Ah, thanx for the clarification, mf -- was preparing to be rather saddened!
Back to the thread topic:
Young's Literal Translation of the Bible has "eternity" as "age" or "age-enduring", which I think is more appropriate. If God exists as an exalted Man like ourselves -- an immortal primate of flesh and bones! -- in a causal universe of any kind, then he cannot have "created" time itself from nothing. Joseph Smith explicitly said in the King Follett Discourse that God did not have power to create Himself or any other Intelligence, nor the elements, as testified in the D&C. He's a wise Intelligence, but He's not the omniscient, omnipresent contradiction of the Creeds.
Such words are not found anywhere in the scriptures at all, anyway; neither is the idea that God created the entire universe. If Heaven is a physical place, God can create it like we can create a city (I cross the St. John's bridge at night and see downtown Portland, and all the glass buildings and neon lights and tv screens certainly look "like a sea of glass and fire, where all things for their glory are manifest, past, present, and future"), and He can be the Governor, but He's not creating it from
ex nihilo scratch, he's irrigating it and Gardening it. (Not to be irreverent, but it's not good to be
so reverent that we idealize God into a magical superman who can do absolutely
anything. He can do all things that are
possible. That "the things which are impossible with men are possible with God" shouldn't give us license to get
completely crazy. *grin*)
What God
could have Created was a Calendar (ie, "time", at least
measured time) instituted at the Foundation of this world, ie, not the foundation when the worlds came rolling into existence, but rather that founding time whenever premortal Intelligences were placed here and this world was colonized. You can measure things out and create a calendar of world-ages (
see Hamlet's Mill), and we can still believe in the big bang, etc. The reckoning of God’s time, angel’s time, prophet’s time, and man’s time, are all according to the planet on which they reside. God can exist before any Age He Created by instituting a Calendar; He, like all other Intelligences, is Eternal, and exists from Age to Age, from Eternity to Eternity.
Eternity: late 14th century, from Old French
eternité (12th century), from Latin
aeternitatem, from
aeternus (see
eternal).
Eternal: late 14th century, from Old French
eternel or directly from Late Latin
aeternalis, from Latin
aeternus "of an age, lasting, enduring, permanent, endless," contraction of
aeviternus "of great age," from
aevum "age" (see
eon).
Eon: 1640s, from Latin
aeon, from Greek
aion, "age, vital force, lifetime," from Proto-Indo-European root
*aiw- "vital force, life, long life, eternity" (cf. Sanskrit
ayu "life," Avestan
ayu "age," Latin
aevum "space of time, eternity," Gothic
aiws "age, eternity," Old Norse
ævi "lifetime," German
ewig "everlasting," Old English
a "ever, always").
Aeon: 1640s, from Latin
aeon, from Greek
aion "a period of existence, lifetime; age, generation;" in plural, "eternity."
Age: late 13th century, "long but indefinite period in human history," from Old French
aage (11th century, Modern French
âge) "age; life, lifetime, lifespan; maturity," earlier
edage, from Vulgar Latin
*aetaticum (cf. Spanish
edad, Italian
eta, Portuguese
idade "age"), from Latin
aetatem, "period of life, age, lifetime, years," from
aevum "lifetime, eternity, age," from Proto-Indo-European root
*aiw- "vital force, life, long life, eternity" (see eon). Meaning "time something has lived, particular length or stage of life" is from early 14th century.
Edited by JeremyOrbe-Smith, 27 April 2012 - 07:39 PM.