Who Created God? It is easy to make an argument
for God’s existence from a cosmological standpoint. As the years
have gone by, a growing amount of scientific data has accumulated which
negates atheistic assumptions about how matter and the cosmos came into
existence and how it has arrived at its present condition. As a science
teacher and public lecturer on the compatibility of belief in God and
science, I have, been impressed with an increasing awareness on the
part of many scientists and theologians that science and religion are
symbiotic disciplines. From a purely scientific standpoint, it is easy to demonstrate that matter cannot be eternal in nature. The universe is expanding from what appears to be a beginning point in space/time, which appears to be a one time event. Hydrogen is the basic fuel of the cosmos, powering all stars and other energy sources in space. If the fuel of the universe has been used eternally, that fuel will eventually be depleted, but the evidence is that the cosmological gas gauge, while moving toward “empty,” is yet a long way from being there—a condition incompatible with an eternal universe. The second law of thermodynamics insists that the cosmos is moving toward a condition of disorder, sometimes referred to as “heat death.” Even in an oscillating universe, things ultimately run out of energy and “die.” All of these evidences, and several others we have not made reference to, show that matter cannot be eternal, as Dr. Sagan and his associates would like to believe. However, this does not mean that we automatically accept the hypothesis that God is the Creator. Why is it not equally invalid to suggest that God has always been? The problem here is that many people have a mistaken concept of God. If we conceive of God as physical, anthropomorphic (like man) being, the question of God’s origin is valid. However, such a concept of God is alien to the Bible and to common sense. Consider the following descriptions of God from the Bible:
Obviously, the descriptions and concepts of God given in these passages are that God is a spiritual entity. He exists outside of the three-dimensional, physical world in which we live. The Bible further supports this concept of God in the following passages:
Not only is God described as being outside space, but He is also described as being outside of time. Consider the following:
If God is a being that is
unlimited in time, and if He has access to every piece of time as if
it were now, the question of who created God is an invalid question.
The problem is like asking a student to draw a four-sided triangle.
The terminology is self-contradictory. God created time. The statement of Genesis, “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth,” is making reference to the creation of time. The reason that things like heat death, the expansion of the universe, and the depletion of hydrogen do not apply to God is because He is outside of time. God has always been. He not only began time; He will also end it. When time ends, all matter and all mankind will enter eternity—a timeless condition free of the negative things that time brings upon us now.
The agnostic position that there is nothing that can be said to support God’s existence that cannot be said against that existence cannot, in the opinion of the author, stand in the face of this evidence. © John N. Clayton |
Text source: http://www.doesgodexist.org/Phamplets/WhoCreatedGod/WhoCreatedGod.html
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