Evolution and Time – The End from the Beginning (Part 2)
Most modern cosmologies assume as a primary condition of the Big Bang that the universe had no edge or center. …
Most modern cosmologies assume as a primary condition of the Big Bang that the universe had no edge or center. …
In our examination of spatial dimensions, we saw how each figure—points, squares, cubes, and hypercubes—had escalating degrees of freedom of …
Time is the first thing that God explicitly sanctified.[1] God’s primary sanctuary wasn’t matter (an idol), space (a temple), but time. Matter, space, and time conceptually correspond with body, soul, and spirit.[2] Scripture attests to the difficulty of differentiating between soul and spirit.[3] Time and space are equally intertwined, which is why physicists often refer to them as the space-time continuum.[4] The introduction of time into our universe and spirit into Adam follow a similar pattern.