In another thread (made by Curious Atheist) about the Apocalypse, I came across the post below, which I've redacted to the parts that interest me.
My question is this; in this apocalypse, what happens to the rest of the Universe? We live in the middle of a galaxy in a universe of which there are over 100 billion other galaxies that we can observe. Surely God isn't going to scrap all of these other galaxies just because humans live on one planet? It just seems a little narcissistic to me for humans to believe they have got God's undivided attention in such a staggeringly vast universe.
Also, let's say God recreates just our earth. Eventually our sun will start to run out of energy, turn into a red giant and burn out all life on earth. Not just this, but the whole universe is set to die in trillions of years as stars die out and there are no more materials to make them with. What happens then?
The present age will come to an end. However the Christian hope is in the restoration of the world "a new heavens and a new earth".
"Heaven" best describes the intermediate state, between death and resurrection. At least as usually understood. "World to Come" or "Age to Come" probably best describes the ultimate future state after the resurrection of the dead and Judgment.
The Prophet Isaiah looks forward to a time of new heavens and new earth, he also describes a time when carnivorous and herbivorous animals rest together in peace, where swords are beaten into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks. St. John the Divine's vision shares in Isaiah's description, namely of a new heavens and a new earth, of God making all things new at the consummation of history.
-CryptoLutheran
My question is this; in this apocalypse, what happens to the rest of the Universe? We live in the middle of a galaxy in a universe of which there are over 100 billion other galaxies that we can observe. Surely God isn't going to scrap all of these other galaxies just because humans live on one planet? It just seems a little narcissistic to me for humans to believe they have got God's undivided attention in such a staggeringly vast universe.
Also, let's say God recreates just our earth. Eventually our sun will start to run out of energy, turn into a red giant and burn out all life on earth. Not just this, but the whole universe is set to die in trillions of years as stars die out and there are no more materials to make them with. What happens then?