Where did the universe come from? A person of faith would probably answer that the universe was created out of nothing, as stated in the first verse of the Torah. Such an answer was long considered a scientific impossibility, because it contradicted the law of the conservation of matter and energy. According to this law of science, which was established in the middle of the nineteenth century, matter and energy can be changed from one form to another, but something cannot come from nothing. Therefore, scientists viewed the universe as eternal, thus neatly avoiding questions regarding its origin. The Torah assertion that the universe was created, presumably from nothing, became an area of conflict between Torah and science. That is how matters stood for many years.
This situation has now completely changed. The twentieth century witnessed an unprecedented explosion of scientific knowledge, which was nowhere more dramatic than in cosmology, the discipline that deals with the origin and development of the universe. Astronomers had been studying the heavenly bodies for thousands of years, but their studies dealt exclusively with charting the paths of the stars, planets, and comets, and determining their composition, spectrum, and other properties. The origin of the heavenly bodies remained a complete mystery.
Today, an overwhelming body of scientific evidence supports the “big bang” theory of cosmology.
Important advances in cosmology during the past few decades have, for the first time, permitted scientists to construct a coherent history of the origin of the universe.
Today, an overwhelming body of scientific evidence supports the “big bang” theory of cosmology.1 There are four major pieces of evidence: (1) the discovery in 1965 of the remnant of the initial ball of light, (2) the hydrogen-to-helium ratio in the universe, (3) the Hubble expansion of the galaxies, and (4) the perfect black-body spectrum of the microwave background radiation measured by the COBE space satellite in 1990.
Only the big bang theory can account for all these observations, and therefore this theory is now accepted by all mainstream cosmologists.
The most surprising assertion of the big bang theory is that the universe was literally created from nothing. It is instructive here to quote the world’s leading authorities:
“It seems certain that there was a definite time of creation.”2 Professor Paul Dirac, Nobel laureate from the University of Cambridge
“The instant of creation remains unexplained.”3 Professor Alan Guth, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
“The creation lies outside the scope of the known laws of physics.”4 Professor Stephen Hawking, University of Cambridge
“The big bang is the modern version of creation.”5 Professor Joseph Silk, University of California
Today, it is not possible to carry on a meaningful discussion of cosmology without the creation of the universe assuming a central role. Professor Brian Greene, a theoretical physicist at Columbia University, wrote in 1999: “The modern theory of cosmic origins asserts that the universe erupted from an enormously energetic event, which spewed forth all space and all matter.”6
When cosmologists use the term “creation,” to what are they referring? Precisely what object was created? Scientists have discovered that the universe began with the sudden appearance of an enormous ball of light, commonly called the “primeval light-ball.” This “explosion of light” was dubbed the “big bang” by British astrophysicist Fred Hoyle. The remnant of the initial ball of light was detected in 1965 by two American physicists, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, who were awarded the Nobel Prize for their discovery.
“The laws of nature came into existence together with the Big Bang, as did space and time.”
People sometimes ask what existed before the big bang, the event that marked the creation of the universe. Professor John Wheeler of Princeton University explains that the very concept of time did not exist before the creation. “There was no ‘before’ prior to the Big Bang. The laws of nature came into existence together with the Big Bang, as did space and time.”7 Wheeler emphasizes that scientists view space and time as the “stage” upon which events take place. If there is no physical world – if the universe does not exist – then neither time nor space can exist. “Time” and “space” are not independent entities; these concepts have meaning only after the creation of the physical universe.
This property of time and space can be illustrated by analogy to the concept of color. “Red” or “black” are not characteristics that are independent of any physical object. Only if macroscopic objects exist, such as grass, rocks, or houses, can one speak of these objects as being red or black. If nothing but atoms and molecules existed, then there would be no meaning to “red” or “black,” or to the entire concept of colour. There is no such thing as a red molecule. In the same way, there were no concepts of time and space before the universe came into being.
Creation and the Torah
In addition to confirming the creation of the universe, the discovery of the initial primeval light by Penzias and Wilson also answers another long-standing puzzle regarding the Torah account of creation. It is written in the Torah on the First Day of Creation: And there was light (Genesis 1:3). But at that time, there existed neither stars, nor sun, nor moon, nor people, nor any other known source of light. Therefore, how can one understand this “light”?
Scientists have now discovered that there was light at the very beginning of time: the primeval light-ball whose appearance heralded the origin of the universe. The creation of light did not occur within the existing universe. Rather, the creation of light was the creation of the universe. In other words, the Torah does not record two separate creations on the first day – the creation of the universe and the creation of light – but only one.
We now turn to the question of the time scale. How much time was required for all the cosmological events that took place at the creation of the universe? How many millions of years had to elapse before the universe was complete and assumed its present form?
All the cosmological events involved in the creation of the universe occurred within a very few minutes.
The remarkable answer is that all the cosmological events involved in the creation of the universe occurred within a very few minutes. This fact is emphasized by the dramatic title that Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg chose for his famous book on modern cosmology: The First Three Minutes.
Nowadays, cosmological events – events that alter the structure of the universe – require millions of years to occur. How could such events have occurred within just a few moments? The answer is that during the period of creation, the temperature of the universe was extremely high. Just as food cooks much more rapidly in a pressure cooker than over a low flame, in the same way, events occurred with amazing rapidity in the blazing universe at the origins of time. Professor Greene explains: “The newly borne universe evolved with phenomenal haste. Tiny fractions of a second were cosmic epochs during which the features of the universe were first imprinted. During the first three minutes after the big bang, as the simmering universe cooled, the nuclei emerged.”8
Thus, the formation of the first atomic nuclei – the basic building blocks of every material – was completed within three minutes after the instant of creation.
Faith
The comprehensive agreement between Torah and science described above does not prove that the Torah is of divine origin, nor does it prove that God exists. However, as we begin the twenty-first century, the person of faith is not forced to choose between accepting the latest scientific discoveries or accepting the Torah account of creation. All leading cosmologists now discuss the creation of the universe, while the Torah discusses the Creator of the universe. It is not unreasonable to assume that science and the Torah are both referring to one and the same subject. It is a pleasure for a person of faith to be living in this day and age!
The current harmony between science and faith was not always the case. Only a few decades ago, the outstanding Torah scholar Rav Joseph B. Soloveitchik expressed the then-existing dichotomy between science and faith in a classic essay entitled “The Lonely Man of Faith.”9 Using the word “lonely” to describe the feelings of the man of faith who lives in a scientific world, Rav Soloveitchik wrote:
“Being people of faith in our contemporary world is a lonely experience. We are loyal to visionary expectations which find little support in present-day reality... Religious faith is condescendingly regarded as a subjective palliative, but is given little credence as a repository of truth.”10
Now, only half a century later, in one scientific discipline after another, the words of the scientist can hardly be distinguished from the words of “the man of faith.” Professor Stephen J. Gould of Harvard University tells us that “human intelligence is the result of a staggeringly improbable series of events, utterly unpredictable, and quite unrepeatable.”11 The term “luck” is now commonly used by evolutionary biologists like Professor David Raup, past president of the American Paleontological Union, to “explain” the existence of human beings.12 Archaeologists express their amazement at the “radical and sudden changes, with no premonitory signs”13 that mark the appearance of civilization, and they speak of a sudden “quantum leap in mental abilities”14 that appears in the archaeological record of human cultural behaviour. Scientists in a wide variety of disciplines discuss the “anthropic principle,” which states that the universe looks as if it had been specifically designed to permit the existence and promote the welfare of human beings.15 The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Astronomy expresses this idea in the following poetic words: “In truth, we are the children of the Universe.”16
The scientific discoveries recorded above are exactly what one would expect if the Torah account of the origin of the universe was correct. Therefore, such harmony between Torah and science constitutes an important argument in support of our religious belief. Modern science has become a significant element in strengthening our ancient faith.
Reprinted from Jewish Life magazine. Download the free Jewish Life app on iOS and Android
Notes
1. See N. Aviezer, 1990, In the Beginning (Ktav Publishing House: New York).
2. P. A. M. Dirac, 1972, Commentarii, vol. 2, no. 11, p. 15.
3. A. H. Guth, May 1984, Scientific American, p. 102.
4. S. W. Hawking, 1973, The Large Scale Structure of Space-Time (Cambridge University Press), p. 364
5. J. Silk, 1989, The Big Bang (W. H. Freeman: New York), p. xi.
6. B. Greene, 1999, The Elegant Universe (Jonathan Cape: London), pp. 345-346.
7. J. A. Wheeler, 1998, Geons, Black Holes, and Quantum Foam (W. W. Norton: New York), p. 350.
8. Greene, pp. 347, 350.
9. J. B. Soloveitchik, Spring 1965, Tradition, pp. 5-67.
10. See the adaptation of the 1965 Soloveitchik essay (especially p. 8) by A. R. Besdin, 1989, Man of Faith in the Modern World (Ktav: New York), pp. 36-37.
11. S. J. Gould, 1989, Wonderful Life (W. W. Norton: New York), p. 14.
12. D. M. Raup, 1991, Extinctions: Bad Genes or Bad Luck? (Oxford University Press).
13. N. Eldredge, 1985, Time Frames (Simon and Schuster: New York), p. 87.
14. N. Eldredge and I. Tattersall, 1982, The Myths of Human Evolution (Columbia University Press: New York), p. 154.
15. G. Gale, December 1981, “Anthropic Principle,” Scientific American, pp. 114-122.
16. S. Mitton, editor-in-chief, 1987, The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Astronomy (Jonathan Cape: London), p. 125.
(13) Boris dain, June 30, 2018 3:48 AM
Where does Torah talks about the universe? Its first sentence clearly indicates the sky and the land. And why the first word is interpreted as beginning? For beginning there is another Hebrew word - Hathala.
(12) Aryeh, September 3, 2017 8:17 PM
To Daniel
Maybe as many as 25% of all Jews believe in Hashem, creation,the exodus, and Matan Torah. Aish directs its efforts to augment that percentage, by reaching out to the undecided. In doing so, there is nothing wrong with using science as a tool. I've my own version of "The First Day" combining the words of the Torah, Physics, and my own thoughts to reach those who want to believe in The Torah but have issues based on science. When they learn that the Big Bang was described in The First Day their eyes and mind are opened.
(11) Hessel meilech, August 21, 2017 3:51 PM
Core
The core of the argument is as follows. In the fraction of a second that the cosmos came into being was it a creator who brought it into being or was it just a random chain of events.
(10) Alan, August 20, 2017 11:51 PM
Compatibility of Faith and Science
Thank you Professor Aviezer. From a slightly different perspective, I have long argued that God wants us to make scientific discoveries and advances and we should welcome such discoveries and advances. I explored this idea in my book Thirteen Truths About God and Life. Science is not the enemy of faith and true faith appreciates and welcomes science.
(9) Leonid, August 20, 2017 4:28 PM
Do not mix science and religion
George Lemaitre, who proposed the theory of the expansion of the universe, was convinced that it was foolish to mix science and religion by suggesting (as many theologians do) that the theory of Big Bang confirms the account of creation given in Genesis. In fact, the Bible knows nothing about modern physics, and the physics knows nothing about G-d.
(8) Larry Beck, November 24, 2016 4:12 PM
Nice article that misses the bigger picture
This is an interesting article which makes a number of good points. However, it misses the most important point of all. I have heard good arguments for both Creationism and Evolution and/or Intelligent Design, and maybe a few other ideas as well. I've also heard a nice argument to combine them all together. But the point that gets missed is why people argue so strongly for one over the other. The real argument is none of these.
The real argument is for or against the existence of G-d. If you say that G-d does or does not exist you can still come up with an argument for or against each position. But the arguments are very different depending on that starting position. In truth the normal arguments given are really trying to prove for or against G-d's existence. Now if you understand that then you realize there is no argument that is going to convince the other side. Because logic only gets you so far when it comes to trying to prove (one way or the other) something that can not be proven.
Note, this same understanding (for or against G-d's existence) is the basis behind the abortion issues the country/world has had for the last 50 years.
(7) Daniel, October 16, 2016 2:50 PM
Torah alone guides our path
Thank you for the interesting article. However, I do not believe science should be presented as a means of proving the validity of the Torah. We believe with absolute faith in the exodus from Egypt, the giving of the Torah and our traditions. It is the same as archeologists in Israel who dig for evidence of the Jewish temples and proof of our ties to the land of Israel.This is foolishness. We beleive without one iota of doubt that the books of our Torah and prophets are of complete truth. Our morals, history, belief in God and His prophets, and our established tradition, do not sway and change due to the ideas and "proofs" of philosophers and scientists. It is them who lack knowledge not us.
Larry Beck, November 24, 2016 4:47 PM
Yes But ...
Daniel, I agree with what you say, however, the non-religious / non-observant world does not. Not everyone functions from an ideal viewpoint. If we just tell them "you have to believe" they will ignore what you say. For that reason we need to give them answers they can hear and that will lead them to belief in Torah. If you give them something that works with science they will listen. Once they understand that Torah is not in conflict with science then their minds are open to more Torah truths.
(6) Daniel, October 16, 2016 2:18 PM
Explanation
The first statement of God in the creation of the world was "let there be light".
(5) Anonymous, October 14, 2016 3:25 AM
Misconstrued conflict Part 2
The author conflates scientific definitions - light, energy, time, space, matter with Torah ideas - light, darkness etc. Yet Rashi explicity describes the light in Genesis 1:4 as "Ohr HaGanuz" to put away for the tzaddikim in the World to Come. This means the Torah is not talking about a physical reality but a spiritual reality. How one relates to the other is a Torah concept - we can understand that everything that G-d put in this world has a spiritual force for it to exist. However we cannot equate one with the other because we simply have no idea unless we are explicity told. When the Torah writes that G-d created the universe, the Torah is speaking in spiritual terms, which in turn has a physical result. G-d says let there be light to be put away for the tzaddikim. If its put away you can't detect it. Even if one posits that the primordial light is the same thing, either you've detected it in which case its not hidden away, or its not there any more, again it cannot be because we explicity know that its still there, just hidden. I think scientists make much a do about nothing which in turn makes them believe they have something to say about philosophy and also religion. What would we say about an electrical engineer's perspective of 14th Century French Literature? We would characterize any comment as lacking depth, intelligence and expertize of which our engineer has none in this field. We would throw out his comments on Literature as out of line with his field of expertize. Ask him about electricity, wiring and his expertize is be trusted and valued. However when scientists make bold claims about philosophical concepts, and religious views their words suddenly become prophecies on the subway wall, and they become soothsayers? They're out of their depth and should continue in their chosen profession and take their proverbial nose out of the fields in which they have no expertize.
(4) Anonymous, October 14, 2016 3:02 AM
Misconstrued conflict Part 1
There is the concept referred to by the Greek view of the world as 'nothing'. Nothing here refers simply to lack of matter. They understood that the atom is the smallest elemental building block of stuff. Everything else was 'nothing'. Fast-forward to the 20th century and quantum physics and the 'nothing' of the Ancient Greeks is suprisingly not nothing but full of fields and sub-particles. From this perspective, science continually shapes and defines space and matter, which has led scientists of the ilk of L. Krauss to deride philosophical ideas of nothing as sophistry; but Krauss assumes that the 'nothing' which has at its core an 'empty' quantumn field, is where particles pop in and out of existence. D. Albert has criticised this point - what happens if there is no field, no quantumn physics - no laws to define. Then we move into what maybe called 'metaphysics' (Like T. Nagel). Philosophy defines nothing very differently - not like physicists will have you believe. Nothing isn't, it is undefined. It isn't zero, because zero is a defined amount. Nothing isn't, and as we suggested above, there are no laws to define it. In that view science has no juristiction. Its not that science doesn't explain it yet. It cannot. It is a metaphysical definition that transcends any concept of time, space and matter.
In short, Krauss' view of 'physical nothing' is simply a scientific model of space, with 'nothing' in the space but quantum fields. The view of 'noting' being a metaphysical idea precludes any definition of space.
Comes the Torah, and a careful reading betrays its simplicity. The Ramban writes that the creation story is incomprensible and a closed book on the subject to all those that wish to plumb its depths. When the Torah writes that the creation was astonishingly empty (see Rashi on 'Tohu v'Bohu'), the question becomes what model are we dealing with? An empty abyss or our metaphysical concept. A careful reading suggests neither!
(3) Isahiah62, October 14, 2016 12:06 AM
Science found GOD
So last night watching noted theoretical physicist Michio Kaku discuss the big bang- he posits that before the forces that set the universe into motion and created gravity and the material world EVERYTHING was ONE, and he called it a "superforce". And I was busing out laughing b/c the JEWS have always told them the same for 5000 years- ALL IS ONE. superforce lol
(2) Ron Brandt, October 13, 2016 9:37 PM
5777 ?
Please reconcile 5777 years since creation with the scientific evidence that this occurred billions of years ago
Anonymous, October 16, 2016 6:07 AM
Misunderstanding of science
The claim that the universe is 13.7 billion years lacks a certain degree of understanding of how science operates. The scientific method decries any form of extrapolation that isn't predicatable and provable. In short, the basis for the assertion relies on redshift measurements with various types of bright stars. The measurements for redshift have been 'shifted' for decades ever since Hubble made his famous prediction of the inverse square as being the rate of expansion of the Universe. In any case, the point is that the measurement of 'light-years' - the distance that light travels in one year is a distance measure and not a speed measure. The measurement assumes that the speed of light is a constant and hasn't changed since the beginning of the observable universe. This assumption has no basis in the scientific method since it remains unprovable and yet an axiom of all cosmology that the speed of light is a constant. However our knowledge of physics is grossly deficient. We have absolutely no understanding of what dark matter is and how it formed. We have yet to reconcile quantumn physics with general relativity in a way that satisfies all questions, and various proposed models have equal problems as they relate to the standard model. With all that, there have been studies and proposals that shatter the orthodoxy, that the speed of light is a constant and has remained so since the beginning of the big bang. So if you have no reason to suspect that anything has changed in 13.7 billion years it's a great assumption and extrapolation. However, its a huge assumption to make, it has no basis in the scientific method since it remains unprovable. (WAMP 2015 is a measurement based on current views so any prediction made about the past is still an extrapolation). Scientists make lots of statements some are based on the scientific method, some are extrapolations etc. I highly recommend Yoram Bocagz's book "Genesis and Genes".
boris dain, July 9, 2018 4:22 AM
it's adam birthday, not world creation
Jewish calendar starts with adam birthday, not with world creation.
(1) Anonymous, October 13, 2016 3:02 PM
Most Authoritative Book on this Subject
The most authoritative work on this subject is "Torah, Chazal, and Science" by Rabbi Dr. Moshe Meiselman, a leading authority in both worlds, Torah and science. As a long-time student of his uncle (Rav Yosef Dov HaLevi Soloveitchik ZT"L) and an MIT Doctor of Science, he has mastered this very difficult and controversial subject.