Saturday, February 11, 2012

God Pressed Play

Alright, let’s take this post out of the strictly Biblical and delve into a more Theological concept: the problem of free will and God’s plan.

I find that the problem always comes back to the concept of Time. But I’ll get to that.

Here is what we know:
• God is omnipotent- He can do anything, change anything, destroy anything,
breathe life into anything. He is limitless.
• God is omnipresent- He is everywhere, in space and time. There is no
geographic location in heaven or earth devoid of him (Hell, I suppose, is the
exception, by His design). Likewise, there is no time, past, present, or
future when God is absent.
• God is omniscient- He knows all. Nothing is hidden from God, neither in the
mind nor on the earth.

Because we know these, we know something else: we can never truly understand Him. It is one of the great ironies of our faith, that we are compelled to understand the nature of God, without the ability to ever fully comprehend Him.

From the English Standard Version:

Jeremiah 29:11 “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope.”

Philippians 2:13 “for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.”

John 16:13 “When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come.”

These verses speak of God’s Plan, a concept that I’ve been taught in Sunday School since I was old enough to understand language. They said, “God has a plan for you and He knows what will happen long before you do. He knew what would happen before you were even born.” It’s a rather comforting thought for most Christians—God has the entire realm of existence planned from beginning to end. Every thought, word, and deed is set in stone. We can do nothing but try to understand what that plan is.


The Ancient of Days, by William Blake, showing God as the architect of the earth.

So here’s the problem. How does prayer work?

Luke 11:9-10 “And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.”

Another inspiration verse, and another fact that I’ve been taught since childhood. God listens to our prayers and needs, and responds to them (with “yes,” “no,” or “wait”). So what this verse is telling me is that if things aren’t going the way I like, then all I have to do is ask and, if He finds it wise, God will change his plan?

That seems wrong.

Then there’s the classic question of free will- do I make my own decisions? Because God knows everything, does he direct everything? Then, has he destined that there are those who will never follow Him, that will die without ever knowing His salvation?

That seems wrong too.


That was just the introduction. Here’s where things get weird and my own potentially heretical theories pop up.

The problem, as I said earlier, is time. If today I have a problem, then I pray and God hears me and he answers my prayer. This is the way we think, linearly. The problem is, God is not linear. He exists outside of our time, the very concept that he is here with us NOW, is ridiculous. God cannot be limited to here and now, or there and then. That speaks against his omnipresence. This is why we say that He knows what you want before you ever ask for it. You just have to ask.

But think of God as outside of our own time led me to an interesting line of thought, one that ended in the theory that I used to title this post: God Pressed Play.

I'll use Windows Movie Maker as my object lesson.



I used to use this program all the time in college, to make slideshows for clubs and presentations. The multiple bars along the bottom allow me to insert music, pictures, videos, and transitions. Then I can edit them, flip them around, crop them, cut them, delete them. I watch what I have, then change what I don’t like. When I’m happy with the finished product, I publish it to movie form and the file type changes from a Windows Movie Maker Project file (.MSWMM) to a standard video file (.WMV).

I propose that this is what God did. He saw the potential and created a project. He made the earth, then changed the waters, then added life. He watched it and saw what the forms of life were doing, so He backed up and changed things. He added more layers, more complexities, then watched it again. The timeline is linear, but God is not on that linear line. He sat above it, at his computer screen, moving the timeline back and forth, and deciding where it would go. He saw a conflicting part, a discordant note, and allowed it to play out because He knew how much more beautiful that resolution would be for the overall project. The process repeated, over and over again. Eventually, he reached November, 2011, when I prayed for help as I presented a paper at a conference. Perhaps God changed the project, or perhaps He decided to leave it the same.

And this continued until He decided that the project was finished. He watched it again, to be sure, then he clicked publish and saved the file as something else. He brought up the movie in a separate program, got a bag of popcorn, and pressed play.


Some of you may worry that this theory reaches too closely toward Deism: the view that God has set the universe in motion, but does not interfere with how it runs. But that is not the case at all. He listened to humanity while he was creating it; He changed the course of events while he was deciding what the course of events would be. In that way, our prayers don’t change His plan; God listened to our prayers before his plan was complete. What we live in now is the .WMV file, the version that he perfected and sat down to watch, after answering all of the prayers and addressing all of the problems.

As far as I can tell, this theory solves the problems: God is still omnipotent, omnipresent, and omniscient. He still has a plan for existence. He still listens to our prayers and decides our fates, and we have the free will to decide our own destinies.

So, this is my theory. God Pressed Play. Tell me, friends: Is this heresy?

3 comments:

  1. I like it. It's succinct and it makes sense to a person like myself who has spent a lot of time trying to make sense of my Christianity. Not only that, but I can personally think of no biblical reason that it couldn't be true.

    I find quite often that we Christians choose to not even try to explain some of the more confusing or esoteric aspects of our faith. This has always bothered me as I know there is an entire group of individuals that would be open to faith and prayer if we tried to offer more explanations, within biblical constraints, as to how the Bible and our world agree.

    I come from a scientific background and I am constantly surprised when one of my classmates counts out Christianity based on their experiences with Christians who are unwilling to attempt to reconcile their faith with scientific fact (note that I said unwilling, not unable). To be honest, I do not believe that we as Christians need to be even close to right regarding our reconciliation of the observed world and Biblical word (how would we even know). We just need to be unafraid to try. Answers are out there as to how this world exists as created by God. Perhaps it's true that we as humans cannot fathom how to totally reconcile the Bible with science but to not try is against human nature. More importantly, to not try leaves an entire group of individuals away from God without hope of salvation. This is unacceptable and correctable.

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  2. The sovereignty of the Father is absolute, but Free will is not absolute. Example: Even if we gather all the required chemical compounds for a creature, we can not bring it to Life with our own sheer will; or, in a biblical sense, we can not save ourselves from hell just by saying "I will not go to hell, blah blah", we require the Christ to enter salvation. Our will is limited to laws that govern the universe. Within the boundaries of the laws, we can exercise our will. Christ makes it clear what the Father's will is. Saying No to salvation or the father's will is still within the boundaries of our "free will". The Father will guide, but ultimately you would have to choose to follow or not.

    The question on prayer: There are several verses from the bible on prayer (James 4, blah blah), even the Lord's prayer in Matthew 6 does not illustrate what institutional Christianity teaches. This prayer in particular only ask for few things including forgiveness, escape from evil, and daily bread to SUSTAIN for the day.

    Like mentioned in the post, The Father is outside of time, therefore we need only to be sustained for the day because who knows what will happen the next day. On free will, because the father is outside of time, the ultimate answer to acceptance of salvation and working for his will is either a Concise "Yes" or "No"

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  3. Why did I start reading this awesome blog right before class? I have a lot of comments, and I think your movie maker analogy is fascinating. First, I might be completely wrong in saying this and I will look it up when we get home from class today, but I think your "ask" verse from Luke is in the context of finding God, not finding just anything. I will look that up to make sure, but this is not a "God is a vending machine" verse. So, that makes the "I'll pray, ask for something and get it later really different.... AHHH more to say, but I'm going to be late!! Talk soon -LE

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