So, yes, I did not take the Scripture into account. I am staying strictly on rational ground as I was supposed to do. The generic concept of “action” is tied to the concept of “change” which does lead logically to the existence of “time”. And that leads to the problems I delineated in the previous posts. (Mind you, this would not disprove that if this creator would turn out to be the Christian God, then he would be outside
our time and thus have all the attributes associated with him.) All I am proving is that whereever this external creator “dwells”, there is a succession of events, and therefore there is time. This result is based upon the postulated “creation”, nothing else.
Which means that the cosmological argument fails, and moreover, the cosmological argument actually disproves the necessity for the existence of an external creator - leading to the atheistic idea that the Universe needs no cause, it is self-sufficient.
I don’t know that to include Scripture is to eliminate rationality.
However the point (ha ha I originally spelled pint) I am making is that the cosmological argument does hold because God does not change. A self existent being would of necessity be uncaused (since to have a cause would eliminate self existence) eternal (because to have a beginning would lead to causation) all powerful (because such a being would have to exist of his own power) and unchanging (because to change implies motion which does away with eternality etc). This is the God which the Bible postulates and such a God is not irrational.
“Ah,” the critic says, “but what about the Law of Causality?”
Well what about it?
The Law of Causality need not demand an uncaused cause be irrational, only that an uncaused effect be irrational.
Of course this does throw wide open the door to the idea that if the universe is no effect then it need no cause, and that of course is true. However I would object given that everything which we see around us (and I freely admit we see only what we see and not more and I am open to further discovery because after all I am not omniscient) does rigorously obey the Law of Causality even if such causes are not always clearly defined.
That being so, the cosmological argument comes into play. We know the universe is expanding and subject to time. We know the universe began to exist. We know that all around us everything we have seen so far that is subject to time and changing and began to exist had a sufficient cause, therefore it is not out of left field to assume that the universe too has a sufficient cause. Also all of these things being true seem to place the universe under the Law of Causality and militates strongly against the universe being self existent.
And if the universe is not self existent then it must have a cause sufficient in power and will to bring it into existence.
Of course such a cause is impossible to know clearly from the physical universe which is exactly why the Church appeals to revelation in order to know about God because apart from revelation any meaningful understanding of God is impossible. Which is why I say these arguments ultimately come down to questions of faith. If we can postulate a Creator from Creation then we need to learn things about said Creator as well, but such knowledge must be alien to us and therefore dependent on revelation. So the question then becomes what sort of revelation is to be believed?
And to that end I again point out (of course) that I am a Christian and therefore argue from a Christian viewpoint. Of course I could do no other. But from that rich tradition we have the wisdom of Augustine who said that since God is eternal and therefore cannot change, then one could not speak intelligibly about time from God’s perspective since time was a means of measure for the physical, finite universe. Therefore to say “When did God create the universe?” is a non sense question since from God’s perspective the universe eternally is since there could never be a “time” when God had not purposed to create, and since everything which God purposes comes to pass, therefore from a certain perspective the universe is eternal.
Just not from our perspective.
God Bless