T
TOmNossor2
Guest
I believe what we experience of space and time is all created by God. Some of the pre-“creation ex nihilo” thought speaks of creating what is from what is not and the Bible speaks of, “All things were made by him: and without him was made nothing that was made.” To me this points to the idea that all that we experience is what God made.A Mormon friend and I have been discussing the concept of God in Mormon vs. Catholic thought lately. He is very much opposed to the God of classical theism. He holds that space and time have existed eternally. Do you believe the same, Tom?
When I showed my friend that Thomas Aquinas never posited creation ex nihilo for his argument for an unmoved mover, he was blown away. A lot of people don’t understand that Aquinas isn’t simply making an argument for the first domino in a chronological chain of events, but an eternal acting principle that is necessary at every instant to sustain the universe. It isn’t a god that just got the ball rolling then went off somewhere else.
Since I experience Space and Time, I believe God created it.
That being said, I believe God “entered” into time in a certain way not connected with bodily incarnation on the earth.
And God does not interact with our time quite like we do but He does have “God time” of some sort (Ostler dragged me kicking and screaming to this view, but it is my best guess - I certainly could be WRONG."
Creation ex nihilo was embraced by Aquinas, but he did not build upon it in his prove of God’s existence based on the existence of creation. If that is what you are saying that that is my recollection.
I think the flaw in the absoluteness of Aquinas’ argument is that God is not nothing. He has no cause.
In my thought God, eternal intelligences, and eternal matter are all unmoved until God acts to move. Does that dethrone God as the singular and supreme unmoved mover? One could say this, and I am sympathetic to it.
There are some requirements in Aquinas’ thought that God is “absolutely simple.” Clearly the unmoved in my thought is not “simple and indivisible.” But I think there are more problems with the idea that God is absolutely simple than that there is a volume of unmoved, that is then moved by God through creation (and continual lending of “concurring power” which is a place in which Aquinas and I would agree).
Charity, TOm