The Mystery of Creation: Chapter 3: Understanding the Trinity: Glitchy Worlds vs. Perfect Universe


Glitchy Worlds vs. Perfect Universe
                And so, when you think about it from that perspective, there really isn’t much of a difference between the way a computer functions and the way our universe functions.  And yet, though it is not hard for people to comprehend that a computer can generate a world, they still have a hard time believing that there is an all-powerful God who created, and who controls, everything. 
                And yet, if you think about it, we create limited and glitchy worlds.  No video game designer can truly create a game without glitches that is flawless and perfect.  It takes computer programmers thousands upon thousands of man-hours with hundreds of people working together to create modern video game worlds, and they still contain tons of glitches.  (Check the final credits of a game to see just how many people are needed to go into a single video game!)
                Our universe, in comparison, is vastly more complex than even a single video game world.  It never glitches or crashes.  We don’t just see people suddenly drop through floors or teleport from one place to another at random like we do in many video games.  The entire universe doesn’t suddenly freeze up while you are still able to move around, like a video game might crash but your mouse might still be able to move around.
                Don’t you think THIS FACT should convince people all the more that God must be real?  If you look at video games you can see just how difficult and complex they are.  No one would ever fathom that a video game world could exist without at least one video game programmer.  No one would ever dream that it could be possible to have some massively multiplayer online (MMO) game just evolve into existence by throwing all of the codes necessary to craft the game randomly through a computer. 
                Computers don’t work like that.  All of the evidence in our universe also indicates that it doesn’t work like that.  Tossing random code around through the processor of a computer would never generate even the simplest of video games.  Why, then, do people find it easier to believe that our universe, which is so much more complex than our best video games, could just accidentally form stars and worlds and plants and animals and all of the immensely complex aspects of our universe?
                And at the very least, the fact that glitches exist in these high end games that are painstakingly designed by hundreds of people…that alone should tell us that a perfect God with infinite power created all things.  I mean, if everything just happened, without someone or something controlling, shaping and molding everything…well…that takes a lot more faith then it takes to believe in God, and it also goes against all of the evidence that we have at our disposal.
                So besides all of our reasoning on why it must be God who created all things, once you look at how God made all things you begin to realize that even creation speaks volumes about who created it.  God must exist, and He exists as three different, distinct elements; a Body (the Word), a Soul (the Father), and a Spirit (the Holy Spirit).

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