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QUANTUM PHYSICS AND FAITH
The twentieth century ushered in the age of quantum physics, often called quantum mechanics or quantum theory. Until that
time, the world had run happily on Newtonian principles of physics, perhaps illustrated best by the law of gravity. But by the
beginning of the twentieth century the atomic age was being introduced and physicists were realizing that the tiny sub-atomic
particles did not react according to the laws of Newton.
The physicist Max Planck is credited with introducing the Quantum Era in 1900. He realized that light energy came in discreet
packets (quanta) and not just in waves. Thus the wave-particle duality of light became known. However, it was really Albert
Einstein who made many of the basic discoveries in the years of 1905 and 1916. It was Einstein who was later called the most
famous scientist of the twentieth century.
It is interesting that the Quantum Era began with studies concerning light (Peat p.1). It is also interesting that as our quantum age
has progressed, many of our discoveries and inventions relate to light in some way. Without the understandings of light in the
quantum sense there would be no computers, copiers, lasers and hundreds and perhaps thousands of other “light-based” inventions.
In 1921 Einstein was awarded the Nobel Prize for his correct explanation of the photoelectric effect (Wolf p.71).
QUANTUM ENERGY
No doubt Einstein’s most famous discovery was his formula E=mc2. Most of us have heard this formula all our lives but
probably few of us could describe what it means. One of Einstein’s greatest insights was his realization that matter and energy are
different forms of the same thing and that they are interchangeable. Thus, matter can be turned into energy and energy can be
turned into matter.
In Einstein’s famous formula the “E” stands for “energy.” The “m” stands for mass and “c” stands for the speed of light in a
vacuum. Obviously, this formula helped usher us into the atomic age where small amounts of fissionable material could produce
gigantic explosions through the means of atomic bombs.
Marcus Chown elaborates on this saying: “The physicists’ symbol for the speed of light, “c,” is a big number – 300 million
meters [186,000 miles] per second. Squaring it- multiplying it by itself- creates an even bigger number. Applying the formula to 1
kilogram of matter shows that it contains 9x1016 joules of energy- enough to lift the entire population of the world into space!” (Chown
pp.114-115). By this formula the energy in the mass of an average human being would amount to that released by a 1,000 megaton
nuclear bomb. This would be approximately 100,000 times the energy that was released by the bomb that fell on Hiroshima
(Tipler p. 38).
When we bring this down to the Bible and to the creation of the world we must realize what an astounding amount of energy it
took to create from nothing the world and the universe. The Son of God as the agent of creation spoke the whole universe into
existence. We are awed by the vast and incredible power display of the word of God both to create the universe and to sustain it to
this present moment (Jn. 1:3; Heb. 1:3). In the Hebrew language, “word” is “devar” and “things” are “devarim.” After all these
centuries “word” and “created things” have a very close connection. When God speaks, things happen.
SPACE AND TIME
With the introduction of the Quantum Era our understandings of space and time necessarily had to change. We are now told
that we must understand the two as a space-time continuum since they form a unity. For instance, if we could approach the speed
of light we would see time lose its relevancy. In fact, a person would age slower as the speed grew faster. Chown remarks at this
point how science becomes much stranger than science fiction (Chown vii). It also makes the eternal life that God has promised to
those who believe in him seem not so far-fetched after all.
The matter of space-time and the speed of light have bearing on how we interpret the six days of creation mentioned in the
Bible. Gerald Schroeder reminds us that the “time” described in the Bible creation account is not the same as we know time today.
He also reminds us that time only began when matter was formed (Schroeder 42, 52, 56). We should note also that there were no natural
lights (sun, moon and stars) until the fourth day (Gen. 1:14-19). Long ago, “St. Augustine gave an answer that should deeply
impress modern cosmologists. He said that there was no time ‘before’ the Beginning” (Sitzer p.19). We can see that some
understanding of quantum physics (including cosmology and relativity) would end the old arguments about the earth being created in
six natural 24-hour days.
Einstein was once quoted as saying: “For us physicists, the distinction between past, present, and future is only an illusion”
(Chown p.104). The Bible’s understanding of our living in this present age while we partake of many advantages of the age to come
(Eph. 1:3) makes a little better sense as we look at it through the eyes of quantum physics.
NONLOCALITY
Quantum physics has turned up many weird and strange things. It has been proven that atoms can do several things at once.
This is the basis of the idea for a quantum computer that supposedly can do numerous tasks and calculations simultaneously. The
physicists now know that atoms can penetrate impenetrable barriers. Physicists have actually demonstrated these weird
performances in the lab (Chown pp. 25-27). Perhaps now the miracle of Jesus walking through closed doors (Jn. 20:26) will not sound so
strange to the skeptics.
There is also a very peculiar connection within the vast universe itself. Although parts of the universe are separated by millions
of light years, yet there seems to be an instant response between these parts, in what appears as a total violation of the speed-of-light
barrier. Chown compares it to a couple in love, that no matter how far they are apart they remain somehow connected (Chown
pp. 53, 56).
How is it possible for the far reaches of the universe to respond together immediately? In the scripture we see the morning
stars singing together (Job 38:7). On one occasion small and beleaguered Israel was compelled to go to war against a heavily armed
despot by the name of Sisera. Amazingly Sisera, although he had many chariots and a vast army, was totally and miraculously
overwhelmed. The Bible tells us why. In Judges 5:20 it is said: “From the heavens the stars fought, from their courses they fought
against Sisera.”
THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE
Quantum physicists tell us that we cannot know the velocity and location of a particle at the same time. The very act of
determining the velocity makes the location uncertain (Chown p. 40). Because of this Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, and other
seeming mysteries like it, we cannot be too certain about the universe in which we live. Richard Feynman, who was probably one of
the most outstanding physicists of the twentieth century once said: “I think I can safely say that nobody understands quantum
mechanics” (Chown p.72).
Even the atom itself is full of mystery and uncertainty. The world is made up of atoms but they are exceedingly small. It has
been calculated that it would take about ten million atoms to reach across a period. Also some 99.9999999999999 percent of the
atom is almost completely empty since its nucleus is so tiny. Chown says that atoms are “no more substantial than a ghost” (Chown p.
12). Fred Alan Wolf pictures the atomic nucleus like a single grain of rice in the middle of a football stadium with electrons somehow
whirling around through the open space (Wolf p.75). Strangely, when sub-atomic particles are alone they act in weird ways but when
they clump together to make an object they act normally as they do in classical physics. This is called the Principle of
Correspondence.
David Peat has summed it up saying “Quantum theory introduced uncertainty into physics; not an uncertainty that arises out of
mere ignorance but a fundamental uncertainty about the very universe itself” (Peat p. 24).
Perhaps God has designed the universe in just such a way as to keep scientists and the rest of us humble. God says that the
wisdom of man is foolishness (1 Cor. 3:19). The Bible also says in 1 Corinthians 13:12, “Now we see but a poor reflection as in a
mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
A BEGINNING FOR THE UNIVERSE
Starting with the Greeks and continuing through much of the twentieth century scientists generally believed in a static
universe. Einstein by his own theories proved that the universe was in motion. Einstein was himself a paradox and some have called
him the last of the classical physicists. He was actually so upset with his findings that he built into his formula a “fudge-factor” to
show the universe as remaining static. Later the astronomer Edwin Hubble corrected Einstein by showing that the universe was
flying apart like cosmic shrapnel. Einstein had missed one of his greatest discoveries and he later called it the biggest blunder of his
life (Chown p.144).
In order to satisfy the changing information on the universe scientists formulated the Big Bang theory in the 1960s. They
explained by this theory that somehow the universe began with a massive explosion. Since that time, physics has been left with the
task of also explaining what or who caused this Big Bang. As far back as the Greek Parmenides it has been known that “from
nothing, only nothing comes” (Spitzer p. 45).
Amazingly, “From the time of Aristotle, 2,300 years ago, scientific theory held the universe to be eternal…Through the early
1960s in the face of mounting evidence to the contrary, two thirds of leading U.S. scientists surveyed believed it. For 3,300 years,
since the revelation on Sinai, the Bible denied it, steadfastly claiming there was a beginning to our universe” (Schroeder p. 22). How
recently has science caught up with religion!
The great Nobel Prize winning physicist Arno Penzias remarks about this quantum quandary saying: “Astronomy leads us to a
unique event, a universe which was created out of nothing, and delicately balanced to provide exactly the conditions required to
support life. In the absence of an absurdly improbably accident, the observations of modern science seem to suggest an
underlying…supernatural plan” (Spitzer p. 13).
RELATIVITY
Einstein’s theory of 1916 has been called the General Theory of Relativity. This was not Einstein’s choice of names and in
some ways it has been unfortunate. In the permissive twentieth century many people assumed that Einstein’s relativity applied to
almost everything, even to their morals or lack of them.
The General Theory of Relativity has changed the way we look at space and time. “Space and time are ‘inextricably bound
together.’ The Universe we see ‘out there’ is not a thing that extends in space but a thing that extends in space-time” (Chown p.103).
Albert Einstein did not ascribe to the Jewish faith into which he was born and neither did he ever really join the Christian faith.
He was however a deeply religious person. He once said, “science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind” (Jammer p.
120). Einstein held to what he called his “cosmic religious experience” and once called it “the strongest and noblest driving force
behind scientific research” (Jammer p. 80).
In Einstein’s wake we are left with a universe that is mysteriously bound together and even more mysteriously held in place. It
is a universe that had a cause and was created.
Many contemporary physicists such as Arno Penzias, Roger Penrose, Owen Gingerich, John Polkinghorne, Fred Hoyle, and
Paul Davies now feel that our universe had a designing intelligence behind it (Spitzer p. 49).
We Christians seem to be in a unique place to submit our humble answer to the great puzzle of modern physics – how did the
universe begin? We can answer with all confidence in the words of Colossians 1:16-17: “For by him [Jesus] all things were created:
things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him
and for him. He is before all things, and in him all things hold together.”
-Jim Gerrish
Publication 2011
Marcus Chown, The Quantum Zoo (Washington D.C.: Joseph Henry Press, 2006).
Max Jammer, Einstein and Religion (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1999).
F. David Peat, From Certainty to Uncertainty (Washington: Joseph Henry Press, 2002).
Gerald Schroeder, The Science of God (NY: Free Press, 1997).
Robert J. Spitzer, New Proofs for the Existence of God (Grand Rapids: W.B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2010).
Frank J. Tipler, The Physics of Christianity (NY: Doubleday, 2007).
Fred Alan Wolf, Taking the Quantum Leap (Grand Rapids: Harper & Row, 1989).
Many thanks to Charles Eklund, my physicist friend, for his suggestions and corrections.
Picture credit Wikimedia Commons. In 2010 ESO Photo Ambassador Yuri Beletsky snapped this photo at ESO’s Paranal Observatory. A astronomers were
observing the centre of the Milky Way using the laser guide star facility at Yepun, one of the four Unit Telescopes of the Very Large Telescope (VLT).
