to question the physics of Dr. Krauss, please note that I am more questioning his logic, which is required to do science of any kind. Dr. Krauss is committing the logical fallacy known as equivocationâthat is, using the same word in an argument but with two different definitions. The ânothingâ in the title of Dr. Kraussâs book is not the ânothingâ from which the universe came.
This critical distinction was not lost on fellow atheist Dr. David Albert. A PhD in theoretical physics, Dr. Albert is a professor at Columbia University and author of the book Quantum Mechanics and Experience. In his scathing review of Kraussâs book in the New York Times, Dr. Albert questions both Kraussâs logic and his physics. He pulls no punches and even uses his fist to illustrate.
Correcting Kraussâs central claim that particles emerging from the quantum vacuum are like creation out of nothing, Dr. Albert writes:
Thatâs just not right. Relativistic-quantum-field-theoretical vacuum statesâno less than giraffes or refrigerators or solar systemsâare particular arrangements of elementary physical stuff. . . . The fact that some arrangements of fields happen to correspond to the existence of particles and some donât is not a whit more mysterious than the fact that some of the possible arrangements of my fingers happen to correspond to the existence of a fist and some donât. And the f...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Endorsements
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Dedication
- Introduction: Is It a Wonderful Life?
- Chapter 1: Causality
- Chapter 2: Reason
- Chapter 3: Information & Intentionality
- Chapter 4: Morality
- Chapter 5: Evil
- Chapter 6: Science
- Chapter 7: The Four-Point Case for Mere Christianity
- Chapter 8: Conclusion: God Will Not Force You into Heaven Against Your Will
- Acknowledgments
- Scripture Index
- Subject Index
- About the Author