Is there evidence that God exists?
Why is there something rather than nothing?
The universe had a beginning, and everything that begins seems to have a cause. That does not prove God, but it points many thoughtful people toward a cause beyond the universe itself — something outside space and time.
The universe looks strangely fit for life
The physical constants that make life possible sit in an astonishingly narrow range. Some explain this away; others find it easier to believe it was intended. Both are honest responses to a genuinely striking fact.
Our moral sense is hard to explain away
Almost everyone feels that some things are truly wrong, not just unpopular. That deep intuition — that justice and love are real — fits a universe with a moral God more naturally than one without.
For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made.— Romans 1:20
The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.— Psalm 19:1Ask your own question →
Can God's existence be proven?
Not with mathematical certainty. It is weighed through reasoning and evidence — the origin of the universe, fine-tuning, morality, experience — like a case, not a proof.
Doesn't science explain everything without God?
Science explains how things work, not why anything exists at all. Many scientists hold faith; the two are not necessarily in conflict.
Is it okay to want more certainty?
Yes. Wanting good reasons is healthy. Faith and honest questioning belong together.