The Age of the Universe by Gerald Schroeder, PHD, Torah scholar
We continue with Torah scholar and PHD Gerald Schroder and the age of the Universe from a Biblical perspective
One of the most obvious
perceived contradictions between Torah and science is the age of the universe.
Is it billions of years old, like scientific data, or is it thousands of years,
like Biblical data? When we add up the generations of the Bible and then add
the secular rulers that followed, we come to fewer than 6000 years. Whereas,
data from the Hubbell telescope or from the land based telescopes in Hawaii,
indicate the number at approximately 14 billion years. In trying to resolve
this apparent conflict, I use only ancient biblical commentary because modern
commentary already knows modern science, and so it is influenced by what
science says.
That commentary includes the
text of the Bible itself (3300 years ago), the translation of the Torah into
Aramaic by Onkelos (100 CE), the Talmud (redacted about the year 400 CE), and
the three major Torah commentators. There are many, many commentators, but at
the top of the mountain there are three, accepted by all: Rashi (11th century
France), who brings the straight understanding of the text, Maimonides (12th
century Egypt), who handles the philosophical concepts, and then Nahmanides
(13th century Spain), the most important of the Kabbalists.
These ancient commentaries
were finalized hundreds or thousands of years ago, long before Hubbell was a
gleam in his great-grandparent’s eye. So there’s no possibility of Hubbell or
any other scientific data influencing these concepts. That’s a key component in
keeping the following discussion objective.
Universe with a Beginning
In 1959, a survey was taken
of leading American scientists. Among the many questions asked was, “What is
your estimate of the age of the universe?” Now, in 1959, astronomy was popular,
but cosmology – the deep physics of understanding the universe – was just
developing. The response to that survey was recently republished in Scientific
American – the most widely read science journal in the world. Two-thirds of the
scientists gave the same answer. The answer that two-thirds – an overwhelming
majority – of the scientists gave was, “Beginning? There was no beginning.
Aristotle and Plato taught us 2400 years ago that the universe is eternal. Oh,
we know the Bible says ‘In the beginning.’ That’s a nice story; it helps kids
go to bed at night. But we sophisticates know better. There was no beginning.”
That was 1959. In 1965, Arno
Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered the echo of the Big Bang in the black of
the sky at night, and the world paradigm changed from a universe that was
eternal to a universe that had a beginning. Science had made an enormous
paradigm change in its understanding of the world. Understand the impact.
Science said that our universe had a beginning. I can’t overestimate the import
of that scientific “discovery.” Evolution, cave men, these are all trivial
problems compared to the fact that we now understand that we had a beginning.
Exactly as the Bible had claimed for three millennia.
Of course, the fact that
there was a beginning does not prove that there was a beginner. Whether the
second half of Genesis 1:1 is correct, we don’t know from a secular point of
view. The first half is “In the beginning;” the second half is “God created the
Heavens and the Earth.” Physics allows for a beginning without a beginner. I’m
not going to get into the physics of that here. “The Science of God,” my second
book, examines this in great detail.
It All Starts From Rosh Hashana
The question we’re left with
is, how long ago did the “beginning” occur? Was it, as the Bible might imply,
fewer than 6,000 years, or was it the 14 billions of years that are accepted by
the scientific community? The
first thing we have to understand is the origin of the Biblical calendar.
The Biblical year is calculated by adding up the generations since
Adam. Additionally, there are six days
from the creation of the universe to the creation of the first human who is the
first being with the soul of a human (not the first hominid, a being with human
shape and intelligence, but
lacking the soul of humanity, the neshama). We have a 6000 year clock
that begins with Adam. The six days are separate from this clock. The Bible has two clocks.
This is no modern rationalization. The Talmud already discussed this 1600 years
ago.
The reason the six pre-Adam
days were taken out of the calendar is because time is described differently in
those Six Days of Genesis. “There was evening and morning” with no relationship
to human time. Once we come to the progeny of Adam, the flow of time is totally
in human terms. Adam and Eve live 130 years before having Seth. Seth lives 105
years before having Enosh, etc. (Genesis chapter 5). From Adam forward, the
flow of time is totally human in concept. But prior to that time, it’s an
abstract concept: “Evening and morning.” It’s as if you’re looking down on
events from a viewpoint that is not intimately related to them, a cosmic view
of time.
Looking Deeper into the Text
In trying to understand the
flow of time here, you have to remember that the entire Six Days is described
in 31 sentences. The Six Days of Genesis, which have given people so many
headaches are confined to 31 sentences! At MIT, in the Hayden library, we had
about 50,000 books that deal with the development of the universe: cosmology,
chemistry, thermodynamics, paleontology, archaeology, and the high-energy
physics of creation. Up the river at Harvard, at the Weidner library, they
probably have 200,000 books on these same topics. The Bible gives us 31
sentences. Don’t expect that by a simple reading of those sentences, you’ll know
every detail that is held within the text. It’s obvious that we have to dig deeper to get the
information out.
What is a “day?”
The usual answer to that
question is let the word ‘day’ in Genesis chapter one be any long period of
time. Bend the Bible to match the science. Fortunately, the Talmud in Hagigah
(12A), Rashi there and Nahmanides (Gen. 1:3) all tell us that the word day
means 24 hours, not sunrise and sun set. The sun is not mentioned till day four
and these commentaries all relate to all six days, right from day one. But the
commentary continues in Exodus and Leviticus, that the days are 24 hours each
(again, not relating to sunrise and sunset, merely sets of 24 hours). There are
six of them, and the duration is no longer than the six days of a work week,
BUT they contain all the ages of the world. How can six 24 hour days contain
all the ages of the world?
The Flexible flow of time and the stretching of space
Einstein taught the world
that time is relative. That in regions of high velocity or high gravity time
actually passes more slowly relative to regions of lower gravity or lower
velocity. (One system relative to another, hence the name, the laws of
relativity.) This is now proven fact. Time actually stretches out. Were ever
you are time is normal for you because your biology is part of that local
system.
That is Einstein and gravity
and velocity. But there is a third aspect of the universe that changes the
perception of time, Not gravity and not velocity. That is the stretching of
space. The universe
started as a minuscule speck, perhaps not larger that a grain of mustard and
stretched out from there. Space actually stretches. The effect of the
stretching of space produces the effect that when observing an event that took
place far from our galaxy, as the light from that event travels through space
and the sequence of events travels through space, the information is actually
stretched out. (In The Science of God I give the logic in detail in simple easy
to understand terms.) Hebrews 11.3
The Creation of Time
Each day of creation is
numbered. Yet Nahmanides points out that there is discontinuity in the way the
days are numbered. The verse says: “There is evening and morning, Day One.” But the second day
doesn’t say “evening and morning, Day Two.” Rather, it says “evening and
morning, a second day.” And the Torah continues with this pattern: “Evening and
morning, a third day… a fourth day… a fifth day… the sixth day.” Only on the
first day does the text use a different form: not “first day,” but “Day One”
(“Yom Echad”). Many
English translations make the mistake of writing “a first day.” That’s
because editors want things to be nice and consistent. But they throw out the
cosmic message in the text! That message, as Nahmanides points out, is that
there is a qualitative difference between “one” and “first.”
One is absolute; first is
comparative. The Torah
could not write “a first day” on the first day because there had not yet been a
second day relative to it. Had the perspective of the Bible for the
first six days been from Sinai looking back, the Torah would have written a
first day. By the time the Torah was given on Sinai there had been hundreds of
thousands of “second days.” The perspective of the Bible for the six days of
Genesis is from the only time in the history of time when there had not been a
second day. And that is the first day. From the creation of the universe to the creation of the
soul of Adam, the Torah views time from near the beginning looking forward.
At the creation of Adam and Eve, the soul of humanity, the Bible perspective
switches to earth based time. And therefore the biblical description of time
changed.
How we perceive time
We look at the universe, and
say, “How old is the universe? Looking back in time, the universe is
approximately 14 billion years old.” That’s our view of time. But what is the
Bible’s view of time looking from the beginning? How does it see time?
Nahmanides taught that
although the days are 24 hours each, they contain “kol yemot ha-olam” – all the
ages and all the secrets of the world. Nahmanides says that before the
universe, there was nothing… but then suddenly the entire creation appeared as
a minuscule speck. He gives a description for the speck: something very tiny,
smaller than a grain of mustard. And he says that is the only physical
creation. There was no other physical creation; all other creations were
spiritual. The Nefesh (the soul of animal life, Genesis 1:21) and the Neshama
(the soul of human life, Genesis 1:27) are spiritual creations.
There’s only one physical
creation, and that creation was a tiny speck. In that speck was all the raw
material that would be used for making everything else. Nahmanides describes
the substance as “dak me’od, ein bo mamash” – very thin, no substance to it.
And as this speck expanded out, this substance, so thin that it has no material
substance, turned into matter as we know it.
Nahmanides further writes:
“Misheyesh, yitfos bo zman” – from the moment that matter formed from this
substance-less substance, time grabs hold. Time is created at the beginning.
But time “grabs hold” when matter condenses from the substance-less substance
of the big bang creation. When matter condenses, congeals, coalesces, out of
this substance so thin it has no material substance, that’s when the biblical
clock starts.
Science has shown that
there’s only one “substanceless substance” that can change into matter. And
that’s energy. Einstein’s famous equation, E=MC2, tells us that energy can
change form and take on the form of matter. And once it changes into matter,
time grabs hold. Nahmanides has made a phenomenal statement. I don’t know if he
knew the Laws of Relativity. But we know them now. We know that energy – light
beams, radio waves, gamma rays, x-rays – all travel at the speed of light, 300
million meters per second. At
the speed of light, time does not pass. The universe was aging, time was
passing, but time only grabs hold when matter is present. This moment of time
before the clock of the Bible begins lasted less than 1/100,000 of a second. A
miniscule time. But in that time, the universe expanded from a tiny speck, to
about the size of the Solar System. From that moment on we have matter, and
biblical time flows forward. The Biblical clock begins here.
Day One and not a first day: seeing time from the beginning
Now the fact that the Bible
tells us there is “evening and morning Day One”, comes to teach us time from a
Biblical perspective, from near the beginning looking forward.
If the Torah were seeing time
from the days of Moses on Mount Sinai – 2448 years after Adam – the text would
not have written Day One. Because by Sinai, hundreds of thousands of days
already passed. It would have said “a first day.” By the second day of Genesis,
the Bible says “a second day,” because there was already the first day with
which to compare it.
We look back in time, and say
the universe is 14 billion years old. But as every scientist knows, when we say
the universe is 14 billion years old, there’s another half of the sentence that
we rarely bother to say. The
other half of the sentence is: The universe is 14 billion years old as seen
from the time-space coordinates of the earth.
The key is that the Torah looks forward in time, from very different
time-space coordinates, when the universe was small. Since then, the universe has expanded out. Space
stretches, and that stretching of space totally changes the perception of time.
Imagine in your mind going back billions of years to the beginning of time. Now
pretend way back at the beginning of time, when time grabs hold, there’s an
intelligent community. (It’s totally fictitious.) Imagine that the intelligent
community has a laser, and it’s going to shoot out a blast of light every
second. Every second — pulse. Pulse. Pulse. And on each pulse of light the
following formation is printed (printing information on light, electro-magnetic
radiation, is common practice): “I’m sending you a pulse every second.”
Billions of years later, way far down the time line, we here on Earth have a
big satellite dish antenna and we receive that pulse of light. And on that
pulse of light we read “I’m sending you a pulse every second.”
Light travels 300 million
meters per second. So at the beginning, the two light pulses are separated by a
second of travel or 300 million meters. Now they travel through space for
billions of years until they reach the Earth. But wait a minute. Is the
universe static? No. The universe is expanding. The universe expands by space
stretching. So as these pulses travel through space for billions of years,
space is stretching. What’s happening to these pulses? The space between them
is also stretching. So the pulses get further and further apart. Billions of
years later, when the first pulse arrives, we read on it “I’m sending you a
pulse every second.” A message from outer space. You call all your friends, and
you wait for the next pulse to arrive. Does it arrive second later? No! A year
later? Maybe not. Maybe billions of years later. Because the amount of time
this pulse of light has traveled through space will determine the amount of
space stretching that has occurred, and so how much space and therefore how
much time there will be between the arrival of the pulses. That’s standard
cosmology.
14 billion years or six days?
Today, we look back in time and we see approximately 14 billion years
of history. Looking forward from when the universe is very small – billions of
times smaller – the Torah says six days. In truth, they both may be correct. What’s exciting about the last few years in cosmology
is we now have quantified the data to know the relationship of the “view of
time” from the beginning of stable matter, the threshold energy of protons and
neutrons (their nucleosynthesis), relative to the “view of time” today. It’s
not science fiction any longer. A dozen physics textbooks all bring the same
number. The general relationship between nucleosynthesis, that time near the
beginning at the threshold energy of protons and neutrons when matter formed,
and time today is a million million. That’s a 1 with 12 zeros after it. So when
a view from the beginning looking forward says “I’m sending you a pulse every
second,” would we see a pulse every second?
No. We’d see it every million
million seconds. Because that’s the stretching effect of the expansion of the
universe.
The Talmud tells us that the soul of Adam was created at five and a
half days after the beginning of the six days. That is a half
day before the termination of the sixth day. At that moment the cosmic
calendar ceases and an earth based calendar starts. The logic for the Talmud choosing the 5 and a half
days (and not the total six days) is that the creation of the Adam, Genesis
1:27, is half way through the number of verses in the sixth day of Genesis.
How would we see those days stretched by a million million? Five and a half days times a
million million, gives us five and a half million million days. Dividing that
by 365 days in a year, that comes out to be 15 billion years. NASA gives
a value of 13.7 billion years. Considering the many approximations, and that
the Bible works with only six periods of time, the agreement to within a few
percent is extraordinary. The universe is billions of years old from one
perspective and a mere six days old from another. And both are correct!
The amount of the 14 billion years compressed within each of the five
and a half days of Genesis is not of equal duration. Each time the universe doubles in size, the
perception of time halves as we project that time back toward the beginning of
the universe. The rate of
doubling, that is the fractional rate of change, is very rapid at the beginning
and decreases with time simply because as the universe gets larger and larger,
even though the actual expansion rate is approximately constant, it takes longer and longer for
the overall size to double. Because of this, the earliest of the six
days have most of the15 billion years sequestered with them. For the duration
of each day and the details of how that matches with the measured history of
the universe and the earth, see The Science of God.
CORRECTION TO THE CALCULATION OF THE AGE OF THE UNIVERSE
Following a talk I gave at
AZUSA Pacific University, February 2011, a participant noted that when calculating
the expansion ratio of space [that is, by what fraction space had stretched]
from the era of nucleosynthesis to our current time, I had neglected to correct
for the effect that the increase in the rate of universal expansion has on the
current cosmic microwave radiation background. This increase introduces a
non-linear effect. [That is, the rate of expansion is not constant, rather the
rate is increasing.] The correction is in the order of 10%. Had the expansion
been linear [and not super-linear resulting from the increased rate], the CMRB
would be, not the currently observed 2.76 K, but 3.03 K. Introducing this
correction into the exponential equation that details the duration of the 5 and
a half 24 hour days of Genesis Chapter One results in an age of the universe
from our perspective of 14 billion years [14, 000,000,000 years]. From the
Bible’s perspective of time for those six evocative days of Genesis, the number
of our years held compressed within each of those six 24 hour days of Genesis,
starting with Day One, would be, in billions of years, respectively, 7.1;
3.6; 1.8; 0.89; 0.45; 0.23 =
14.07 billion years!
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