Can God be the creator of the universe? No. If we define the universe as “all that exists” then God cannot have created it.
Some fancy footwork you’ve executed in this post, but none of your objections hold any hold water.
Your first objection is a false dilemma, which is betrayed by your “if.” You are attempting to analyze theism within the framework of atheism and, naturally, producing logical absurdities. This reminds me a lot of Scott Clifton’s “Kalam Argument Against God.” You must address a particular philosophy on its own terms and show logical inconsistencies within itself. You can’t make a patchwork of one argument’s premises and another’s conclusion and then declare the conclusion is wrong. To the point, the fact is that no theist defines the universe as
all that exists. Specifically, the universe is defined as all that God has created.
Can God be the eternal creator of the material universe? No. The material universe is not itself eternal, so prior to the Big Bang God cannot have been the creator of the material universe, because that would be like a parent without children. A logical impossibility. A ‘creator’ who has not created anything is not a creator.
More wordplay. You are either misrepresenting or misunderstanding the meaning of “eternal creator.” When most people say this, they probably simply mean this: “Eternal” is descriptive of God’s nature (i.e. He exists eternally) and “creator” is descriptive of His… well… being the creator. In other words, it simply means he is the creator, and He is eternal.
Or perhaps you are referring to the idea of God’s “eternal creative act.” As one student of philosophy, J.L. Micah Petillo, put it in his thesis, “It is important to keep in mind that while God’s eternal creative act sustains each and every successive moment, it is not itself successive. For this would put God in time along with creation. It does not sustain the universe
from one moment
to the next, as the hands of the potter sustain the clay vessel as it is brought up on the wheel. Though the potter’s hands sustain the vessel at every moment of its existence, this image envisions creation to be an ongoing process of sustaining. God’s creative act is an eternal act which gives being to the totality of the past, present and future simultaneously and singularly.”
Can God create time? No. Creation/created is like cause and effect. Cause comes before effect – that is the way we can tell them apart. In the absence of time there is no “before”. God cannot create from nothing, He requires time to be present as well.
I’ll defer my reply to an article written by a man who the atheist philosopher Quentin Smith called “one of the leading philosophers of time”; none other than W.L. Craig:
*I must confess that I’m baffled why atheists would think that causation presupposes time and space or at least time. Janey and John, you need to ask them what they mean by “causality” and what reason they have for believing that it presupposes time and space. They’re the ones raising the objection, so make them shoulder their burden of proof. After all, it’s not just obvious that causality presupposes time and space. So ask them for their argument.
You could also do a thought experiment. Ask them why one timeless entity—say, a number—could not depend timelessly for its existence on another timeless entity. Why is that impossible? Why couldn’t God timelessly sustain a number in existence? That would clearly be an asymmetric causal relation. Why is that impossible?
Maybe they’ll say that causes always precede their effects in time. But then ask them if they think simultaneous causal relations are impossible. Why can’t the cause and effect exist at the same time in an asymmetric dependency relation? For example, a heavy chandelier hanging on a chain from the ceiling. The ceiling and chain hold up the chandelier; the chandelier and chain don’t support the ceiling!
Indeed, you could ask them if all causation isn’t in the end simultaneous. Imagine C and E are the cause and the effect. If C were to vanish before the time at which E is produced, would E nevertheless come into being? Surely not! But if time is continuous, then no matter how close to E’s appearance C’s disappearance takes place, there will always be an interval of time between C’s disappearance and E’s appearance. But then why or how E came into being when it does seems utterly mysterious, for there is no cause at that moment to produce it.
They might say that even simultaneous causation presupposes time. Yes, the cause and effect occur at the same time. But then why couldn’t such a causal dependency exist timelessly? In simultaneous causation the cause and effect exist co-incidently. But in a timeless state two things can exist co-incidently in a dependence relation. So if simultaneous causation is possible, I see no reason to think timeless causation is impossible. At least we’d need an argument to show that it is.
Read more:
reasonablefaith.org/causation-and-spacetime#ixzz2TP4AXZmV*