The Preaching of the Cross

The Bible as Science: Unanswered Questions

24 min · 10. juni 2026
episode The Bible as Science: Unanswered Questions cover

Beskrivelse

Science gets invoked like a trump card in conversations about faith, but what happens when the Bible itself raises scientific questions that still humble the modern mind? We take you to Job 38, where God confronts human pride with simple, piercing challenges: Have you ever commanded the morning to come on time, or made the dawn “know its place”? If you have ever stared at the ceiling at 2 a.m. wishing the night would end, you already understand the force of that question. From there we follow the text into the sky and out into space, looking at the order behind timekeeping and the staggering precision that our clocks only imitate. Then we pause over a vivid ancient image, “the earth is turned as clay to the seal,” and talk about why that language sounds a lot like Earth’s rotation in sunlight. The goal is not to worship human cleverness, but to put our knowledge in its proper place and let Scripture speak with the weight it claims. Next we drop into the deep ocean and the mystery of “the springs of the sea.” Even with submersibles, pressure suits, and modern marine research, the seafloor still defeats our tools and keeps secrets locked under crushing pressure. We also challenge a comfortable assumption: mechanical progress and modern convenience do not automatically make us spiritually wiser or morally better. Finally, we explore “the treasures of the snow and the hail,” connecting the passage to real agricultural value through nitrogen compounds that enrich the soil. If you care about the Bible and science, Christian apologetics, or just want a serious answer to the claim that “science disproved Scripture,” this message will give you plenty to think about. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review with your take: which question from Job 38 exposes human limits the most? Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

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Alle episoder

118 episoder

episode The Bible as Science: A Big Fish Story cover

The Bible as Science: A Big Fish Story

Jonah and the whale is one of the easiest Bible stories to mock and one of the hardest to discuss calmly. We start somewhere most people do not expect: the quiet power of generosity that gives without asking, serves without squeezing, and trusts God to provide. Then we turn straight toward the criticism that never seems to go away, the claim that the book of Jonah collapses under science and common sense. We walk through why Jonah draws so much fire from skeptics, and why the key phrase “God prepared” changes the entire frame of the argument. If you erase the supernatural at the start, you will never be satisfied with any explanation. But if you take Scripture on its own terms, you can examine what it actually says, including the way Jesus Christ points to Jonah as a sign. That leads to a challenging line of thought: the story is not merely about surviving inside a sea creature, but about death, the soul, and a parallel to Christ’s time in the heart of the earth. We also tackle the “fish vs whale” debate, the translation complaints, and the way critics shift between Hebrew and Greek only when it suits them. Along the way, we use a simple modern analogy a submarine, an “iron fish” built by man to expose a common double standard about what people call impossible. We end right where the next broadcast begins, promising more evidence for why the Jonah account is scientifically probable. Subscribe for the next installment, share this with a friend who loves Bible and science questions, and leave a review with your toughest Jonah objection so we can address it. Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

15. juni 202625 min
episode The Bible as Science: Jonah and the Whale cover

The Bible as Science: Jonah and the Whale

Jonah and the whale gets mocked so often that many people assume the Bible must be careless with facts and science. We take the opposite approach: slow down, read the text plainly, and ask what the evidence actually supports. From the opening minutes, we lay out why “science falsely so called” is not a threat to Scripture, and why the loudest attacks on biblical accuracy tend to come from a surprisingly small list of recycled objections. We then turn to the core controversy: the book of Jonah and the two verses critics most want deleted, the great fish swallowing Jonah and later casting him onto dry land. Rather than dodging the hard questions, we walk through what the passage says, why the miracle is the point, and why changing the Bible to fit the scholarship of any generation is a dead end. Along the way, we highlight how often people discuss Jonah without ever reading its four short chapters for themselves. Finally, we build the positive case for Jonah’s historicity, first through the historical reference in 2 Kings and then through the conclusive testimony of Jesus Christ. Jesus treats Jonah as real, ties Jonah’s three days and three nights to His own burial and resurrection, and points to Nineveh’s repentance as a warning to the hard-hearted. We also explore a more human, more believable reason Jonah runs: not because God is “tribal,” but because Nineveh is dangerous, hated, and frightening for a lone prophet. Subscribe for weekday Bible teaching, share this with a friend who thinks Jonah is just a legend, and leave a review telling us what Bible objection you want us to examine next. Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

12. juni 202624 min
episode The Bible as Science: Spectroscopy and Meteorology cover

The Bible as Science: Spectroscopy and Meteorology

If someone told you the book of Job contains scientific questions that still corner modern thinkers, would you roll your eyes or lean in. I lean in, because Job 38 doesn’t read like a vague religious poem. It reads like a series of direct challenges about the physical world, asked thousands of years before modern instruments existed, and that tension is exactly where today’s conversation lives. We walk through the startling line “By what way is the light parted?” and connect it to what we now call spectroscopy, the method scientists use to analyze light and even identify the composition of distant stars. From there, we move into meteorology, exploring lightning, thunder, and precipitation, and why rain falls on wilderness where no man dwells. Along the way, we contrast God’s providence with the enormous human cost of moving water into cities, and we ask what that should do to our pride. Then we slow down and stare at something we all take for granted: water. Why does ice float, insulating life beneath it all winter, when so many substances sink as they solidify. We talk about heavy water, the strange expansion near freezing, and why describing a phenomenon is not the same as explaining it. The deeper theme is simple: when science can measure so much yet cannot control drought, storms, seasons, or the basic mysteries of water, maybe the honest response is humility before the Creator. If you enjoy faith and science conversations, biblical apologetics, and expository Bible teaching rooted in Scripture, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

11. juni 202625 min
episode The Bible as Science: Unanswered Questions cover

The Bible as Science: Unanswered Questions

Science gets invoked like a trump card in conversations about faith, but what happens when the Bible itself raises scientific questions that still humble the modern mind? We take you to Job 38, where God confronts human pride with simple, piercing challenges: Have you ever commanded the morning to come on time, or made the dawn “know its place”? If you have ever stared at the ceiling at 2 a.m. wishing the night would end, you already understand the force of that question. From there we follow the text into the sky and out into space, looking at the order behind timekeeping and the staggering precision that our clocks only imitate. Then we pause over a vivid ancient image, “the earth is turned as clay to the seal,” and talk about why that language sounds a lot like Earth’s rotation in sunlight. The goal is not to worship human cleverness, but to put our knowledge in its proper place and let Scripture speak with the weight it claims. Next we drop into the deep ocean and the mystery of “the springs of the sea.” Even with submersibles, pressure suits, and modern marine research, the seafloor still defeats our tools and keeps secrets locked under crushing pressure. We also challenge a comfortable assumption: mechanical progress and modern convenience do not automatically make us spiritually wiser or morally better. Finally, we explore “the treasures of the snow and the hail,” connecting the passage to real agricultural value through nitrogen compounds that enrich the soil. If you care about the Bible and science, Christian apologetics, or just want a serious answer to the claim that “science disproved Scripture,” this message will give you plenty to think about. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves big questions, and leave a review with your take: which question from Job 38 exposes human limits the most? Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

10. juni 202624 min
episode The Bible as Science: The Oldest Book cover

The Bible as Science: The Oldest Book

Modern science loves to critique the Bible, but what happens when the Bible turns around and questions science? We open Job 38 and watch God respond to Job’s challenge with a blunt examination of creation, origins, and human limits and the most honest answer keeps resurfacing across the centuries: “I don’t know.” We build the case that the Bible and science are not natural enemies when you actually read the text. Drawing on the Book of Job (often called the oldest book of the Bible), Pastor James W. Knox argues that Scripture contains striking anticipations of discoveries people label “modern,” and that many confident critics simply haven’t grappled with what the passage is claiming. Along the way, we retell Harry Rimmer’s memorable story of leading scientists trying to answer Job’s forty questions and realizing how quickly expertise runs out when the questions move from technology to first causes. Then we dig into three big ideas from Job 38: the unanswered riddle of where we were when earth’s foundations were laid, the mystery of life and consciousness that even embryology cannot fully pin down, and the provocative line about the “morning stars” singing, connected to physics, wavelengths, and the relationship between light, color, and sound. We close at the shoreline, asking what truly holds the sea inside its boundaries and what that means for a biblical worldview rooted in the power and authority of God’s Word. Subscribe for more Bible teaching, share this with a friend who loves faith-and-reason conversations, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Church Website — BibleBaptistDeLand.com [https://biblebaptistdeland.com] Ministry Website — JamesWKnox.org [https://jameswknox.org]  YouTube Channel — YouTube.com/JamesWKnoxSermons [https://www.youtube.com/jameswknoxsermons] Sermon Audio — SermonAudio.com/BibleBaptistDeLand [https://www.sermonaudio.com/biblebaptistdeland] Web Store — Store.JamesWKnox.org [https://store.jameswknox.org]

9. juni 202625 min