Spooky Action at a Distance
The Apostle Paul said in Romans 1:20 that even the invisible
attributes of God’s nature, power, and glory are revealed in the created order.
Paul again said in Acts 14:17 that the good things that are evident in the world
around us are evidence of an all powerful creator. David said in Psalms 19:1
that the heavens declare the glory of God.
Dr. Michael Guillen is an Emmy-winning science
journalist, physicist, and bestselling author who is widely known for his
14-year tenure as the Science Editor for ABC News (1988–2002).
During this time, he was a regular contributor to major programs like Good
Morning America, Nightline, and 20/20. A
significant part of Guillen's later career has focused on the intersection of
faith and science. Having once been a "devout atheist," he
transitioned to Christianity, a journey he details in several of his books. He
currently hosts the "Science + God" podcast and
speaks globally on how scientific discovery can coexist with biblical truths.
Following is an article recently published by Dr. Guillen, an article that demonstrates
the truths called out by the Apostle Paul and King David.
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“For millennia, the concept of an omniscient
God — a deity who knows every sparrow that falls, every thought
that forms, and every star that burns across the vast expanse of the cosmos —
has boggled the human imagination. How in the world can any entity, no matter
how supreme, know everything that’s happening everywhere, all at once, in real
time, and with atomic-level intimacy?
To the strict materialist, it sounds like an impossibility,
a wondrous but completely illogical relic of ancient philosophies and
religions. Yet, when one plumbs the depths of modern physics, one discovers something utterly profound: The
concept of divine omniscience is not just plausible; its mechanism is woven
into the very fabric of spacetime.
This deeply mysterious mechanism is called quantum
entanglement. It was first acknowledged in 1935 by physicists Albert Einstein,
Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen; verified theoretically in 1964 by physicist
John Stewart Bell; and validated experimentally in 1972 by physicists John
Clauser and Stuart Freedman.
Here’s how it works.
Two objects — for example, subatomic particles — that are
intimately related and then widely separated, somehow maintain an invisible,
intimate and unbreakable connection. One object might be in a lab on Earth and
the other might be clear across the universe, billions of light-years away, yet
whatever happens to one is known and felt by the other instantaneously, without
any delay whatsoever.
Einstein was none too pleased with quantum entanglement
because it violates a sacred principle of his theory of special relativity:
Nothing — not even information — can travel faster than the speed of light. He
mocked the idea that two widely separated objects could communicate infinitely
fast, calling it spukhafte Fernwirkung, German for "spooky action at a
distance."
Even though he was ultimately proven wrong both
theoretically and experimentally, Einstein was right to call quantum
entanglement spooky. To this day, the instantaneous signals passing between
entangled objects are like nothing we can explain. They’re something totally
different from radio waves and light signals.
Indeed, one would be justified in calling the connection
between widely separated, entangled objects "otherworldly." I say
that because quantum entanglement clearly offers us a stunning scientific
explication of the age-old belief in an omniscient God.
Many people carry with them the image of a deity who
is far removed from human affairs, peering down on his creation
through a cosmic telescope, waiting for the light of our actions to reach him
in heaven. Quantum entanglement offers us a radically different image: A God
who is strongly entangled with the whole of creation — right down to the very
atoms of our being — by virtue of his being the source of the universe and
everything in it.
In other words, the existence of quantum entanglement offers
us a fresh perspective on God’s omniscience. It suggests that God’s awareness
of the universe is not obtained through observation; it’s acquired via an
intimate, instantaneous, "spooky" connection.
Just as an object instantaneously knows and feels whatever
happens to its entangled partner clear across the universe, God instantaneously
knows and feels everything that happens to every single atom anywhere in the
universe — and beyond. There’s no distance too great, no darkness too deep, to
sever that deep, fundamental connection between Creator and creation.
As fellow travelers on this journey called life, we’re
tempted to maintain a firewall between the realm of
science and the realm of the spirit. We’re mistaught that the
former deals in cold, hard facts, while the latter deals in blind faith. But
when we look closely at the invisible, underlying architecture of reality, that
wall crumbles.
Science does not erase the majesty of the divine; it
illuminates it. It shows us that we live in a universe filled with unseen
forces, deeply interconnected and governed by mysteries that should leave us
filled with awe and wonder.
So, then, the next time you look up at the night sky, I
encourage you to resist the impulse to look upon the cosmos as nothing but a
collection of isolated, distant stars. Instead, allow yourself to behold it for
what it really is: a grand, entangled tapestry!
Above all, consider this: The same invisible architecture
that instantaneously and intimately connects physical objects across the cosmic
void is of the very same design that connects you — instantaneously,
intimately, and eternally — to the mind and spirit of God.”