Balder,Originally posted by Balder
Hi, Clete,
Thanks for your letter, and for sharing Bob's thoughts on this as well. This issue is one that has perplexed some of the best minds of humanity, so I don't think you or I will get to the bottom of it in a few posts. Recent scientific/philosophical books on the nature of time acknowledge that time makes sense intuitively, when we don't examine it; but when we attempt to draw close and analyze it, it gets more and more baffling and contradictory seeming. Einstein had a number of insights, obviously, into space and time, but acknowledged that the "now" is a mystery, and speculated that it may even be beyond the reach of science to grasp.
I personally find the Buddhist perspective on this issue to be compelling, and perhaps you will as well when I make a bit of it clearer -- because it actually works a little better to explain God's eternity, in my opinion, than Bob's thoughts above. As you will have no doubt noticed, Bob is positing an eternal "linear" time before God created the universe, and adds a second eternity on top of that one, with the creation of our world being a kind of "dividing point" between God's two supposed eternities. But if something is infinite, can you add something to it and thereby increase it? Certainly, there are different "orders" of infinity, if you imagine different sorts of "sets" of infinite objects or numbers, but Bob doesn't indicate whether God's infinity "before" creation is of a different order than the one after, nor of course does he explain how God could have "gotten" to the point of creation if in fact an eternity preceded it.
The Buddhist answer is to look past time to its ground, which is pure presence. This perspective holds that eternity itself is the child of the Now. This may strike you up front as mumbo-jumbo, but think about this: eternity only happens now. Every moment that has ever happened, has only happened in the present. Things change, phenomena come and go, increase and diminish, but the "now" is invariant: it is always already here. "Time" is the experience of differentiation in manifestation, and it shifts according to perspective (as the theory of relativity makes clear), but all differentiation takes place in the invariant and inviolable field of Presence, or the Now (the Fourth Moment).
We may confuse the "past" with memory (which is a recollected image experienced in the present) and the future with anticipation (which is an image of an imagined future event also experienced in the present), but the "actual" past and future also only "take place" Now. Time passes now, and thus "now" is actually pre-time or atemporal: differentiations in manifestation have a delineable onset and conclusion, but the Now does not. Likewise, the "Now" should not be confused with the "specious present," that intellectual construct of the "now" which is basically a dimensionless point sandwiched between "what just happened" and "what's about to arrive."
As one student of Dzogchen puts it: "Time-space is the self-structuring of now, which is Being." This Presence is identical to what Buddhists call "true nature," buddha-nature, the essence or ground of all manifest reality. Thus, when Ecclesiastes says that God put eternity in the heart of man, this actually has a new meaning when you think that the "heart" of man lives and knows only Now, which is the source and ground of all phenomena, including all apparent "eternities."
Thus, this perspective allows for both invariance and change: the invariant Now, Absolute Presence, is the "space" in which temporal and physical change take place, and the "invariant" is at the heart of all changing things, as their presence. Buddhist traditions teach that spiritual experience will disclose both timelessness, which would be the experience of pure presence, dropping deep into presence so that manifest differentiations are no longer perceived and there is only the sense of boundless light and well-being, always already here; but also the experience of eternity, in which you are aware of the Now and the flux of manifestation simultaneously, and are aware that this has "always already" been, beyond imagining.
Peace,
Balder
I somehow had missed this post, sorry about leaving you hanging like that.
I like what you had to say here. I agree with most of it (the last paragraph made no sense but the rest was good). It might interest you to know that Bob has said similar things concerning "now" in his Bible studies. He has made the argument that all of existence exists now. The past does not exist at all, nor does the future. The past was, the future will be but all that actually is, is now. I've made that exact argument on this site several times. The point being that your supposed Buddhist belief happens to a Christian one as well. A fitting bit of irony considering the topic of this thread.
Resting in Him,
Clete