Post by Cindy on Jun 8, 2015 10:54:46 GMT -5
Intellectuals Who Found God by Chad Owen Brand
C. S. Lewis (1898–1963)
Lewis’s parents taught him the proper faith and religious life of an Englishman, but troubles awaited the young man. His mother died when he was a boy, after which his father sent him to boarding schools. Though early on he tried to be a good Christian, he came to resent religion and developed instead a fascination with myth and fantasy literature. His great concerns were with whether Christianity was unique and how it could solve (or not solve) the problem of evil. When he entered Oxford in 1917, Lewis was a convinced agnostic. He had sought through logic to debunk religion in general and Christianity in particular. Yet his favorite authors—Dante, MacDonald, Herbert, Plato, Milton, and Virgil—were all people who held some sort of religious understanding of the world. In reading George MacDonald, and through personal acquaintance with J. R. R. Tolkien and Owen Barfield, Lewis eventually abandoned his nontheistic view of the world. In 1929 he threw in the towel, conceding that “God was God,” and he knelt and prayed—perhaps the “most reluctant convert in all England.”
Aurelius Augustine (354–430)
Augustine was born at a time when Christianity was just beginning to become a dominant faith in the Roman empire. Though his mother was a strong Christian, she did not have him baptized as an infant. By age 15, Augustine had abandoned the faith of his childhood and had adopted the cult known as Manicheeism as his own.
His biggest problem with Christianity was its failure to deal adequately with the problem of evil. If God is all powerful and all good, how can evil exist—and exist so prevalently and powerfully in the world? The Manichees taught that two spirit beings exist, the one good and the other evil. They believed this explains how one can find a mixture of both good and evil in the world. For a decade or so, the young Augustine, eventually a professor of rhetoric at several Roman universities, believed this to be a better solution. But eventually the young intellectual came to realize that this “solution” was unsatisfactory.
Augustine despaired and began reading skeptical philosophers, such as Cicero and Porphyry, who taught that everything is a matter of doubt. Perhaps there is no solution, he thought. Yet here, at the end of hope, Augustine was transformed. He heard the preaching of the famous Ambrose and began reading Scripture. Ambrose’s apologetics helped Augustine understand that the Bible really does present the solution to the problem of evil.
Though his intellect was satisfied, his heart, filled with sin and with no answer to the problem of sin, was still empty. One day Augustine read Paul’s words in Romans 13:14: “Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no plans to satisfy the fleshly desires.” The key to life lay not in trying to live the moral life but in putting on Christ, who satisfies both the intellectual and existential dilemmas humans face. Augustine’s writings went on to lay the foundation for the political and intellectual developments of the next 1,500 years in the Western church.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1918–)
Solzhenitsyn was born into the new Russian Revolutionary system. In 1945 he was arrested for writing disparaging comments about Stalin in his letters and was sentenced to a “mild” eight years in the Soviet Gulags (labor camps). Upon his release, he was exiled to the desert in Kazakhstan and then in 1974 was exiled to the West. During this period, Solzhenitsyn became an orthodox Christian. He came to recognize that only Christianity provides both a realistic understanding of the human condition of sin and the one solution to the human condition that makes any sense. His works on the Soviet Gulags and on Russian history have become classics that have given the West a clear picture of life in the repressive Soviet system.
Francis Schaeffer (1912–84)
Schaeffer grew up in a liberal Protestant home. As a teenager, he began to read the Bible and was surprised to find that it contained answers to life’s greatest problems. He gave his life to Christ and, contrary to his family’s wishes, determined to enter Christian ministry. In 1948 he and his wife, Edith, moved to Switzerland. There they gave their lives to talking to and witnessing to young people, mostly disaffected youth from America and Western Europe.
Schaeffer was never afraid to confront modernity and postmodernity on their own grounds. His writings demonstrate a dialogue with the key intellectual and cultural developments of the last two centuries. If there is one important thing to be learned from Schaeffer, it is that a person can face the best (and worst) that the nontheistic world can offer and still have confidence that God is there and that He is not silent.
J. S. Bach (1685–1750)
Bach entered the world as one of the most gifted musicians of all time. The sheer amount of work he turned out is almost unbelievable, amounting to nearly a thousand compositions, many of which have since been lost. He set the Christian faith to music in a way that no one before or since has done. He read the Bible faithfully and sought to give accurate presentations of its truths not only in lyrics but in musical composition as well. Bach also demonstrated that one could serve God by producing music that was not specifically Christian in orientation, such as his Brandenburg Concerti, but which, by their very structure, still demonstrate a conviction that God has made a well-ordered universe. Bach’s commitment to Christ can be seen in his telling his students that unless they committed their talents to Jesus they would never become great musicians.
Lewis Wallace (1827–1905)
Wallace was a Union general during the Civil War. Later he sat on the court-martial that dealt with the Lincoln assassination conspirators, then became governor of the territory of New Mexico. His life began to change when he had an extensive conversation with the well-known infidel scholar Robert Ingersoll. In the conversation he was unable to refute Ingersoll’s arguments. So he set himself to learn everything he could about the life, setting, and historical context of Jesus Christ. Wallace was not overawed by the reputation of Ingersoll, but he believed that investigation of the facts of the gospel message could lead one to the truth about Jesus. Wallace’s investigations led to his writing the novel Ben-Hur.
In the novel a Jewish man named Judah Ben-Hur encounters Jesus and hears him say, “I am the resurrection and the life.” Later Ben-Hur returns to Rome and gives all his wealth to promote the Christian faith.
From: The Apologetics Study Bible: Real Questions, Straight Answers, Stronger Faith
Atheists and Agnostics like to tell people that intelligent people don't believe in God, but the opposite is actually the truth. The more intelligent a person is, the more likely they are to believe in God! I was looking to see if I could find a list of scientists that believe in God. I remember seeing a very long one quite some time ago but I can't remember where I saw it. I couldn't find that one, though I wish I had as I've never seen a better one, but these will do for a start:
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES ESTABLISHED BY CREATIONIST SCIENTISTS
DISCIPLINE - SCIENTIST
ANTISEPTIC SURGERY JOSEPH LISTER (1827-1912)
BACTERIOLOGY LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
CALCULUS ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
CELESTIAL MECHANICS JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
CHEMISTRY ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
COMPARATIVE ANATOMY GEORGES CUVIER (1769-1832)
COMPUTER SCIENCE CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS LORD RAYLEIGH (1842-1919)
DYNAMICS ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
ELECTRONICS JOHN AMBROSE FLEMING (1849-1945)
ELECTRODYNAMICS JAMES CLERK MAXWELL (1831-1879)
ELECTRO-MAGNETICS MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
ENERGETICS LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
ENTOMOLOGY OF LIVING INSECTS HENRI FABRE (1823-1915)
FIELD THEORY MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
FLUID MECHANICS GEORGE STOKES (1819-1903)
GALACTIC ASTRONOMY WILLIAM HERSCHEL (1738-1822)
GAS DYNAMICS ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
GENETICS GREGOR MENDEL (1822-1884)
GLACIAL GEOLOGY LOUIS AGASSIZ (1807-1873)
GYNECOLOGY JAMES SIMPSON (1811-1870)
HYDRAULICS LEONARDO DA VINCI (1452-1519)
HYDROGRAPHY MATTHEW MAURY (1806-1873)
HYDROSTATICS BLAISE PASCAL (1623-1662)
ICHTHYOLOGY LOUIS AGASSIZ (1807-1873)
ISOTOPIC CHEMISTRY WILLIAM RAMSAY (1852-1916)
MODEL ANALYSIS LORD RAYLEIGH (1842-1919)
NATURAL HISTORY JOHN RAY (1627-1705)
NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY BERNHARD RIEMANN (1826- 1866)
OCEANOGRAPHY MATTHEW MAURY (1806-1873)
OPTICAL MINERALOGY DAVID BREWSTER (1781-1868)
PALEONTOLOGY JOHN WOODWARD (1665-1728)
PATHOLOGY RUDOLPH VIRCHOW (1821-1902)
PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
REVERSIBLE THERMODYNAMICS JAMES JOULE (1818-1889)
STATISTICAL THERMODYNAMICS JAMES CLERK MAXWELL (1831-1879)
STRATIGRAPHY NICHOLAS STENO (1631-1686)
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY CAROLUS LINNAEUS (1707-1778)
THERMODYNAMICS LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
THERMOKINETICS HUMPHREY DAVY (1778-1829)
VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY GEORGES CUVIER (1769-1832)
NOTABLE INVENTIONS, DISCOVERIES OR DEVELOPMENTS BY CREATIONIST SCIENTISTS
CONTRIBUTION SCIENTIST
ABSOLUTE TEMPERATURE SCALE LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
ACTUARIAL TABLES CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
BAROMETER BLAISE PASCAL (1623-1662)
BIOGENESIS LAW LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
CALCULATING MACHINE CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
CHLOROFORM JAMES SIMPSON (1811-1870)
CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM CAROLUS LINNAEUS (1707-1778)
DOUBLE STARS WILLIAM HERSCHEL (1738-1822)
ELECTRIC GENERATOR MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
ELECTRIC MOTOR JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
EPHEMERIS TABLES JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
FERMENTATION CONTROL LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
GALVANOMETER JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
GLOBAL STAR CATALOG JOHN HERSCHEL (1792-1871)
INERT GASES WILLIAM RAMSAY (1852-1916)
KALEIDOSCOPE DAVID BREWSTER (1781-1868)
LAW OF GRAVITY ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
MINE SAFETY LAMP HUMPHREY DAVY (1778-1829)
PASTEURIZATION LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
REFLECTING TELESCOPE ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
SCIENTIFIC METHOD FRANCIS BACON (1561-1626)
SELF-INDUCTION JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
TELEGRAPH SAMUEL F.B. MORSE (1791-1872)
THERMIONIC VALVE AMBROSE FLEMING (1849-1945)
TRANS-ATLANTIC CABLE LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
VACCINATION & IMMUNIZATION LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
www.icr.org/article/bible-believing-scientists-past/
Nobel Scientists Who believe in God (20-21 Century)
Albert Einstein Nobel Laureate in Physics
Max Planck Nobel Laureate in Physics
Erwin Schrodinger Nobel Laureate in Physics
Werner Heisenberg Nobel Laureate in Physics
Robert Millikan Nobel Laureate in Physics
Charles Hard Townes Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arthur Schawlow Nobel Laureate in Physics
William D. Phillips Nobel Laureate in Physics
William H. Bragg Nobel Laureate in Physics
Guglielmo Marconi Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arthur Compton Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arno Penzias Nobel Laureate in Physics
Nevill Mott Nobel Laureate in Physics
Isidor Isaac Rabi Nobel Laureate in Physics
Antony Hewish Nobel Laureate in Physics
Joseph H. Taylor, Jr. Nobel Laureate in Physics
Alexis Carrel Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
John Eccles Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Joseph Murray Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Ernst Chain Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
George Wald Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Ronald Ross Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Derek Barton Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Christian Anfinsen Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Walter Kohn Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Richard Smalley Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
PART II. Nobel Writers who believed in God (20-21 Century)
T.S. Eliot Nobel Laureate in Literature
Rudyard Kipling Nobel Laureate in Literature
Alexander Solzhenitsyn Nobel Laureate in Literature
François Mauriac Nobel Laureate in Literature
Hermann Hesse Nobel Laureate in Literature
Winston Churchill Nobel Laureate in Literature
Jean-Paul Sartre Nobel Laureate in Literature
Sigrid Undset Nobel Laureate in Literature
Rudolf Eucken Nobel Laureate in Literature
Isaac Singer Nobel Laureate in Literature
PART III. Nobel Peace Laureates who believed in God (20-21 Century)
Albert Schweitzer Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Jimmy Carter Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Baptist
Theodore Roosevelt Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Woodrow Wilson Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Frederik de Klerk Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Nelson Mandela Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Kim Dae-Jung Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Dag Hammarskjold Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Martin Luther King, Jr. Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Adolfo Perez Esquivel Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Desmond Tutu Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
John R. Mott Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Part IV. Founders of Modern Science who believed in God (16-21 Century)
Isaac Newton Founder of Classical Physics and Infinitesimal Calculus
Galileo Galilei Founder of Experimental Physics
Nicolaus Copernicus Founder of Heliocentric Cosmology
Johannes Kepler Founder of Physical Astronomy and Modern Optics
Francis Bacon Founder of the Scientific Inductive Method
René Descartes Founder of Analytical Geometry and Modern Philosophy
Blaise Pascal Founder of Hydrostatics, Hydrodynamics,and the Theory of Probabilities
Michael Faraday Founder of Electronics and Electro-Magnetics
James Clerk Maxwell Founder of Statistical Thermodynamics
Lord Kelvin Founder of Thermodynamics and Energetics
Robert Boyle Founder of Modern Chemistry
William Harvey Founder of Modern Medicine
John Ray Founder of Modern Biology and Natural History
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz German Mathematician and Philosopher, Founder of Infinitesimal Calculus
Joseph J. Thomson Nobel Laureate in Physics, Discoverer of the Electron, Founder of Atomic Physics
Louis Pasteur Founder of Microbiology and Immunology
Part V. Great Philosophers who believed in God (17-21 Century)
Immanuel Kant One of the Greatest Philosophers in the History of Western Philosophy
Jean-Jacques Rousseau Founder of Modern Deism born
Voltaire French Philosopher and Historian, One of the Most Influential Thinkers of the Enlightenment
David Hume Scottish Empiricist Philosopher, Historian, and Economist,
Spinoza, the Chief Exponent of Modern Rationalism
Giordano Bruno Italian Philosopher, Astronomer, and Mathematician, Founder of the Theory of the Infinite Universe
George Berkeley Irish Philosopher and Mathematician, Founder of Modern Idealism, Famous as "The Precursor of Mach and Einstein"
John Stuart Mill English Philosopher and Economist,
Richard Swinburne Oxford Professor of Philosophy, One of the Most Influential Theistic Philosophers
PART VI. Other Religious Nobelists
60 more Nobel Prize winners are listed
(32 scientists, 17 writers, 11 Nobel Nobel Peace Laureates)
PART VII. Nobelists, Philosophers, and Scientists on Jesus
Quotes by 16 individuals about their beliefs about Jesus
- Alexis Carrel
- Albert Einstein
- Arthur Compton
- Robert Millikan
- Francois Mauriac
- Sigrid Undset
- T.S. Eliot
- Mother Theresa
- Albert Schweitzer
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Frederik de Klerk
- John R. Mott
- Kim Dae-Jung
- Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Jimmy Carter
- Blaise Pascal
www.adherents.com/people/100_Nobel.html
Seven Scientists Who Believe in God
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
Gottfried W. Leibnitz (1646-1716)
Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
Charles B. Thaxton (living)
www.biblequery.org/Science/Scientists.htm
Famous Scientists Who Believed in God:
Francis Collins (A more recent scientist who helped crack the human genome (genetics/DNA)).
Sir Isaac Newton- He believed very strongly in God, and loved viewing science as God’s creation. He remains one of the most prolific scientists remembered in history. He actually wrote and studied the Bible as much as he experimented, and believed the universe was designed by God.
Louis Pasteur- Another famous scientist who also believed in God.
Robert Boyle- Known for his contributions in chemistry, philosophy, and more, he believed in God
Gregor Mendel-Known for his contributions in genetics and inheritance studies.
Albert Einstein- Albert Einstein didn’t believe (according to most accounts) in the tradition Judeo-Christian God of the Bible. However, he did believe in a God that could have started the universe.
and many more
Other Famous People Who Believe in God:
John D. Rockefeller- A business genius and the world’s first “billionaire” was a devout Christian who believed strongly in God and attended church regularly and tithed 10% of his income.
Famous Rapper “Mase” – Had a vision of leading people to hell, so he gave up his rapidly growing hip-hop career and became a minister.
Chuck Norris- The guy who no one wants to fight- is also known for his faith in God.
George Foreman- Former boxing heavyweight and the guy sold the cool grill on TV, is also a devout Christian.
Zig Ziglar- Motivational speaking guru that became a born-again Christian and has a strong faith in God.
Johnny Cash- This country legend was also known for his belief in God. He recorded several gospel songs over his career, and turned to God for strength during his struggles.
Abraham Lincoln- Always at the top of the list for the world’s greatest presidents of all time, had a strong faith in God. He often made references to God during his speeches, and lived a very moral life by standing up against the cruel practice of slavery.
and the list goes on and on and on.
www.revelation.co/2009/01/05/are-there-any-famous-scientists-philosophers-or-celebrities-that-believe-in-god/
Belief in God
Is belief in the existence of God irrational? These days, many famous scientists are also strong proponents of atheism. However, in the past, and even today, many scientists believe that God exists and is responsible for what we see in nature. This is a small sampling of scientists who contributed to the development of modern science while believing in God. Although many people believe in a "God of the gaps", these scientists, and still others alive today, believe because of the evidence.
For information about 13 scientists who believe in God: www.godandscience.org/apologetics/sciencefaith.html
Last, but the most important person of all who believed in God and who has changed the world more then any of those listed above or anyone else who has ever lived, who lived and died and rose again for you and me: Jesus Christ, Son of God.
C. S. Lewis (1898–1963)
Lewis’s parents taught him the proper faith and religious life of an Englishman, but troubles awaited the young man. His mother died when he was a boy, after which his father sent him to boarding schools. Though early on he tried to be a good Christian, he came to resent religion and developed instead a fascination with myth and fantasy literature. His great concerns were with whether Christianity was unique and how it could solve (or not solve) the problem of evil. When he entered Oxford in 1917, Lewis was a convinced agnostic. He had sought through logic to debunk religion in general and Christianity in particular. Yet his favorite authors—Dante, MacDonald, Herbert, Plato, Milton, and Virgil—were all people who held some sort of religious understanding of the world. In reading George MacDonald, and through personal acquaintance with J. R. R. Tolkien and Owen Barfield, Lewis eventually abandoned his nontheistic view of the world. In 1929 he threw in the towel, conceding that “God was God,” and he knelt and prayed—perhaps the “most reluctant convert in all England.”
Aurelius Augustine (354–430)
Augustine was born at a time when Christianity was just beginning to become a dominant faith in the Roman empire. Though his mother was a strong Christian, she did not have him baptized as an infant. By age 15, Augustine had abandoned the faith of his childhood and had adopted the cult known as Manicheeism as his own.
His biggest problem with Christianity was its failure to deal adequately with the problem of evil. If God is all powerful and all good, how can evil exist—and exist so prevalently and powerfully in the world? The Manichees taught that two spirit beings exist, the one good and the other evil. They believed this explains how one can find a mixture of both good and evil in the world. For a decade or so, the young Augustine, eventually a professor of rhetoric at several Roman universities, believed this to be a better solution. But eventually the young intellectual came to realize that this “solution” was unsatisfactory.
Augustine despaired and began reading skeptical philosophers, such as Cicero and Porphyry, who taught that everything is a matter of doubt. Perhaps there is no solution, he thought. Yet here, at the end of hope, Augustine was transformed. He heard the preaching of the famous Ambrose and began reading Scripture. Ambrose’s apologetics helped Augustine understand that the Bible really does present the solution to the problem of evil.
Though his intellect was satisfied, his heart, filled with sin and with no answer to the problem of sin, was still empty. One day Augustine read Paul’s words in Romans 13:14: “Put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no plans to satisfy the fleshly desires.” The key to life lay not in trying to live the moral life but in putting on Christ, who satisfies both the intellectual and existential dilemmas humans face. Augustine’s writings went on to lay the foundation for the political and intellectual developments of the next 1,500 years in the Western church.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1918–)
Solzhenitsyn was born into the new Russian Revolutionary system. In 1945 he was arrested for writing disparaging comments about Stalin in his letters and was sentenced to a “mild” eight years in the Soviet Gulags (labor camps). Upon his release, he was exiled to the desert in Kazakhstan and then in 1974 was exiled to the West. During this period, Solzhenitsyn became an orthodox Christian. He came to recognize that only Christianity provides both a realistic understanding of the human condition of sin and the one solution to the human condition that makes any sense. His works on the Soviet Gulags and on Russian history have become classics that have given the West a clear picture of life in the repressive Soviet system.
Francis Schaeffer (1912–84)
Schaeffer grew up in a liberal Protestant home. As a teenager, he began to read the Bible and was surprised to find that it contained answers to life’s greatest problems. He gave his life to Christ and, contrary to his family’s wishes, determined to enter Christian ministry. In 1948 he and his wife, Edith, moved to Switzerland. There they gave their lives to talking to and witnessing to young people, mostly disaffected youth from America and Western Europe.
Schaeffer was never afraid to confront modernity and postmodernity on their own grounds. His writings demonstrate a dialogue with the key intellectual and cultural developments of the last two centuries. If there is one important thing to be learned from Schaeffer, it is that a person can face the best (and worst) that the nontheistic world can offer and still have confidence that God is there and that He is not silent.
J. S. Bach (1685–1750)
Bach entered the world as one of the most gifted musicians of all time. The sheer amount of work he turned out is almost unbelievable, amounting to nearly a thousand compositions, many of which have since been lost. He set the Christian faith to music in a way that no one before or since has done. He read the Bible faithfully and sought to give accurate presentations of its truths not only in lyrics but in musical composition as well. Bach also demonstrated that one could serve God by producing music that was not specifically Christian in orientation, such as his Brandenburg Concerti, but which, by their very structure, still demonstrate a conviction that God has made a well-ordered universe. Bach’s commitment to Christ can be seen in his telling his students that unless they committed their talents to Jesus they would never become great musicians.
Lewis Wallace (1827–1905)
Wallace was a Union general during the Civil War. Later he sat on the court-martial that dealt with the Lincoln assassination conspirators, then became governor of the territory of New Mexico. His life began to change when he had an extensive conversation with the well-known infidel scholar Robert Ingersoll. In the conversation he was unable to refute Ingersoll’s arguments. So he set himself to learn everything he could about the life, setting, and historical context of Jesus Christ. Wallace was not overawed by the reputation of Ingersoll, but he believed that investigation of the facts of the gospel message could lead one to the truth about Jesus. Wallace’s investigations led to his writing the novel Ben-Hur.
In the novel a Jewish man named Judah Ben-Hur encounters Jesus and hears him say, “I am the resurrection and the life.” Later Ben-Hur returns to Rome and gives all his wealth to promote the Christian faith.
From: The Apologetics Study Bible: Real Questions, Straight Answers, Stronger Faith
Atheists and Agnostics like to tell people that intelligent people don't believe in God, but the opposite is actually the truth. The more intelligent a person is, the more likely they are to believe in God! I was looking to see if I could find a list of scientists that believe in God. I remember seeing a very long one quite some time ago but I can't remember where I saw it. I couldn't find that one, though I wish I had as I've never seen a better one, but these will do for a start:
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES ESTABLISHED BY CREATIONIST SCIENTISTS
DISCIPLINE - SCIENTIST
ANTISEPTIC SURGERY JOSEPH LISTER (1827-1912)
BACTERIOLOGY LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
CALCULUS ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
CELESTIAL MECHANICS JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
CHEMISTRY ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
COMPARATIVE ANATOMY GEORGES CUVIER (1769-1832)
COMPUTER SCIENCE CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS LORD RAYLEIGH (1842-1919)
DYNAMICS ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
ELECTRONICS JOHN AMBROSE FLEMING (1849-1945)
ELECTRODYNAMICS JAMES CLERK MAXWELL (1831-1879)
ELECTRO-MAGNETICS MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
ENERGETICS LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
ENTOMOLOGY OF LIVING INSECTS HENRI FABRE (1823-1915)
FIELD THEORY MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
FLUID MECHANICS GEORGE STOKES (1819-1903)
GALACTIC ASTRONOMY WILLIAM HERSCHEL (1738-1822)
GAS DYNAMICS ROBERT BOYLE (1627-1691)
GENETICS GREGOR MENDEL (1822-1884)
GLACIAL GEOLOGY LOUIS AGASSIZ (1807-1873)
GYNECOLOGY JAMES SIMPSON (1811-1870)
HYDRAULICS LEONARDO DA VINCI (1452-1519)
HYDROGRAPHY MATTHEW MAURY (1806-1873)
HYDROSTATICS BLAISE PASCAL (1623-1662)
ICHTHYOLOGY LOUIS AGASSIZ (1807-1873)
ISOTOPIC CHEMISTRY WILLIAM RAMSAY (1852-1916)
MODEL ANALYSIS LORD RAYLEIGH (1842-1919)
NATURAL HISTORY JOHN RAY (1627-1705)
NON-EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY BERNHARD RIEMANN (1826- 1866)
OCEANOGRAPHY MATTHEW MAURY (1806-1873)
OPTICAL MINERALOGY DAVID BREWSTER (1781-1868)
PALEONTOLOGY JOHN WOODWARD (1665-1728)
PATHOLOGY RUDOLPH VIRCHOW (1821-1902)
PHYSICAL ASTRONOMY JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
REVERSIBLE THERMODYNAMICS JAMES JOULE (1818-1889)
STATISTICAL THERMODYNAMICS JAMES CLERK MAXWELL (1831-1879)
STRATIGRAPHY NICHOLAS STENO (1631-1686)
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY CAROLUS LINNAEUS (1707-1778)
THERMODYNAMICS LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
THERMOKINETICS HUMPHREY DAVY (1778-1829)
VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY GEORGES CUVIER (1769-1832)
NOTABLE INVENTIONS, DISCOVERIES OR DEVELOPMENTS BY CREATIONIST SCIENTISTS
CONTRIBUTION SCIENTIST
ABSOLUTE TEMPERATURE SCALE LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
ACTUARIAL TABLES CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
BAROMETER BLAISE PASCAL (1623-1662)
BIOGENESIS LAW LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
CALCULATING MACHINE CHARLES BABBAGE (1792-1871)
CHLOROFORM JAMES SIMPSON (1811-1870)
CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM CAROLUS LINNAEUS (1707-1778)
DOUBLE STARS WILLIAM HERSCHEL (1738-1822)
ELECTRIC GENERATOR MICHAEL FARADAY (1791-1867)
ELECTRIC MOTOR JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
EPHEMERIS TABLES JOHANN KEPLER (1571-1630)
FERMENTATION CONTROL LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
GALVANOMETER JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
GLOBAL STAR CATALOG JOHN HERSCHEL (1792-1871)
INERT GASES WILLIAM RAMSAY (1852-1916)
KALEIDOSCOPE DAVID BREWSTER (1781-1868)
LAW OF GRAVITY ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
MINE SAFETY LAMP HUMPHREY DAVY (1778-1829)
PASTEURIZATION LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
REFLECTING TELESCOPE ISAAC NEWTON (1642-1727)
SCIENTIFIC METHOD FRANCIS BACON (1561-1626)
SELF-INDUCTION JOSEPH HENRY (1797-1878)
TELEGRAPH SAMUEL F.B. MORSE (1791-1872)
THERMIONIC VALVE AMBROSE FLEMING (1849-1945)
TRANS-ATLANTIC CABLE LORD KELVIN (1824-1907)
VACCINATION & IMMUNIZATION LOUIS PASTEUR (1822-1895)
www.icr.org/article/bible-believing-scientists-past/
Nobel Scientists Who believe in God (20-21 Century)
Albert Einstein Nobel Laureate in Physics
Max Planck Nobel Laureate in Physics
Erwin Schrodinger Nobel Laureate in Physics
Werner Heisenberg Nobel Laureate in Physics
Robert Millikan Nobel Laureate in Physics
Charles Hard Townes Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arthur Schawlow Nobel Laureate in Physics
William D. Phillips Nobel Laureate in Physics
William H. Bragg Nobel Laureate in Physics
Guglielmo Marconi Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arthur Compton Nobel Laureate in Physics
Arno Penzias Nobel Laureate in Physics
Nevill Mott Nobel Laureate in Physics
Isidor Isaac Rabi Nobel Laureate in Physics
Antony Hewish Nobel Laureate in Physics
Joseph H. Taylor, Jr. Nobel Laureate in Physics
Alexis Carrel Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
John Eccles Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Joseph Murray Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Ernst Chain Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
George Wald Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Ronald Ross Nobel Laureate in Medicine and Physiology
Derek Barton Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Christian Anfinsen Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Walter Kohn Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
Richard Smalley Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
PART II. Nobel Writers who believed in God (20-21 Century)
T.S. Eliot Nobel Laureate in Literature
Rudyard Kipling Nobel Laureate in Literature
Alexander Solzhenitsyn Nobel Laureate in Literature
François Mauriac Nobel Laureate in Literature
Hermann Hesse Nobel Laureate in Literature
Winston Churchill Nobel Laureate in Literature
Jean-Paul Sartre Nobel Laureate in Literature
Sigrid Undset Nobel Laureate in Literature
Rudolf Eucken Nobel Laureate in Literature
Isaac Singer Nobel Laureate in Literature
PART III. Nobel Peace Laureates who believed in God (20-21 Century)
Albert Schweitzer Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Jimmy Carter Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Baptist
Theodore Roosevelt Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Woodrow Wilson Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Frederik de Klerk Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Nelson Mandela Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Kim Dae-Jung Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Dag Hammarskjold Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Martin Luther King, Jr. Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Adolfo Perez Esquivel Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Desmond Tutu Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
John R. Mott Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Part IV. Founders of Modern Science who believed in God (16-21 Century)
Isaac Newton Founder of Classical Physics and Infinitesimal Calculus
Galileo Galilei Founder of Experimental Physics
Nicolaus Copernicus Founder of Heliocentric Cosmology
Johannes Kepler Founder of Physical Astronomy and Modern Optics
Francis Bacon Founder of the Scientific Inductive Method
René Descartes Founder of Analytical Geometry and Modern Philosophy
Blaise Pascal Founder of Hydrostatics, Hydrodynamics,and the Theory of Probabilities
Michael Faraday Founder of Electronics and Electro-Magnetics
James Clerk Maxwell Founder of Statistical Thermodynamics
Lord Kelvin Founder of Thermodynamics and Energetics
Robert Boyle Founder of Modern Chemistry
William Harvey Founder of Modern Medicine
John Ray Founder of Modern Biology and Natural History
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz German Mathematician and Philosopher, Founder of Infinitesimal Calculus
Joseph J. Thomson Nobel Laureate in Physics, Discoverer of the Electron, Founder of Atomic Physics
Louis Pasteur Founder of Microbiology and Immunology
Part V. Great Philosophers who believed in God (17-21 Century)
Immanuel Kant One of the Greatest Philosophers in the History of Western Philosophy
Jean-Jacques Rousseau Founder of Modern Deism born
Voltaire French Philosopher and Historian, One of the Most Influential Thinkers of the Enlightenment
David Hume Scottish Empiricist Philosopher, Historian, and Economist,
Spinoza, the Chief Exponent of Modern Rationalism
Giordano Bruno Italian Philosopher, Astronomer, and Mathematician, Founder of the Theory of the Infinite Universe
George Berkeley Irish Philosopher and Mathematician, Founder of Modern Idealism, Famous as "The Precursor of Mach and Einstein"
John Stuart Mill English Philosopher and Economist,
Richard Swinburne Oxford Professor of Philosophy, One of the Most Influential Theistic Philosophers
PART VI. Other Religious Nobelists
60 more Nobel Prize winners are listed
(32 scientists, 17 writers, 11 Nobel Nobel Peace Laureates)
PART VII. Nobelists, Philosophers, and Scientists on Jesus
Quotes by 16 individuals about their beliefs about Jesus
- Alexis Carrel
- Albert Einstein
- Arthur Compton
- Robert Millikan
- Francois Mauriac
- Sigrid Undset
- T.S. Eliot
- Mother Theresa
- Albert Schweitzer
- Theodore Roosevelt
- Frederik de Klerk
- John R. Mott
- Kim Dae-Jung
- Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Jimmy Carter
- Blaise Pascal
www.adherents.com/people/100_Nobel.html
Seven Scientists Who Believe in God
Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
Robert Boyle (1627-1691)
Isaac Newton (1642-1727)
Gottfried W. Leibnitz (1646-1716)
Albert Einstein (1879-1955)
Charles B. Thaxton (living)
www.biblequery.org/Science/Scientists.htm
Famous Scientists Who Believed in God:
Francis Collins (A more recent scientist who helped crack the human genome (genetics/DNA)).
Sir Isaac Newton- He believed very strongly in God, and loved viewing science as God’s creation. He remains one of the most prolific scientists remembered in history. He actually wrote and studied the Bible as much as he experimented, and believed the universe was designed by God.
Louis Pasteur- Another famous scientist who also believed in God.
Robert Boyle- Known for his contributions in chemistry, philosophy, and more, he believed in God
Gregor Mendel-Known for his contributions in genetics and inheritance studies.
Albert Einstein- Albert Einstein didn’t believe (according to most accounts) in the tradition Judeo-Christian God of the Bible. However, he did believe in a God that could have started the universe.
and many more
Other Famous People Who Believe in God:
John D. Rockefeller- A business genius and the world’s first “billionaire” was a devout Christian who believed strongly in God and attended church regularly and tithed 10% of his income.
Famous Rapper “Mase” – Had a vision of leading people to hell, so he gave up his rapidly growing hip-hop career and became a minister.
Chuck Norris- The guy who no one wants to fight- is also known for his faith in God.
George Foreman- Former boxing heavyweight and the guy sold the cool grill on TV, is also a devout Christian.
Zig Ziglar- Motivational speaking guru that became a born-again Christian and has a strong faith in God.
Johnny Cash- This country legend was also known for his belief in God. He recorded several gospel songs over his career, and turned to God for strength during his struggles.
Abraham Lincoln- Always at the top of the list for the world’s greatest presidents of all time, had a strong faith in God. He often made references to God during his speeches, and lived a very moral life by standing up against the cruel practice of slavery.
and the list goes on and on and on.
www.revelation.co/2009/01/05/are-there-any-famous-scientists-philosophers-or-celebrities-that-believe-in-god/
Belief in God
Is belief in the existence of God irrational? These days, many famous scientists are also strong proponents of atheism. However, in the past, and even today, many scientists believe that God exists and is responsible for what we see in nature. This is a small sampling of scientists who contributed to the development of modern science while believing in God. Although many people believe in a "God of the gaps", these scientists, and still others alive today, believe because of the evidence.
For information about 13 scientists who believe in God: www.godandscience.org/apologetics/sciencefaith.html
Last, but the most important person of all who believed in God and who has changed the world more then any of those listed above or anyone else who has ever lived, who lived and died and rose again for you and me: Jesus Christ, Son of God.