16:04
@user80226 His main point seems to be that as the line of science advances, fewer and fewer things lie "behind the curtain" of our understanding for religion to explain; and so perhaps science can explain everything, if not in practice per our limits, then at least in theory. (Feel free to correct me if I'm misunderstanding.).
(1) First, this seems to be faulty extrapolation. It reminds me of the reasoning Rab-shakeh used in 2 Kings 19:12, 17-18. He destroyed a lot of gods, and now he comes to Israel and thinks, "What's one more god?" King Hezekiah prays to God and says, in effect, "Yeah, he's destroyed so many gods, but that's because they were false to begin with."
So I'd grant that science is at war with false religion, and has done quite well against much of it. But it would be wrong for a scientist to think, "We can dismantle Christianity, just as we've dismantled the notion of the world sitting on the back of a giant turtle, etc. etc. etc." That's incorrectly presuming that Christianity is just one more such result of human imagination.
(2) Second, this seems like a conflation of immediate mechanistic explanation with more ultimate explanation. I like the illustration I read on SE recently (paraphrasing): "Why did the chicken cross the road? Because he wanted to get to the other side."
Science "swoops in to the rescue" and says, "No, no; why did the chicken cross the road? Because he put one foot in front of the other." Both are true, actually. He put one foot in front of the other because he wanted to get to the other side!
Often, science claims to have stolen ground from "religion," when in reality, it has merely given an immediate mechanistic explanation. But that doesn't negate deeper explanations.
For instance, the Bible maintains that God can often work through weather (Job 38:35). Do explanations of how lightning works negate that? No, not any more than explaining how a gun works negates the deeper explanation of human motive in the soldier who fires it.
Comparing meteorologists' best guess at the future confirms that they often have no clue what will happen, at least not in details. :) And that's just in the immediate future. The point is, why do scientists think they can show that God isn't behind certain events of weather? It seems arrogant, even in that oft-cited example, to suppose that science has "taken over" that ground.
(3) Third, it's the stuff before the curtain, that we clearly do see, which indicate a Creator. The more we learn, the clearer that becomes (e.g., molecular biology).
For him to hold out hope that some yet-unknown naturalistic explanation exists seems a great leap of faith on his part, I would say. Especially given the odds of the most basic calculations! I.e., it's not that we don't understand enough, it's what we do understand that's so amazing here.
I also don't understand his point that if we can't mechanistically explain how God creates, it's an unsatisfying explanation. But why? We can see clear evidence that it was designed, without being able to explain the details of how it happened.
I.e., wouldn't God have to be supernatural do create the universe and life anyway? And if so, He won't have a naturalistic explanation by definition, because He transcends the world. Yet the world can bear strong evidence of a Creator all the same. To me that sounds like an excuse for Siskend to defend a priori naturalism.