Backglass wrote:OnlyAmbrose wrote:When asked where matter came from, atheists simply say, "We just don't get it."
Some of us say "It's always been here".

OnlyAmbrose wrote:Just as there are things we do not yet know about science, so too are there things we do not yet know about the supernatural.
The "supernatural" is Science we do not yet understand. The weather, stars, conception, fire & fermentation were once all considered "supernatural". We no longer call those things that today. Why not?
If matter has always existed, then how did it condense to the point of the Big Bang? Seems to defy the laws of physics that all the matter in the Universe would condense to a point that small, doesn't it?
We no longer call such things "supernatural" today because we now know them to be the result of perfectly natural phenomena. But, since I as a theist hold that the laws of nature come from God, a supernatural being, looking into the nature of science is essentially just looking into a creation of God. I see nothing wrong with challenging and testing things in an ethical manner to discover more about the world around us and the laws that govern it.
Basically what I'm saying is that the natural is an extension of the supernatural. Take the example of weather you posed.
Humanity once thought that the path of the sun was a chariot riding through the sky. A work of God.
Now we know that the path of the sun is a result of the earth's gravitational orbit around the sun. But, since gravity is a work of God, the earth's orbit around the sun is still a work of God.
Gravity is just another example of something which is a mystery to scientists. Why do bodies of mass attract each other?
They just do.
Hope that helps.