DOES GOD EXIST? — “Is Belief in God Still Reasonable?”

There’s a quiet question many people carry but rarely say out loud: Is there really a God—or have we just learned to cope without one?

For some, belief in God feels outdated—like something humanity needed before science explained the universe. But here’s the truth: the deeper we go into science, the harder it becomes to ignore the possibility of a Creator.

Consider this—everything that begins to exist has a cause. The universe had a beginning. Even modern science confirms this. So the real question isn’t if there was a cause—but what kind of cause it was. Whatever caused the universe must be outside of time, space, and matter. That doesn’t sound like nature. That sounds like something… greater.

Then there’s the precision of it all. The universe isn’t random chaos—it’s finely tuned. The laws of physics are balanced so perfectly that if even one constant were slightly different, life would be impossible. That level of precision doesn’t happen by accident.

And what about morality? Deep down, we all know certain things are truly right or wrong—regardless of culture or opinion. But if there is no God, where does that moral law come from? Why do we feel that justice matters?

Belief in God is not blind faith. It’s a conclusion that many arrive at by following the evidence—scientific, philosophical, and personal.

The real question is not, “Is belief in God irrational?”
The real question is, “Can we honestly explain reality without Him?”

Scroll to Top