52 results ( Located in the same paragraph Located in the same sentence Located in the same paragraph Located in the same article ). Sorted by most occurrences Sorted by most occurrences Sorted by date, newest first Sorted by date, oldest first What the Big Bang Explains—What It Doesn’t (40 occurrences) What the Big Bang Explains—What It Doesn’t g96 1/22 pp. 3-6 - Awake!—1996 Did It Really Have a Beginning? (10 occurrences) & World Report in 1997, that “the universe began with a big bang that propelled matter outward in all directions.” g99 6/22 pp. 3-5 - Awake!—1999 Did It Just Happen, or Was It Created? (8 occurrences) Actually, it is as the magazine Scientific American reported in its January 1999 issue: “The big bang theory does not describe the birth of the universe.” g99 6/22 pp. 6-9 - Awake!—1999 Insight on the News (8 occurrences) “Big Bang” Theory—a Fizzle? w78 4/15 p. 23 - The Watchtower—1978 Creation or Evolution?—Part 2: Why Question Evolution? (6 occurrences) CLAIM: ‘Everything in the universe came as a result of a random big bang.’ ijwyp article 33 - Young People Ask (ijwyp) Evolution (6 occurrences) Does the Bible’s creation account rule out the possibility that the universe began with the big bang? g 10/15 pp. 8-9 - Awake!—2015 ‘Something Is Missing’—What? (6 occurrences) Most espouse some version of the big bang “theology,” which has become the secular religion of our time, even as they quibble incessantly over the details. g96 1/22 pp. 11-14 - Awake!—1996 Lessons Learned From the Universe (6 occurrences) This radiation was said to be a reverberation coming from the primeval explosion that astronomers have christened the big bang. g92 3/22 pp. 9-11 - Awake!—1992 Our Awesome Universe (6 occurrences) One prominent theory that attempts to describe this beginning is known as the Big Bang. ce chap. 9 pp. 114-127 - Creation (ce) Insight on the News (6 occurrences) Called the inflationary universe theory, it is challenging the formerly favored big bang theory that “all the stuff of the universe was there from the beginning” and exploded, forming the universe. w83 7/15 p. 10 - The Watchtower—1983 Insight on the News (6 occurrences) “Before the Big Bang”? w79 6/15 p. 11 - The Watchtower—1979 Watching the World (5 occurrences) ◆ In March, Britain’s New Scientist magazine published an article entitled “In the Beginning,” outlining events during the first tiny instants after the so-called big bang. g81 8/8 pp. 29-31 - Awake!—1981 Should I Believe in Evolution? (4 occurrences) CLAIM: Everything in the universe came as a result of a random big bang. ypq question 9 pp. 27-29 - 10 Questions (ypq) So Mysterious, yet So Beautiful (4 occurrences) As we have seen, disagreements over the distances to other galaxies have recently touched off a lively debate over the big bang model of the creation of the universe. g96 1/22 pp. 6-10 - Awake!—1996 Warning! This Water May Be Hazardous to Your Health (4 occurrences) “The question is how big the bang will be.” g86 11/22 pp. 8-11 - Awake!—1986 Does It Make Sense to Believe in God? (4 occurrences) The theory of many astronomers is that thousands of millions of years ago, a tremendous explosion, a “big bang,” started energy and matter spreading out to form the universe as we know it. hp chap. 2 pp. 10-20 - Happiness (hp) The Ultimate Source of Meaning (4 occurrences) But the latest evidence makes it almost certain that the Big Bang really did occur many millions of years ago.” g80 10/22 pp. 8-11 - Awake!—1980 Watching the World (4 occurrences) In recent years, the most widely accepted conclusion among scientists is that the universe expanded from an initial “big bang” in the distant past, and is continuing this expansion. g75 12/22 pp. 29-30 - Awake!—1975 Our Awesome Universe (4 occurrences) This theory apparently supported the idea that the universe began with a “big bang,” from a central mass, and then spread out from there. g75 6/22 pp. 16-19 - Awake!—1975 A Big Bang! (4 occurrences) A Big Bang! w55 2/15 p. 110 - The Watchtower—1955 Universe (2 occurrences) big bang theory: g 10/15 8; g 8/09 17; g96 1/22 3-6, 11; g92 3/22 10-11; rs 62 dx86-24 - Index 1986-2024 Creation (2 occurrences) big bang theory: g 10/15 8; g 8/09 17; g96 1/22 3-6, 11; g92 3/22 10-11; rs 62 dx86-24 - Index 1986-2024 Purposeful Design or Mindless Process? (2 occurrences) If the cosmos and everything in it are the product of spontaneous combinations of elements after the primordial big bang, then there can be no real purpose to life. g 12/09 pp. 4-8 - Awake!—2009 A Universe Full of Surprises (2 occurrences) When Hubble published his groundbreaking work in 1929, he paved the way for the development of the big bang theory of the origin of the universe, which indicates that the universe originated in a cosmic explosion approximately 13 billion years ago. g 8/09 pp. 16-18 - Awake!—2009 Enjoy Our Beautiful Earth (2 occurrences) Is the existence of life on this planet the product of blind chance, the fortuitous result of some part of the “big bang”? w07 2/15 p. 3 - The Watchtower—2007 How Did the Universe and Life Originate? (2 occurrences) “It may be that the Big Bang happened 12 billion years ago. g02 6/8 pp. 4-7 - Awake!—2002 Our Awesome Universe—A Product of Chance? (2 occurrences) The birth of the universe is often referred to as the big bang. g00 10/8 pp. 3-4 - Awake!—2000 From Our Readers (2 occurrences) This poses a problem for the modern big bang theory! g96 9/8 p. 30 - Awake!—1996 Page Two (2 occurrences) Does the big bang theory explain creation? g96 1/22 p. 2 - Awake!—1996 Creation (2 occurrences) big bang theory: ce 126-127, 202; g81 2/22 11-12 dx30-85 - Index 1930-1985 Radiation (2 occurrences) leftover radiation from time of big bang: g81 2/22 11 dx30-85 - Index 1930-1985 Astronomy (2 occurrences) big bang theory: ce 126-127, 202; g84 3/22 17; hp 18; g80 10/22 9, 20; w76 71 dx30-85 - Index 1930-1985 Universe (2 occurrences) big bang: ce 126-127, 202; g84 3/22 17; w81 2/15 3; g81 2/22 11-12; g81 8/8 29; hp 18; g80 10/22 9, 20; w76 71 dx30-85 - Index 1930-1985 Science (2 occurrences) big bang theory: ce 126-127; w78 5/15 15 dx30-85 - Index 1930-1985 Used in Teaching Class (2 occurrences) Then he started teaching us about the big bang theory. w90 9/1 p. 32 - The Watchtower—1990 Part 1—1920-1928 The Roaring Twenties—Lull Before a Storm (2 occurrences) Belgian astronomer Georges Lemaître formulates big bang theory of expanding universe g87 3/8 pp. 11-15 - Awake!—1987 When It Touches On Science, the Bible Is Scientific (2 occurrences) Scientists teach a beginning, the Big Bang. g87 1/22 p. 13 - Awake!—1987 Can You Trust the Bible? (2 occurrences) Jastrow here refers to the now commonly accepted big bang theory, as noted in Chapter 9. ce chap. 17 pp. 199-215 - Creation (ce) Telescopes and Microscopes—Have Their Revelations Undermined or Strengthened Your Faith? (2 occurrences) Scientists believe that what Penzias and Wilson thought was mere static was actually the echo of a “big bang”—a cosmic explosion that gave birth to our universe eons ago. g84 9/22 pp. 8-10 - Awake!—1984 Looking Deeper Into the Heavens (2 occurrences) According to the currently popular theory, the universe got started with a “big bang” about 18 to 20 billion years ago. g84 3/22 pp. 15-18 - Awake!—1984 12
& World Report in 1997, that “the universe began with a big bang that propelled matter outward in all directions.”
Actually, it is as the magazine Scientific American reported in its January 1999 issue: “The big bang theory does not describe the birth of the universe.”
Does the Bible’s creation account rule out the possibility that the universe began with the big bang?
Most espouse some version of the big bang “theology,” which has become the secular religion of our time, even as they quibble incessantly over the details.
This radiation was said to be a reverberation coming from the primeval explosion that astronomers have christened the big bang.
Called the inflationary universe theory, it is challenging the formerly favored big bang theory that “all the stuff of the universe was there from the beginning” and exploded, forming the universe.
◆ In March, Britain’s New Scientist magazine published an article entitled “In the Beginning,” outlining events during the first tiny instants after the so-called big bang.
As we have seen, disagreements over the distances to other galaxies have recently touched off a lively debate over the big bang model of the creation of the universe.
The theory of many astronomers is that thousands of millions of years ago, a tremendous explosion, a “big bang,” started energy and matter spreading out to form the universe as we know it.
But the latest evidence makes it almost certain that the Big Bang really did occur many millions of years ago.”
In recent years, the most widely accepted conclusion among scientists is that the universe expanded from an initial “big bang” in the distant past, and is continuing this expansion.
This theory apparently supported the idea that the universe began with a “big bang,” from a central mass, and then spread out from there.
If the cosmos and everything in it are the product of spontaneous combinations of elements after the primordial big bang, then there can be no real purpose to life.
When Hubble published his groundbreaking work in 1929, he paved the way for the development of the big bang theory of the origin of the universe, which indicates that the universe originated in a cosmic explosion approximately 13 billion years ago.
Is the existence of life on this planet the product of blind chance, the fortuitous result of some part of the “big bang”?
big bang: ce 126-127, 202; g84 3/22 17; w81 2/15 3; g81 2/22 11-12; g81 8/8 29; hp 18; g80 10/22 9, 20; w76 71
Scientists believe that what Penzias and Wilson thought was mere static was actually the echo of a “big bang”—a cosmic explosion that gave birth to our universe eons ago.
According to the currently popular theory, the universe got started with a “big bang” about 18 to 20 billion years ago.