We don't really know for sure. God stands outside time.
Peter makes an interesting statement about the length of a day from God's perspective. He wrote it as a reply concerning those wondering about the coming of Jesus.
Peter states, "But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day." (2 Peter 3:8). Just to clarify, Peter is not saying that God's one-day is 1000 years. He is saying it is "like" a thousand years. Peter himself doesn't know the exact conversion, but one day to God can be a long time for us.
Now on a scientific note, scientists theorize that one can stop time by going the speed of light. Researchers as Standford have found that particles traveling near the speed of sound as having "1 minute of their time [that] might be weeks or months or even longer in our rest frame" (Gravity Probe B, para. 1). Therefore, time is relative and can be changed by how fast an object moves.
Reference
Gravity Probe B Testing Einstein's Universe (n.d.). Retrieved from einstein.stanford.edu/content/relativity/q2566.html
Peter makes an interesting statement about the length of a day from God's perspective. He wrote it as a reply concerning those wondering about the coming of Jesus.
Peter states, "But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day." (2 Peter 3:8). Just to clarify, Peter is not saying that God's one-day is 1000 years. He is saying it is "like" a thousand years. Peter himself doesn't know the exact conversion, but one day to God can be a long time for us.
Now on a scientific note, scientists theorize that one can stop time by going the speed of light. Researchers as Standford have found that particles traveling near the speed of sound as having "1 minute of their time [that] might be weeks or months or even longer in our rest frame" (Gravity Probe B, para. 1). Therefore, time is relative and can be changed by how fast an object moves.
Reference
Gravity Probe B Testing Einstein's Universe (n.d.). Retrieved from einstein.stanford.edu/content/relativity/q2566.html
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