Thanks, Linus2, for your post.
The problem is that from a scientific and/or from a philosophical point of view there is no reason to suppose that the universe has not always existed.
Linus2nd
You know, Linus2, why do you put your statement in a negative format?
there is no reason to suppose that the universe has not always existed.
You are one deep deep deep learned snob in forums, I presume, presume because I have not had much contacts with you, but I have read enough to have an impression of you and Poly and perhaps also Sochi to be deep deep deep learned snobs in forums.
Why not put your statement in a positive format?
there is reason to suppose that the universe has always existed.
Anyway, your statement is connected to the thread’s topic.
You see, Candide at one time already indicated as much that one alternative to the question of the cause of the universe is that it has always existed, period.
But later on like the snail’s antennae or a turtle’s appendages he withdrew, he took on a new tack, slithering out and away like a snake, imagining that I did not notice.
That is one satanic obstructionist of a die-hard fanatical bigot atheist whose intention is to not engage constructively, but to put up all kinds of quibbles to impede the fruitful advance of an argumentation, between two otherwise both decent sincere seekers of facts observing all the orderliness protocols in debate.
I will not pursue you on your penchant for negative talking instead of direct positive talking, which I suspect is an ingrained peculiar attitude from your part as a deep deep deep learned forum snob.
Okay, back to the universe having always existed, I have no problem with that and the existence of God.
And the explanation is because the universe has a part that changes, and a part that does not; the part that does not is the cause of the part that does change,
That part that is subject to changes which makes up the physical universe that has a beginning, that is the change, from nothing to something, the first ever change of something that did not exist at all except as a possibility in the mind of the primal author of all existence with a beginning.
And that part that exists always eternally as I said several times in this Catholic Answers forum is the cause of everything with a beginning.
How does that jibe with my topic, “How to transit from the concept of God to the existence of God?”
Simple, as I have always said, the concept of God first and foremost in the Christian faith is that he is the creator of the universe, but we may and I do ask, which part of universe? that part that is subject to changes and is actually in a change process, and its first ever change was to pass from the status of nothing to the status of something, which marks the beginning of its existence, namely, again, by the causation of the part that does not change and is eternal, that part called in the Christian faith as the creator of heaven and earth.
So, with that concept of God as creator of heaven and earth, we march forth into the universe, the physical part, to search for the cause of anything with a beginning; and in the search expedition we come to the conclusion that everything in the physical universe has a beginning, and scientists tell us that the whole physical universe has a beginning: wherefore we infer to the existence of God the cause of everything in the physical universe, because everything in the physical universe including the whole physical universe has a beginning, and on this account it has a cause outside itself to arrive at existence.
But how come we do not see the cause of this physical universe?
Simple: because it is of a substance the nature of which makes it larger than the physical universe and more subtle than any minutest particles, and fields, and forces, and laws of physics and laws of nature in the universe.
That is why the God creator is both cause and operator of the physical universe, just like in a way on the smallest scale imaginable compared to God, the human inventor operator of a computer.
KingCoil