“In the Beginning…” — The Scientific Accuracy of the Bible’s First Words
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” (Genesis 1:1)
The Hebrew word for “In the beginning,” Bereshit (בראשית), does not merely signify a start in time. It declares the simultaneous origin of time, space, and matter. Today, modern science is finally catching up to the profound truth hidden in this single sentence written thousands of years ago.
1. Science Once Scoffed at the Bible
Just 100 years ago, the mainstream scientific community believed the “Steady State Theory”—the idea that the universe was eternal, with no beginning and no end. They mocked the biblical account of a “beginning” as unscientific.
- Einstein’s “Biggest Blunder”: When Einstein’s equations suggested an expanding universe, he was so uncomfortable with the implication of a beginning that he inserted a “Cosmological Constant” to force the universe into a static state.
- The Turning Point: Later, the Hubble Telescope confirmed that galaxies are moving away from us. In 1965, the discovery of Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation effectively ended the debate: the universe definitely had a beginning.
[!NOTE]
Key Insight: The Bible declared a beginning for the universe long before human instruments could prove it.

2. Can “Something” Come from “Nothing”?
Modern atheistic scientists often claim the universe arose “from nothing” to bypass the need for a Creator. However, there is a catch in their definition of “nothing.”
- A Redefined “Nothing”: When these scientists say “nothing,” they usually mean a Quantum Vacuum—a field fluctuating with energy.
- The Debt Analogy: Claiming a universe came from nothing because the total energy sums to zero is like saying a person with $1 billion in assets and $1 billion in debt has “nothing.” In reality, both the assets and the debt exist.
- The Verdict: True “nothingness” (the absence of anything) cannot produce “something.” Only a transcendent cause outside of time and space can explain the transition from non-existence to existence.
3. Probability vs. Chaos: Can an Explosion Create Order?
The Big Bang is often described as a massive explosion. Common sense tells us that explosions result in chaos and destruction, not complex architecture.
- The Law of Entropy: Thermodynamics dictates that systems move toward disorder over time. The odds of an explosion resulting in a functional, beautiful skyscraper are zero.
- The Fine-Tuned Universe: Physicist Roger Penrose calculated the probability of our orderly universe occurring by chance as 1 in 10(10^123). This number is so large that it is mathematically equivalent to “impossible.”
- Evidence of Design: The universe is not a byproduct of a random accident; it is a masterpiece of precision, fine-tuned to an unimaginable degree.
4. Returning to Common Sense
Many scientists observe the undeniable “appearance of design” in the cosmos but dismiss it as an “illusion of design.” They enter their labs with a pre-existing bias: that a supernatural Creator must be ruled out at all costs.
However, if we return to basic logic and common sense, the conclusion is clear:
- The Universe had a beginning.
- Something cannot come from nothing.
- Complex order requires an Intelligent Designer.
The fact that Genesis accurately recorded the origin of the universe millennia ago is powerful evidence that the Bible is indeed the Word of God.

