What Is Time?
Questions about time often arise in discussions of Genesis and Earth’s age.
Could billions of years have elapsed before the “in the beginning” of Genesis 1?
When did time start?
Science and Scripture suggest some answers.
As one of the seven fundamental quantities of physics, time is essential to our existence.
It sets “the stage on which reality plays out.”
It permits possibilities to become real and allows causes to produce effects.
Over time, we observe matter change state or form.
People grow, learn, and get to know one another and God.
We can define time as duration characterized by changes in what something is or has.
For example, an ant can pick up a bit of leaf and thus change what it has. After it dies, its nature changes over time from that of an ant to that of essentially dirt.
Time and change go hand in hand.
But God does not change. He already knows the future, including theoretical futures.
If He changed who He is, He would cease to be perfect and thus cease to be God.
He cannot learn anything new because He already knows everything.
Time could not exist without God, yet He does not need time.
Humans require time to exist.
My potential to be a different me becomes the actual me only through time.
Over time, we change what we have, such as gaining knowledge or strength.
And God can change what we are, like from a sinner to a saint.
These descriptions help address the question of how time began.
“For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible.”
Time may not be visible, but its effects are.
Time is tightly tied to changing states of visible and invisible entities.
Without time for the ant to decay, its essence would not change.
Without time for a girl to learn the gospel, she would not have the opportunity to repent of her sin and trust Christ.
Thus, time, space, and matter either all exist together or none exist.
When Time Began
Genesis 1:1 says, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”
Clearly, no created entities existed before that moment.
And without material or immaterial entities, how could anyone notice the passage of time?
So, it looks like “the beginning” marked the first moment of time.
One could make a similar argument about space.
Without space for material like clocks to inhabit, then no clocks could exist to mark the passage of time.
And God did not create space (“the heavens”) until Genesis 1:1.
Another argument suggests the same conclusion.
Hebrews 11:3 says, “The things which are seen were not made of things which are visible.”
Scripture doesn’t record any things or events prior to the beginning, and time is defined by changes in the state of things.
Apparently, prior to the creation week, there was only God, perfect in His timeless changelessness - just as He still is and will forever remain.
Thus, the Bible suggests there was no time before the beginning of creation.
God, Eternity, Genesis, and Me
I find it hard to comprehend God’s eternal state.
It helps me to note the difference between eternity and endless time.
Endless time would involve the same kind of time we experience now, just elongated forever into the future.
But God does not exist in a state of endless time.
He exists in eternity, apart from any timeline.
He can pop into the timeline of our reality anytime He wants.
He left evidence of having done just that with His many miracles, including the miracle of
- creating time (“in the beginning”),
- space (“God made the heavens”) and
- matter (“and the earth”).
Because it records no time before the beginning’s first moment, Scripture leaves no time for eons of evolution.
Jesus appears to address this when He tells the Pharisees, “But from the beginning of the creation, God ‘made them male and female.’”
He could just as easily have said, “But eons after the beginning of creation, God ‘made them male and female.’”
Thank God for creating people, things, time, and space in the beginning.
He even had His Son Jesus enter time with us and for us because He loves us so much!
“But when the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, that we might receive the adoption as sons.”
So, can we avoid recent creation by fiddling with the meaning of time in Genesis 1?
Bottom line, we would have a hard time trying to go against the scriptural trend that time began at the moment God first spoke light into being on Day 1 of the creation week.
BY BRIAN THOMAS, PH.D.
Days of Praise
the Institute for Creation Research
At the Institute for Creation Research, we want you to know God’s Word can be trusted with everything it speaks about—from how and why we were made, to how the universe was formed, to how we can know God and receive all He has planned for us.
icr.org
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