Does space have an end? If it does--if there is a brick wall at the end of space that reads "The End," I want to know what's behind the brick wall. By faith you and I are forced to believe that no matter in which direction we set off, space will never end. It just goes on and on and on--forever. It has no beginning or end. It hurts the brain to think about such a state, but we have no choice but to accept that fact by faith.
No, we don't. We can observe space and try to see whether there's an end to it. We can come up with theories about the size and shape of space that can tell us where to look for an edge to space.
God also has no beginning and no end.
Neither does a circle, or a Celtic knot, or the surface of a sphere or of a doughnut.
Time is a dimension that God has created and it is to this dimension that mankind is subjected. We have to wait for time to pass. We can't jump ahead even one second in time. We are enslaved in its power. It is because we are in time that reason demands a beginning and an end. It hurts the brain to think of any other dimension.
God is not subject to the dimension of time. He dwells in eternity. The Bible tells us that a day to the Lord is as a thousand years to us (see Psalm 90:4 & 2 Peter 3:8). God can flick through time as you and I flick through the pages of a history book.
What do you mean by "dwells in eternity"? I assume you don't mean that God does not experience any dimension of time, because would make him incapable of any change over time, including movement, thought, learning, etc.
So presumably you mean that God's time axis is not the same as ours, perhaps perpendicular to ours (whatever that means in a relativistic universe); or perhaps God is rotated 90 degrees with respect to us, so that one of our spacelike dimensions is God's time dimension, and our time dimension is one of God's spacelike dimension.
I imagine mathematicians and physicists could have a field day working out the details of this model (to say nothing of SF writers like Robert Heinlein or Greg Egan). Has any work been done on this?
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