![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
That being said, his death reminds me of a couple of things, one of which is that the debate "Is there any hope for us after we die?" is probably the most important debate humans can possibly have (more important than how to end crime, for example). In so being, I came back here in order to brainstorm a little bit more on this extremely important debate. Now, this time, my question is: assuming that God created the universe AND wanted us humans to know that, what kind of sense does it make to create a universe that could - even if minimally - suggest that said universe could be explained with no obligation for a god? I suppose that could kind of be a way to test our faith, but...isn't the risk a little too high? I mean, even assuming Mr. Deem's optimistic statistic that 40% of scientist believe in God (which is now 20 years old, so maybe not as cheering as it once was...), that implies that 60% don't, and...honestly, don't you think it would be much less than that if scientists just kept reasearching and researching and found absolutely no way for the universe to be explained without a god? I mean, God probably could guess that humans would eventually test that hypothesis, so wouldn't it be safer - for the sake of His test to us - to just erradicate any possibility, albeit minimal, that the universe could be explained without the need for a creator?
And yes, I'm paraphrasing Mr. Hawking. His quote seems to have been God may exist, but science can explain the universe without the need for a creator
And please, PLEASE, don't harass me and/or insult me like it has happened before on this forum. Please. I'm not here to point fingers at Christians; virtually every single question I ever posted here was a genuine doubt of mine, one that prevents me from being a Christian. (I don't loathe the idea of being a Christian, I actually think I would be happier if I were. But for the record, harassment doesn't help. Not me, at least...)