He telleth the number of the stars; he calleth them all by their names.
Psalm 147:4
"Big bang theory says that the first stars that formed shortly after
the supposed ‘bang’, known as Population III stars, were quite different
from today’s, and were made of almost entirely hydrogen and helium.
Q: But
where are they all? There should be some left over, but not one has
ever been found.
A recent paper claims to have evidence of a 13.5-billion-year-old Pop
III star—only it hasn’t been observed as such, it’s supposedly ‘hiding’
inside another star in our galaxy. The Pop III star allegedly suffered a
supernova explosion that gave birth to the star observed today. But the
explosion was so weak that most of the material from the earlier star,
its ancestor, was sucked back into the descendant.
This whole scenario, using computer simulation, was based solely upon the pattern of elements in the star—particularly the amount of iron, the lowest ever found.
This appears to be another feeble attempt at storytelling, even special pleading, to support the big bang origin of the universe by ‘finding’ one of the missing Pop III stars—despite the fact that it can’t be seen. .....the important thing seems to be the current naturalistic story, and whatever is observed is fitted into that story." CMI