THE PROBLEM OF CONTINUITY
- CONCLUSION.
From the Christian view of reality, all these proposed solutions to the
problem of continuity attempt to solve it by either ignoring God or reducing
God to an impersonal being, an super "It", and ignoring the fundamental
ontological difference between God as the Creator and all other beings as
created by Him. Augustine's solution has dominated Christian theology;
that is, that God is timeless, beyond time and space, and that time with space
was created by God when in the beginning He created the heavens and the earth
(Gen. 1:1). This solution is only partially correct; God created time and
space (space-time) when He created the heavens and the earth. But as we saw
above,
Augustine borrowed the Neo-Platonic concept of God (the one Being) as timeless,
and interpreted it as an "eternal now", without a before or after, without a
beginning or end. This solution of Augustine's has raised many problems:
for example, if God is timeless, then how could the Son of God (the second
person of the Trinity) become a man and enter into time? And how could God
make a decision of His will to create the heavens and the earth?
("Worthy art thou, our Lord and God,
to receive glory and honor and power,
for thou didst create all things,
and by the will they existed and were created." Rev. 4:10)
In any decision of the will, there is a before and an after the decision.
If God is timeless, then how can there be a before and after the decision to
create? To these complications of Augustine's solution of God's relation to
time that God is timeless, Christian theology has usually declared that they
are mysteries beyond our human understanding. But instead of retreating into
mysteries, why didn't Christian theology recognize that these complications
were produced by the Greek and Neo-Platonic philosophical view of God as
timeless, and to reject this view of God and Its relation to time? Again,
the Greek view of God is a Super-It, and things, even super-its, can not make
decisions because they do not have wills. Persons do have wills, and in fact
their existence is in their decisions. "I choose, therefore I am." Choices
involve time; there is a before the decision, the now of the decision, and an
after the decision. Since God has revealed Himself as three persons, the
Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, time must exist in God; God is not
timeless. But God's time is not our created time. The statement of II Pet.
3:8 makes this clear. "...that one day with the Lord is as a thousand years,
and a thousand years as one day." This language is not metaphorical but is a
statement of reality. God has time, but His time is not our created time.
God's uncreated time is absolute time; it has no beginning nor end. But it is
not our created relative time. Just as God created space (the heavens and the
earth), He created time. Newton's mistake was that he identified relative
created time with God's absolute time. What the theory of relativity shows us
is the true character of created time as relative and Newton's mistake in
absolutizing it. The complications introduced by Augustine's view of God as
timeless are thus now removed. When God decided to create the heavens
and the earth, there was in God's time a before and after the execution
of the decision to create, but that act of creation was the beginning of
our created relative time. And in the incarnation, the Son of God decided
in His absolute time (in eternity) to take upon Himself our relative created
time.