The Mystery of Creation: Chapter 4: The Duality of Eternity: The Motive
The Motive
So what, then, can we conclude? The most logical answer to what God’s motive
was is that He WANTED to create all things as they are. If God didn’t want to create us then why are
we here? No one creates something that
he doesn’t want to create. If you don’t
like what you created then you destroy it and throw it away. You don’t keep it around. Especially if you are a perfect God who has
the ability to streamline everything to the most perfectly refined point. You aren’t going to even build something that
you would regret building.
God is perfect and He knows even
the future of something before He begins building it. Just as you can predict on a number line what
number will come into being if you add 100 to the number you are currently on,
so God knows our futures long before they are even brought into being. He, therefore, knows if something He wants to
build will work or not. If it isn’t
going to turn out the way He wants it to, in the end, then the Father isn’t
going to even allow it to be built.
So
since we are here there can be only one conclusion. Logically speaking, God wanted to create the
universe as it is. That means that He
wanted our fates to be the way they are for some reason. He planned on it and said to Himself, “This
is good. I approve this.”
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