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Investigating Christianity

The Cop Response: “What Makes the Cumulative Case for God So Powerful?”

The Cop Response What Makes the Cumulative Case for God So Powerful
Image Credit: Cottonbro Studios from Pexels

Cops typically understand how to resolve issues and questions quickly. If you’re a cop, you might consider applying your skills to questions about God’s existence and the reliability of the Bible. Imagine someone making the following claim: “Christians believe God exists, but the case for God seems complicated. It seems to rely on several lines of evidence. Doesn’t this mean the case is weak and lacks a single definitive proof?” How would you respond to such a statement? Here is a conversational example of how I recently replied:

“Well, let’s say, as a detective, I was going to investigate you as a suspect in a case, and I had a witness who said, ‘I saw him do it.’ OK, great. That’s one piece of evidence, not bad so far.

Now, of course, if I had more evidence, that would be even better, right?

What if your fingerprints and DNA were also discovered at the scene, you made statements to implicate yourself before and after the crime, and your behavior (as later observed) seemed to implicate your involvement?

If this were the case, I’d have a lot more evidence from different categories; some direct evidence (the statement of the eyewitness) and some indirect evidence. These are the kinds of evidences that make a cumulative case convincing. It’s not just that we have lots of evidence pointing to the same conclusion, but it’s also that the evidence is from a variety of sources and categories.

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Well, the case for God’s existence is very similar. I can identify eight pieces of evidence in “God’s Crime Scene.”

For example, the evidence in this case includes the origin of the universe and the fine-tuning of the universe, two cosmological pieces. We also must consider the appearance of life in the universe and the appearance of design in biology, two biological pieces of evidence. In addition, we must add the existence of consciousness and free agency, two mental pieces of evidence. Finally, we must consider the existence objective moral values and evil, two moral pieces of evidence.

These are very different categories. Some are revealed through sciences, others through philosophy. There is a lot of evidence to consider, and the different categories of evidence point to the same reasonable inference. There’s one common causal factor that could explain all eight pieces of evidence in four very different categories, the same way you might’ve been the one common causal factor that would explain all the evidence in the case I was first making against you. In that first case, you were the most reasonable inference.

In a similar way, if God (as the one common causal ‘suspect’) can explain all of these attributes of the universe, He is the most reasonable inference.

The evidence in the universe, based on this cumulative case, points to a divine intruder, a cosmic creator, an all-powerful, all-knowing God who is non-material, non-spatial, non-temporal, creative, the source of information in the DNA, the conscious mind who chooses freely, provides the basis for moral law, and sets the standard for righteousness. That kind of Being would explain all the evidence we see in the cumulative case.

The evidence in the universe points to a cosmic creator, an all-powerful God who is non-material, non-spatial, non-temporal. Share on X

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And that’s why the cumulative evidence matters. It’s points to God as the most reasonable inference.”

Written By

J. Warner Wallace is a Dateline featured cold-case homicide detective, popular national speaker and best-selling author. He continues to consult on cold-case investigations while serving as a Senior Fellow at the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. He is also an Adj. Professor of Christian Apologetics at Talbot School of Theology, Biola University, and a faculty member at Summit Ministries. J. Warner presently serves as a chaplain for his agency and holds a BA in Design (from CSULB), an MA in Architecture (from UCLA), and an MA in Theological Studies (from Gateway Seminary).

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