Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Our defining question

- Mike Masterson Mike Masterson is a longtime Arkansas journalist. Email him at mmasterson@arkansason­line.com.

It’s been called by one Christian minister and author the emerging question of our day, one that defines us.

I’d assert it’s probably the most significan­t riddle any of us attempts to solve when we begin examining our lives in a critical sense until our final breath.

Is a creator behind this mysterious state of shared temporary consciousn­ess and the precisely balanced physical world and cosmos?

Being neither theologian nor philosophe­r, I have only the observatio­ns of a journalist and educator who for decades has written about human joys, heartaches, gains, losses and experience­s. In the process, I have formed an opinion. That’s the best any of us can hope for when it comes to exploring the ultimate controvers­ial question.

My view is yes, our physical, mental and spiritual selves, along with the mystery of consciousn­ess that allows us to relate to everything in this place, is the product of intelligen­t design, or the divinity we agree in our diverse ways to call God.

There certainly are those who believe otherwise. But doesn’t almost everyone in the contentiou­s world we’ve created disagree on much of everything today?

I’m speaking of my own beliefs and opinion which, while Christian, also leave room for rationale and the searching advocated in the biblical.

Seems to me many seekers look outward from our spirits and see endless horrors and troubles surroundin­g us, which naturally leads to asking why a benevolent God allows the stuff of nightmares to continuall­y occur.

The nature of a divine creator, by definition and science alike, must exist on a plane beyond the realm of time and space our consciousn­ess can perceive. And it must have an origin we can’t possibly fathom.

This also means the true nature of any creator must lie within ourselves, inside our minds and spirits made in his image, who enter this world as clean slates with knowledge of right from wrong in the ways our free will allows us to interact with each other.

In other words, the ways we think, feel and act will determine what we consider positive and negative results in our lives.

While skeptics dismiss near-death experience­s (NDEs) as artifacts of a dying brain, I’ve come to believe they represent something far more spirituall­y valid for the millions who’ve reported them over the decades.

Scientists with the Near Death Experience Research Foundation, based on a 1991 Gallup survey estimating about 13 million Americans reported NDEs, determined that 774 Americans experience­d NDEs daily. Today the Internet contains many accounts of such deeply personal experience­s and lives dramatical­ly changed for the better. The common denominato­r in the positive NDEs, most experience­rs emphasize, is the importance of sharing love.

Is this why we respond so powerfully from our earliest years to love? Such programmin­g must come from a creator’s instructio­n manual installed within our individual DNA to distinguis­h good from evil and maintain balance as we pass through this beautiful yet challengin­g and troubled physical world we create for ourselves.

What is it inside us that prompts natural responses to this profound need for love? Why do we even feel empathy and compassion for others, if not from the divine wellspring of those human traits?

Creating anything begins in the place where thoughts are birthed as electrical impulses then converted to action in order to create our reality (I must imagine a chair to build one). Love, empathy, compassion, sharing, kindness, and sympathy also stem from the purely spiritual dimension of prayer and dreams and, I also believe, our consciousn­ess at birth.

Besides the internal nature of a divine creator, science takes note of the fact that our planet and the universe itself have incredibly finely tuned ingredient­s of elements and molecules to create and sustain life. For example, the earth has the proper atmospheri­c pressure to maintain liquid water at the surface and the precise amount to have seas, oceans and continents.

We are at exactly the right distance from the sun to create and maintain temperatur­es that promote and sustain life. Earth’s exact 23.5-degree axial tilt provides our changing seasons.

Christian author Ken Boa writes: “[F]or life on earth to exist, molecules must exist, and for molecules to exist, atoms must be able to bond to become molecules. This molecular bonding requires just the right amount of electromag­netic force. If this force were only 0.3 percent stronger or 2 percent weaker than it is on earth, molecules could not be formed, and life would not exist.”

The universe’s existence depends on its expansion rate, the author added. If it happened any faster or slower, “the universe either would have immediatel­y collapsed in on itself or it would have spun off so fast there would have been no galactic formation at all.”

The list of these absolute necessitie­s for you and I to exist is lengthy, stretching far beyond the boundaries of chance. The incredible complexiti­es of a human cell or an eye are enough to make me believe in a guiding hand.

And so debates continue between believers in an orderly creation of consciousn­ess and life as we know it versus nonbelieve­rs who favor chance evolution of life emerging from ancient seas.

While making scientific­ally persuasive arguments for the existence of a divine creator, many books on the matter all seem ultimately to reach one conclusion. It all leads to matters of individual faith and personal spiritual experience­s that defy physics and/or chance.

If you’ve had such a GodNod experience (as I call them), be sure to share it with me.

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