George Hobson

Imago Dei: Man/Woman Created in the Image of God


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level of reality deeper even than the concepts of energy and matter and not reducible to them.3 He thinks that this concept of “information” will be a main focus of research for the rest of this century.

      Where does all this order come from? How can we best explain the regularities and patterns within nature, which we call laws, and which, to a real extent, we can discover and elucidate by mathematics? How is it that even what we call chance occurrences at the quantum level are not manifestations of chaotic randomness but are events within a larger, apparently ordered framework? It would seem that there are only two explanations on offer today: the first is the existence of multiple parallel universes, perhaps infinite in number, of which ours, by chance, happened to turn out this way; the second is that an all-powerful creative mind—God—created the universe in just this way. The first possibility, without any basis in observation or experiment, seems, to many scientists, believers in God or not, to be a completely unscientific flight on mathematical wings into metaphysical fantasy in order to escape the second possibility—the one that points to God—which provides a far simpler and indeed much more probable metaphysical explanation of the order we find in the universe.

      The biblical texts in the Old and New Testaments that I alluded to earlier, which speak of the Creator God and his creation, provide a plausible underpinning for the second hypothesis. The Triune God, who imagines, speaks, and breathes out the cosmos, is an inconceivably powerful, personal, rational mind, and the cosmos he created by his Word, the Logos, is therefore orderly and rational; man, because he is created in the image of this personal, rational God—of this Logos—and because he is given moreover the mandate to exercise dominion over the creation and is therefore designed to be able to know it, possesses in consequence the rational capacity, through mathematics, to do, among other things, what we call science, that is, to fruitfully investigate God’s handiwork that we call nature and to discover its inner workings and laws.

      The convergence of so many apparent coincidences among the primordial variables, all of them a priori independent of each other, demands an explanation other than chance. The presence of such precision had nothing to do with natural selection, obviously. The laws of nature that underlie the possibility of biological evolution were in place from the beginning of the universe, long before the mechanisms of biological evolution came into play; and it is becoming clear that they are still operative in the processes of biological development, though exactly how has yet to be discerned. But in themselves these basic laws, whose very existence to begin with remains an unfathomable mystery, cannot explain the emergence of life and the increasing information needed for the development of that life.

      The order of the universe, and the special order peculiar to Earth, display a stunning particularity which manages to hold in a kind of equilibrium the rigidity of regimented structures and patterns such as crystals, with the random unpredictability of quantum activity. Law and chance operating together are required for the universe we know to have evolved the way it has done. There is constraint and there is openness; there is structure and there is freedom; there is stability and there is dynamism; there is necessity, in the sense of law, and there is contingency. But all these balancing features that structure reality are not inherently necessary to that reality; they are contingent; things could have been different. These features are imposed upon the universe by the free will of the Creator. Their order and rationality are not necessary in themselves, but are reflections of the rational nature of the God who willed them into being. And this order is intelligible to human beings because we are made in the image of that God. But, of course, our rational powers are limited; we are finite creatures, we cannot fathom everything. In what way, for instance, the astounding progressive complexification of life, involving evolutionary process and emergence, was contained potentially in the unimaginable release of energy at the Big Bang and in the initial cosmological conditions and forces that quickly channeled that energy, remains a mystery.

      Such order, and the interconnectivity of all aspects of the universe, as illustrated again by the recently discovered phenomenon of nonlocality mentioned earlier—a phenomenon that seems to escape the constraints of cosmological law as presently understood—does appear to point in the direction