Everything about Eternity totally explained
While in the popular mind,
eternity often simply means existing for a limitless amount of
time, many have used it to refer to a timeless existence altogether outside of time. There are a number of
arguments for eternity, by which proponents of the concept, principally
Aristotle, purported to prove that matter, motion, and time must have existed eternally.
Eternity as a timeless existence
Augustine of Hippo wrote that time exists only within the created universe, so that God exists outside of time; for
God there's no
past or
future, but only an eternal
present. One need not believe in God in order to hold this concept of eternity: for example, an atheist mathematician can maintain the philosophical tenet that numbers and the relationships among them exist outside of time, and so are in that sense eternal.
God and eternity
Theists say that
God is
eternally existent. How this is understood depends on which definition of eternity is used. On the one hand, God may exist
in eternity, a
timeless existence where categories of past, present, and future just don't apply. On the other hand, God will exist
for or
through eternity, or at
all times, having already existed for an infinite amount of time and being expected to continue to exist for an infinite amount of time. One other definition states that God exists outside the human concept of time, but also inside of time. The reasoning for this definition is that if God didn't exist both outside of time and inside of time, God wouldn't be able to interact with humans.
Whichever definition of eternity is understood, it's common to observe that finite human beings can't fully understand eternity, since it's either an
infinite amount of the time we know or something other than the time and space we know. For the
infinite definition, there are parallels that give some notion of an infinity—of at least a
potential infinity, or a
series that begins and hasn't ended. A series of moments that has begun and not ended is however, not potentially eternal by that definition. A series of moments that has begun and not ended can't be eternal, because even if it were to continue for the rest of (infinite) time, there would still be time prior to the initial moment in the series. The series of moments couldn't ever exist for
all eternity because no matter what happened during the series of moments, nothing would ever cause the series of moments to have existed since the beginning of "eternity", and thus could never achieve the status of
eternal or even
potentially eternal.
Related to the notion of eternal existence is the concept of God as Creator, as a being completely independent of "everything else" that exists because he created everything else. (Contrast this with
panentheism.) If this premise is true, then it follows that God is independent of both space and time, since these are properties of the
universe. So according to this notion, God exists before time began, exists during all moments in time, and would continue to exist if somehow the universe and time itself were to cease to exist.
Related to 'eternal life', the biblical
revelation first indicated that Man as a special created being is able to grasp the abstract concept in contrast with the lower animal world which didn't have the ability to understand the concept of "eternity". See book of
Ecclesiastes 3:11 "He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set
eternity in the hearts of men .." (from
Bible translation in the N.I.V.). Contrast this with the
timeless existence definition, which would imply animals are blessed with
eternal life from birth (
because of their inability to grasp the concept of eternity or even
time), which is something mankind gave up when he was cast out of the "Garden of Eden". It is commonly believed among theists that although mankind can grasp the abstract concept of "eternity", one may only obtain "eternal
life" once returned to God.
It is also equally possible that God can choose not to exist as he's all powerful, but eternity doesn't have this choice. After God there may be "nothing", and God himself will be powerless to prevent this so the state of "nothing" may remain forever. This is the very idea of eternity, where a state of series of events or motion or matter will continue in some way or another. This aspect of God and eternity leads to the human mind assuming that both are completely separate entities, and God himself is bound by the rules of eternity. There are no examples of this, and there never will be. Both entities in this aspect are beyond the "finite" capabilities of the human mind as mentioned above. It can't be proven or unproven, for if it happened there would be no life or device to document this.
See also
the nature of God in monotheistic religions.
Symbolism and eternity
Eternity is often symbolized by the image of a snake swallowing its own tail, known as
Ouroboros (or Uroboros), though the symbol can also carry a number of other connotations.
The circle is also commonly used as a symbol for eternity. The related concept,
infinity, is symbolized by
.
There is a folk story called "The Shepherd Boy" by the Brothers Grimm where a wise shepherd boy is brought to a king to answer three questions. The third question the king asks is "how many seconds of time are there in eternity?" To which the shepherd boy replies, "In Lower Pomerania is the Diamond Mountain, which is two miles and a half high, two miles and a half wide, and two miles and a half in depth; every hundred years a little bird comes and sharpens its beak on it, and when the whole mountain is worn away by this, then the first second of eternity will be over."
Image:Infinity symbol.svg|Infinity symbol variations.
Image:Armenian eternity.svg|Armenian ancient symbol of eternity.
Image:Ouroboros.png|Ouroboros.
Image:Not-star-shaped.png|An annulus, a Celtic symbol for eternity.
Further Information
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