CATEGORIES OF CREATION
The term "creatio ex nihilo" refers to God
creating everything from nothing. In the
beginning, God created the heavens and the earth (Genesis 1:1). Prior to that moment there was nothing. God,
therefore, did not, as some have argued, produce the universe from
preexisting building blocks but rather from scratch.
Just to clarify, the Bible never expressly states that
God made everything from nothing, but it is implied. In Hebrews 11:3 it states, “By faith we
understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God, so that the things
which are seen were not made of things which are visible.” Scholars interpret this to mean that the
universe came into existence by divine command only, with nothing
pre-existing.
This is difficult to
comprehend. The “first law of science” states that matter (the
stuff the universe is made of) is neither created nor destroyed. Matter can be converted from solid to liquid
to gas to plasma and back again. Atoms
can be combined into molecules and split into their component parts, but matter
cannot be created from nothing or be completely destroyed. And so this idea that God created everything
from nothing is not natural to us. Creation was supernatural is why.
Judeo/Christian denominations, most of them, hold this view.
The next category, accordingly,
is "creatio ex materia." This is creation out of some
pre-existent eternal matter, which is the belief of the Mormon
church.
"Creatio ex deo" is creation out of the
being of God and is where Vedanta is found. Here, God IS
creation. God, in this viewpoint, literally shares
in the existence of everything created through everything’s experience
of it. And as everything grows and develops so does God.
A fourth category of creation is no
creation. The universe, in this instance, had no beginning and will
never end. One model of this is an endless series of Big
Bangs and Big Crunches lasting trillions of years, with God present the whole
time. God, here, is either a separate phenomenon, an interpenetrating entity, or existence
itself. God is not the creator, though.
The fifth possibility is also no
creation, but this time there is no God present at
all. The universe is merely a phenomenon that always was
and always will be. Again, it might go through phases, such as
a chain of Big Bangs and Big Crunches, but no God is
involved with it. This category is where Buddhism would be, since
it does not accept that God ever existed, much less a creator-God.
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