In response to Walter Pound:
“God is understood to be changeless, and therefore timeless, but God is also understood to be the creator of time.
If God creates the physical world along with time, then God experiences a change - from existing alone to existing along with time.
Can anyone explain how God is the creator of time and remains changeless?”
In this post, I will attempt to formulate a response to the question posed and explain how God can be changeless while still being the creator of time.
This question seems to take the form of two arguments. The first argument seems to go like this:
Change constitutes the passing of time. (Newtonian view)
If something does not change, it is timeless.
God does not change.
So, God is timeless.
The second part of the question seems to be an objection to premise three:
If the creator creates the physical world and time, the creator must experience a change–from existing alone to co-existing with time.
God is the creator of the physical world and time.
God does indeed change–from existing alone to co-existing with time.
I will start by deconstructing each of these arguments, to hopefully come to a conclusive answer to the question posed, by the end. First, I will object to the first premise of the objection made in argument two.
I create a sculpture.
I go from a state of existing alone, to a state of existing with this sculpture.
I have not changed.
Premise one of Mr. Pound’s objection fails simply because a change in the environment does not necessarily change the being involved. I think a modification to this premise would be something like this:
If the creator creates the physical world and time, the creator must enact some change.
Though I believe this modified premise is true, it would not lead to the conclusion that God does change. Overall, my objection to the objection is really just support for premise three of the original argument that God does not change.
There seems to be some misunderstanding in the statement, “God does not change”. Here are some references to the Bible that speak to this idea.
https://bible.knowing-jesus.com/topics/God-Is-Unchanging
The meaning of “God being unchanging” is testifying to God’s character being unchanging–not the conditions in which He lives. While God can create and change existing things, He himself does not ever change who He is. Take for instance:
James 1:17– “Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shifting shadow.”
James seems to clearly indicate here that though God is unchanging, He still enacted some change by sending “good things” and “perfect gifts”. This makes sense, considering that giving a gift to someone does not necessarily mean that the giver changes in character. And to go back to the original wording of the argument, because God must go from existing without a perfect gift, to co-existing with a perfect gift, does not directly change God.
So, because God can change things without changing Himself, it is possible that God created both the physical world and time while still being changeless.