All gods invented by man have been described as having various powers.
Assumption. Invented by man. How do you know God does not exist?
Actually, that statement did not specify whether or not Yahweh was among the "gods invented by man". With or without that being the case for Yahweh, the sentence as written still describes all those other gods. The remainder of the paragraph was just comparison.
Also, even including Yahweh in that category, calling God a human invention, is a statement of known historical fact, whether a creature matching its description coincidentally really exists or not. Not only does the Bible contain anachronistic traits from earlier versions of that character, which somebody obviously just missed when trying to clean them out, but we also have non-Biblical and pre-Biblical texts which shed even more light on him. It is absolutely clear and inescapable that the version we finally ended up with in the latest versions of the books that eventually ended up in the Bible was the result of ages of modification by human authors, whose work we can see in progress at various stages, derived not from observations of reality or even from philosophication about the universe needing a Creator, but from a member of an earlier pantheon which would surely be declared fictional by modern Christians, like Chronos and Baldr and Ganesh and Amaterasu. (
In fact, Yahweh's role within that pantheon includes getting invoked in treaties to punish kings or kingdoms with destructive storms if they violate those treaties, making him essentially the deity of punishment... now which modern Christian character does that sound like?)
If a real thing like the current trendy Christian concept of God actually exists, then it's a tremendous coincidence that one version of the fictional character called "God" finally happens to have anything in common with that entity right now.
Science dispelled the "myth" that the Universe was created from nothing in seven days and said it always existed, and was stable.
No, science dispelled the myth that it was created in seven days and noted that there was no available sign of its actual age, just that it was clearly older than that. You are lying.
(And not even lying about the right thing; the important part here is the dispelling of the religious myth, which didn't change after the Big Bang was discovered anyway; Creationism was still a dispelled myth.)
Shock - horror. Science found out about the Big Bang.
No shock or horror. Just a discovery that many people didn't expect... which, for scientists, is
fun & exciting. You are lying.
Science found out about the Big Bang. So now Krauss and many other scientists believe the Universe was created from nothing.
No, the "universe from nothing" idea is not based on the Big Bang. It's about the amounts of matter & energy and the curvature of space. Krauss has described this on many occasions which are easily available to the public, including several iterations of different lengths & amounts of detail on YouTube. These things have nothing to do with the discovery of the Big Bang (although they do fit together with it well enough). What connection this has with the "debate" between Creationism and science is also not much of a connection itself, although there's no point in getting into that with someone who claims Krauss was talking about the Big Bang in the first place. It would be like debating whether a new modern plane's engine should be a turboprop or a high-bypass turbofan with someone who just said Boeing's most popular commercial model flies by flapping its wings.
And in a very short time as well.
Trillionths of a second are not a day or a week, thousands to millions of millennia are not a day or a week, the events that happened in that time are not the events the Bible depicts, and even an explanation that pretends the Bible uses metaphors for the real events and a metaphorical time frame still puts the Bible's metaphors in two different wrong orders. Pretending that this has anything to do with the Bible being proven right is lying. (And it's also tacitly admitting that science, not religious stuff, is the only actual way to determine truth, since it's treating science as the standard which the Bible needs to meet, not the other way around.)
But they still cannot say who or what was the cause, but are sure that God is not a possibility.
Another lie.
The Greeks intuited the atom. They were centuries ahead.
Wow, people can think of questions and guess at the answers centuries before the relevant evidence is available? What a meaningful revelation.
