The Problem of God — and Cosmology: Big Bang, Big Questions, Bigger Assumptions


The God Question is a blog committed to respectful but rigorous examination of Christian truth claims. This post is part of an ongoing series analyzing Mark Clark’s bestselling book The Problem of God—a work popular among evangelical apologists for its accessible defense of Christian belief. Each post highlights a specific claim or chapter, testing it through logic, science, history, and reason—all through the lens of The God Question’s core philosophy.


Cosmology & Big Bang

Mark Clark begins Chapter 2 of The Problem of God with the claim that the existence of moral law points to the existence of a divine lawgiver. He then pivots, calling cosmology—the study of the universe’s origin—the “second evidence” for God’s existence. Citing Immanuel Kant’s phrase “the starry hosts above,” Clark introduces this section with an air of reverence and inevitability. And yet, as with much of his apologetic method, the argument quickly reduces to a series of well-worn and misleading claims.

“Whatever begins to exist has a cause”

Clark recycles the familiar Kalam Cosmological Argument—popularized by William Lane Craig—claiming:

  1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause.
  2. The universe began to exist.
  3. Therefore, the universe has a cause (which he identifies as God).

It’s a tidy syllogism, but it carries massive philosophical and scientific baggage. For one, premise one—“everything that begins to exist has a cause”—is assumed, not demonstrated. In quantum physics, subatomic particles (like virtual particles) appear to come into being without any identifiable cause at all. Some physicists argue this undercuts the first premise entirely.

Second, while Clark confidently asserts that the universe “began to exist” 15 billion years ago, modern cosmology is less certain. The Big Bang represents a beginning of our observable universe—space, time, matter, and energy—but what (if anything) came before remains unknown. Physicists like Sean Carroll and Lawrence Krauss argue that asking “what caused the Big Bang?” may be a category error, akin to asking “what’s north of the North Pole?”

Clark fails to mention the range of cosmological models that don’t require a supernatural cause: vacuum fluctuation models, cyclic universes, multiverse theory, and more. Instead, he cherry-picks the version that supports his belief.

The Universe Had a “Birthday”

Clark writes that the universe “began to exist fifteen billion years ago,” and thus “has a birthday.” But a birthday implies a beginning in time. According to Big Bang cosmology, time itself began with the Big Bang—making the phrase “before the Big Bang” meaningless. Again, Clark applies language shaped by everyday human experience to a context (cosmic origins) where such language breaks down.

He then draws this conclusion:

“The cause must be mind, not matter, because matter itself began to exist at the Big Bang.”

But why must it be “mind”? Why not energy, or some still-unknown quantum field? This is argument by assertion, not evidence.

“That’s exactly what Christianity has been claiming from the beginning”

Here, Clark tries to claim cosmology for Christianity—suggesting that Big Bang cosmology confirms the Bible’s creation story. But Genesis depicts a firmament, a stationary Earth, a six-day creation, and light existing before the sun. None of this aligns with modern cosmology.

What’s more, Clark sidesteps the historical truth: for centuries, the church fought against emerging scientific cosmologies—from Copernicus to Galileo to Darwin. He also fails to mention that Georges Lemaître, the Catholic priest who first proposed the Big Bang, did so while insisting it should not be used to justify theological arguments.

“Nobody times nothing equals everything?”

Clark ends this section with a rhetorical jab, mocking secular explanations of origins as “nobody times nothing equals everything.” But this misrepresents what scientists actually say. Most do not claim the universe came from “nothing” in the philosophical sense; instead, they speak of a quantum vacuum or primordial state that does not equate to “nothing.”

Clark either doesn’t understand—or doesn’t care to accurately represent—those he disagrees with.


🧠 Final Reflection

Clark’s use of cosmology is not an honest inquiry but a clever repackaging of scientific mystery as theological certainty. Rather than follow the evidence wherever it leads, he frames the evidence to serve a preordained conclusion. And he does so without wrestling seriously with opposing views—from quantum cosmology to secular metaphysics.

If you want to explore real cosmological questions—without the theological bait-and-switch—look instead to physicists who admit what they don’t know. There’s more humility, and ironically, more awe, in their uncertainty than in any apologetic proof.

Does the Fine-Tuning Argument Prove God?

One of the most popular modern arguments for God’s existence is the Fine-Tuning Argument. You’ll hear it from pastors, Christian apologists, and even scientists who believe in God. It goes something like this:

“The physical constants of the universe are so precisely set that even a slight change would make life impossible. This kind of precision couldn’t happen by accident—therefore, a Designer must be behind it.”

It sounds powerful. It feels persuasive. But is it actually a good argument?

Let’s break it down.


📌 What Is Fine-Tuning?

“Fine-tuning” refers to the idea that the fundamental constants of physics—like the gravitational constant, the strength of the strong nuclear force, or the rate of expansion of the universe—fall within an incredibly narrow range that allows life to exist.

If they were even slightly different, the argument goes, stars wouldn’t form, atoms couldn’t bond, and life as we know it would be impossible.

The conclusion: This couldn’t be a coincidence. It must be the work of an intelligent Creator.

But there are several critical flaws in this line of thinking.


❌ Problem 1: We Don’t Know What the “Probability” Really Is

The argument assumes that these constants could have taken on any value, and that ours are wildly unlikely. But we have no idea what the range of possible values is—or even if they could have been different.

This means the argument is making a huge assumption about probability without evidence. You can’t call something unlikely if you don’t know what the odds are.


❌ Problem 2: Life as We Know It Isn’t the Only Possibility

The argument says, “If the constants were different, life wouldn’t exist.” But what it really means is: “Life like us wouldn’t exist.”

That’s not the same thing.

Different physical constants might not allow for carbon-based life, but that doesn’t mean no form of complexity or awareness could arise in a different kind of universe. We’re assuming this form of life is the goal—but that’s a biased, human-centered view.


❌ Problem 3: The Multiverse Is a Plausible Explanation

Some physicists suggest that we may live in a multiverse—an unimaginably vast collection of universes, each with different physical constants.

If that’s the case, then it’s not surprising that one of those universes would have the right conditions for life—and of course, we’d find ourselves in that one.

You don’t need a designer. You just need enough rolls of the cosmic dice.


❌ Problem 4: A Designer Doesn’t Solve the Problem

Let’s say you still feel the universe is too perfect to be random. Does that mean God did it?

Not necessarily.

✔ If the universe is fine-tuned, who fine-tuned God?
✔ If complexity needs a designer, who designed the designer?
✔ Invoking God just pushes the problem back one step—it doesn’t solve it.

And even if a designer did exist, how do you leap from “designer” to “the God of the Bible”? The Fine-Tuning Argument doesn’t get you there.


🎥 Watch: The Fine-Tuning Argument Debunked in 12 Minutes

This excellent video breaks down the flaws in the fine-tuning argument with clarity, science, and logic. It’s well worth your time.


📌 Conclusion: An Argument from Ignorance

The Fine-Tuning Argument is ultimately a God-of-the-gaps argument. It says, “We don’t know why the universe is this way—therefore, God must have done it.”

But ignorance isn’t evidence.

Science is still exploring the origins and constants of the universe. Just because we don’t yet understand everything doesn’t mean we should default to a supernatural explanation.

Belief in God should be based on evidence—not gaps in our understanding.


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