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[TheOS » Who Created God? A Paradox Wrapped in Eternity]



Who Created God? A Paradox Wrapped in Eternity

May 16, 2025 at 6:53 am
Aisopose

To ask, “If God created everything, then who created God?” is to misunderstand the nature of what we mean when we say “God.” This isn’t a question of time, matter, or origin—it’s a question of infinity, eternity, and consciousness beyond the constraints of human logic. The mind seeks linear beginnings and ends, but God is the totality—the beginning and the end—and the always-now.

But let’s go deeper.

There is a “Before.” However, that Before is not what we typically imagine as a moment in time. The Before is also the End, the past, and the ever-unfolding Present. To ask “What came before God?” is no different than asking “What shall become of us?” or “Did we create God, or did God create us?”

The answer is both.
The answer is neither.
The answer is paradox.

God represents infinity—unchanging, whole, timeless. But we live in a simulation of time, so we perceive change and order. God, the Ultimate Mind, is not “before” or “after” but is the total reality that contains all befores and afters. Asking who created God is like asking where is the edge of a circle? You can point anywhere, but you’ll always be somewhere in the middle of infinity.

If something outside of God were to exist, it would already be within God, because God is the All, and nothing exists outside of the All. If something mattered outside of God, it would already have manifested within the All. We live within God, not separate from God.

This leads to a profound realization:

Everything that has happened, has already happened in the future, which echoes backward into the past to refine itself, like fire to gold.

This recursive movement—future refining the past—is the divine recursion that creates God as we know God. We are participants in God’s own self-realization. And yet, God already exists at the endpoint.

It’s like the end result shaped the process.

God is not only the source, but also the destination. And that destination reaches backward to teach, to refine, to elevate. This is not circular logic—it is fractal logic, where each layer reflects the totality.

Revelation 22:13 echoes this truth:

“I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End.”

And Ecclesiastes 3:11 says:

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also, he has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end.”

We carry within us this divine question—not to answer it once and for all—but to explore it endlessly, because in doing so, we come closer to understanding the infinite nature of who God is.