Does God
Exist?
Seventeen lines of evidence, three major objections, and one compelling conclusion
The question of God's existence is arguably the most important question a human being can ask. It touches everything: meaning, morality, purpose, and what happens when we die. Many people assume that modern science has settled the matter — that educated people simply don't believe anymore. The evidence tells a different story.
What follows is not a single proof but a cumulative case — seventeen distinct lines of evidence from cosmology, physics, biology, philosophy, and human experience. No single argument is decisive on its own. Together, they form a picture that many serious thinkers — including former atheists — have found compelling enough to change their minds.
We also take the objections seriously. The multiverse, the problem of evil, and neuroscience deserve honest engagement — and they get it here.
The Universe & Physics
Arguments from cosmology, fine-tuning, and the mathematical structure of reality
The Kalam Cosmological Argument
The universe had an absolute beginning approximately 13.8 billion years ago — confirmed by the Big Bang, the second law of thermodynamics, and the Borde–Guth–Vilenkin theorem, which shows that any expanding universe must have had a beginning. Everything that begins to exist has a cause. The universe began to exist. Therefore, the universe has a cause.
That cause must be outside of time, space, matter, and energy — since it created all of those things. It must be immensely powerful. And the only kind of thing that fits this description is a mind. As philosopher William Lane Craig argues, this is the classical definition of God.
The Fine-Tuning of the Universe
More than thirty physical constants — the gravitational constant, the cosmological constant, the strong nuclear force, the proton-to-electron mass ratio — must be exquisitely precise for any life to exist. The cosmological constant is fine-tuned to one part in 10120. If the strong nuclear force were slightly different, atoms couldn't form. If gravity were slightly stronger, stars would burn out too fast for life to develop.
There are three explanations: physical necessity (no evidence), chance (the numbers make this essentially impossible), or design. Astronomer Fred Hoyle — a lifelong atheist — reluctantly concluded the design inference was unavoidable after discovering the fine-tuned carbon resonance level that makes life in stars possible.
The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Mathematics
Physicist Eugene Wigner called it a miracle: mathematics, developed by humans for purely abstract reasons, turns out to perfectly describe physical reality. James Clerk Maxwell's equations for electromagnetism — written for theoretical reasons — predicted radio waves decades before they were discovered. Riemann's abstract geometry became the language of Einstein's General Relativity. The universe is not just comprehensible — it is mathematically elegant.
On atheism, this is a profound coincidence. On theism, it is exactly what you would expect: a rational Creator made a rationally accessible universe.
It seems as though somebody has fine-tuned nature's numbers to make the Universe. The impression of design is overwhelming.Paul Davies — Physicist & Templeton Laureate (The Cosmic Blueprint, 1988)
Life & Biology
Arguments from the origin of life, DNA, the fossil record, and biological systems
The Information Enigma: DNA
DNA encodes approximately 3.2 billion base pairs of functionally specified digital information — the most dense information storage known to science. The probability of a functional 150-amino-acid protein arising by chance is approximately 1 in 10164 (Douglas Axe, 2004). No undirected chemical process has been shown to generate even a single functional protein from scratch.
Information, in every example we know, comes from minds. Antony Flew — for fifty years the world's most influential philosophical atheist — changed his position specifically because of the DNA evidence, describing it as showing beyond reasonable doubt that a creative intelligence was involved.
The Cambrian Explosion: Biology's Big Bang
Around 540 million years ago, virtually all major animal body plans appeared abruptly in the fossil record within 5–10 million years — an eyeblink in geological time. The Burgess Shale and Chengjiang biota show fully-formed complex eyes, nervous systems, and body plans with no clear evolutionary precursors. Even Stephen Jay Gould, no friend of intelligent design, called this "the most remarkable and puzzling event in the history of life."
Darwinian mechanisms require gradual transitions. The Cambrian explosion shows the opposite: the sudden appearance of massive amounts of new, coordinated genetic information that paleontologist Charles Marshall admits remains unexplained.
Irreducible Complexity
Biochemist Michael Behe identified a class of biological systems — irreducibly complex systems — that require multiple interdependent parts to function, such that removing any one part destroys the function entirely. The bacterial flagellum, a nano-scale rotary motor, has 40 distinct protein components. Remove any one and the motor fails completely. Darwin himself acknowledged: "If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed which could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight modifications, my theory would absolutely break down."
The Human Genome: A Digital Library
The human genome contains roughly 3.2 billion base pairs encoding around 20,000 protein-coding genes, plus vast regulatory networks. The 2012 ENCODE project revealed that approximately 80% of the genome has functional activity — largely refuting the earlier dismissal of most DNA as "junk." Bill Gates observed: "DNA is like a computer program, but far, far more advanced than any software ever created." The genome is read, error-checked, and repaired by machinery that presupposes the very information it maintains.
Mind, Morality & Meaning
Arguments from consciousness, reason, moral reality, and human experience
The Moral Argument
Most people — atheists included — believe that some things are genuinely wrong: torturing children for entertainment, genocide, slavery. Not just culturally inconvenient, but actually wrong. This is moral realism — the view that objective moral facts exist. But objective moral values require a foundation beyond human opinion or evolutionary preference. If there is no God, what makes anything truly, objectively obligatory?
C.S. Lewis, once a convinced atheist, found this argument decisive. His own sense of injustice — his argument against God — turned on itself when he noticed that having a concept of injustice requires having a concept of justice. You can't call a line crooked unless you have some idea of a straight line.
The Argument from Consciousness
Why is there subjective experience at all? Philosopher David Chalmers — an atheist — calls this the "Hard Problem" of consciousness: the most vexing unsolved problem in philosophy of mind. Why isn't all brain processing done "in the dark," without any felt inner life? Materialism has no good answer. Panpsychism (attributing experience to all matter) is deeply counterintuitive and faces its own fatal problems.
Theism offers a natural explanation: consciousness exists because the fundamental reality is itself a mind. God is not a physical object who happened to become conscious; he is the consciousness from which everything else derives.
The Argument from Reason
C.S. Lewis identified a devastating problem for naturalism: if our minds are the product of entirely irrational, undirected physical processes — if "thought" is just atoms in the skull arranging themselves — then we have no reason to trust our reasoning. Natural selection selects for survival-useful behaviors, not for true beliefs. But if we can't trust our reasoning, we can't trust the reasoning that leads to naturalism. The worldview defeats itself.
Universal Religious Intuition
Every known human culture throughout history has developed religious belief and practice. Cognitive scientists Justin Barrett and Pascal Boyer have shown that humans possess a near-universal "agency detection" faculty — we intuitively perceive minds behind events. This cross-cultural, cross-historical universality demands explanation. Is it mass delusion across all of human history? Or sensitivity to something real?
The desire for the transcendent — for meaning, justice, and something beyond death — is not a quirk of one culture. It is the human condition. As G.K. Chesterton observed: "If there were no God, there would be no atheists."
The Argument from Beauty
Humans respond to beauty in music, mathematics, literature, and nature — often moved to awe that goes far beyond any survival utility. Why does a sunset move us to silence? Why does Bach's Mass in B minor produce something that feels like it is pointing beyond itself? Evolution can explain a preference for symmetrical faces (reproductive fitness). It cannot explain the experience of the sublime.
On theism, beauty is an echo of the Creator's own character — we are made in the image of One who is beautiful and good. The longing that great art produces is real and points beyond the material world.
There is superficial conflict but deep concord between science and theistic religion, but superficial concord and deep conflict between science and naturalism.Alvin Plantinga — Philosopher, Notre Dame · Templeton Prize 2017 (Where the Conflict Really Lies, 2011)
Taking the Objections Seriously
Honest engagement with the strongest arguments against theism
The Multiverse Explains Fine-Tuning
This is a serious objection that deserves a serious response. Three problems: First, there is currently no empirical evidence for other universes — making the multiverse an unfalsifiable hypothesis, arguably outside the bounds of science by Karl Popper's criterion. Second, the multiverse itself requires fine-tuned laws to generate universes at all; the problem regresses. Third, the Boltzmann Brain problem: random fluctuations in an eternal multiverse would produce lone conscious observers far more often than ordered universes — making our ordered experience deeply improbable.
Physicist Paul Davies, who is not a theist, nevertheless concludes: "Theories that predict multiverses must themselves be fine-tuned."
The Problem of Evil
This is the most emotionally powerful objection, and it deserves more than a clever argument. At the personal level, suffering is real and the pastoral response matters more than the philosophical one. At the philosophical level, philosopher Alvin Plantinga demonstrated that God cannot create genuinely free beings and simultaneously guarantee they always choose good — that is a logical contradiction. Free will requires the real possibility of evil.
Theologian John Hick's "soul-making" theodicy adds that moral virtues like courage, compassion, and perseverance can only develop in a world with real challenges. A world without suffering would also be a world without heroism, depth, or meaningful love.
Importantly, the existence of suffering does not constitute a logical disproof of God. What it creates is the pastoral question — which every serious theistic tradition takes with great seriousness.
Religion Is Just Brain Chemistry
This commits what logicians call the genetic fallacy: explaining the mechanism of a belief does not address whether that belief is true. Mathematical reasoning is also "just" neurons firing — this doesn't mean that 2+2=4 is false. If God exists and designed the brain, we would expect the brain to have a faculty capable of perceiving him. As Alvin Plantinga puts it: "The fact that our brains can detect God no more disproves God than the fact that our eyes can detect light disproves the existence of light."
Science Has Replaced God
The "warfare thesis" — the idea that science and religion have been in perpetual conflict — was invented in the 1890s by two ideologically motivated writers and has been thoroughly refuted by historians of science. The list of devout theists who made foundational scientific contributions is long: Newton (mechanics), Mendel (genetics), Faraday (electromagnetism), Pasteur (microbiology), Lemaître (Big Bang cosmology), Collins (Human Genome Project).
More fundamentally, theism provides the philosophical foundation for science itself: a rational God made a rational, law-governed, mathematically structured universe — one that rewards investigation. As Oxford mathematician John Lennox argues, science and Christianity are not competitors; they are natural partners.
Frank Tipler, Professor of Mathematical Physics at Tulane, put it bluntly: "When I began my career I was a convinced atheist. I have been forced into my conclusions by the inexorable logic of my own branch of physics."
The Cumulative Case
No single argument here is a knockdown proof. That is not how the best reasoning works. What we have is a web of converging considerations — each pointing in the same direction, each independently supporting the others.
The best explanation across all these domains — the simplest, most coherent hypothesis that unifies the most evidence — is a personal, transcendent, rational, morally perfect Creator. What the great philosophical and theological traditions call God.
Follow the Evidence
This is an invitation, not a verdict. None of us comes to the biggest questions with a perfectly clean slate. But the evidence outlined here is real, the thinkers cited are serious, and the arguments deserve honest engagement.
Former atheists like Antony Flew, C.S. Lewis, Francis Collins, and Alister McGrath did not abandon reason when they changed their minds. They followed it.
The question is open. The evidence is on the table.
"You will seek Me and find Me when you seek Me with all your heart."
— Jeremiah 29:13