So Big Bang has to be proven but God just is?
Never said that. [Neither has to be proven. Neither can be proven.]
Despite how complicated this discussion may seem to the casual observer, it's really simple:
@stu wanted a discussion, so I gave my opinions--boy was he upset:
Neither (big bang theory, creationism) can be rigorously proven to a scientific certainty. Full stop.
Both require faith in an initial premise. Full stop.
This premise can't be mathematically derived. Full stop.
@stu doesn't seem to enjoy the fact that belief in how the whole universe was created, necessarily requires some sort of initial 'given' to be assumed true; as the foundation to all that follows from that initial 'birth' of the universe; or birth of the precursors to the universe (strings, membranes, whatever it was that went BANG!, God).
Bottom line: If either could've be proven by now, they would've been proven. So it boils down to ... a choice.
I'm not sure who hurt @stu, but I'm praying for him.

EDIT: These sorts of debates tend to assume that the two creation beliefs are mutually exclusive. They are not. As long as science can also not answer the "Why?" question (Why did it go BANG! Why were the membranes there in the first place?)--it's possible that "science explains how, God explains why." But that's a different discussion.
"And if it seem evil unto you to serve the LORD, choose you this day whom ye will serve; whether the gods which your fathers served that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell: but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD."
Last edited:
Let me guess, product of a christian school "education" (I speak from experience). I would highly recommend you take a course on the scientific method, the kind usually taught in middle school science classes. The big bang is a scientific theory (just like everything in science, including gravity). It is the best consensus explanation we currently have for what we observe. No one "believes" in it, in fact those most involved in studying the origins of the universe will tell you that it is certainly wrong in at least several key areas and potentially or even probably entirely wrong. They actually spend their lives trying to figure out which parts are wrong to improve our understanding of what happened at the beginning of the universe.
)