
The eternal God has
created the universe. And that universe is time-bound. How can we best
understand God's relationship with our time-bound universe? For example, does
God experience each moment of time in succession or are all times present to
God?
How we think of God and time has implications for our understanding of the
nature of time, the creation of the universe, God's knowledge of the future,
God's interaction with his creation and the fullness of God's life.
In this book, four notable philosophers skillfully take on this difficult
topic--all writing from within a Christian framework yet contending for
different views.
Paul Helm
argues that divine eternity should be construed as a state of absolute
timelessness.
Alan G.
Padgett maintains that God's eternity is more plausibly to be understood as
relative timelessness.
William
Lane Craig presents a hybrid view that combines timelessness with
omnitemporality. And
Nicholas
Wolterstorff advocates a doctrine of unqualified divine temporality.
Each essay is followed by responses from the other three contributors and a
final counter-response from the original essayist, making for a lively exchange
of ideas. Editor Gregory E. Ganssle provides a helpful introduction to the
debate and its significance. Together these five scholars conduct readers on a
stimulating and mind-stretching journey into one of the most controversial and
challenging areas of theology today.