Friday, October 5, 2018

Fractal Time and Biblical Prophecy

God’s Fractal Time

Envision time as a one-way street whose direction is fixed by entropy. The second law of thermodynamics fixes its irreversibility - no backing up! How do we reconcile this with Biblical prophecy and the doctrine of predestination? 

Using distance as a metaphor for time, we can imagine a second dimension (or more) perpendicular to our time-street. Imagine turning right 90 degrees. As we proceed in this direction, time on the original line is unchanged but seems to continue advancing for us. Imagine a grid of such streets. We advance on the cross street until encountering another street, and turns right again (imagining that entropy flows differently on Main Street than on our side street). Two more such maneuvers and we are back to the original time-line but upstream of our starting point. 

One might wish for such a trip, but such are not possible for mere mortals, as physics apparently confines us to our current timeline. We might think God inhabits some multidimensional continuum, and perhaps the angels, but there are still questions. If God desires all men to be saved (1 Timothy 2:4), how does He orchestrate time to give each individual, give each individual the best possible opportunity to be saved? When He allows prophets to see future events (e.g., Daniel, Revelation) is He allowing them a view from afar through this multidimensional time fabric, or recording future events on a heavenly DVD and playing it back for the prophet, or allowing them a short trip outside our timeline?

The story gets more complicated as we contemplate the hints that God may not be limited to integer time dimensions. Suppose our space-time continuum is constructed by God with fractional time dimensions. A one-dimensional one-way time street manifestation of fractal time might be self-similar constructs on different scales. For example, the concept of a Sabbath rest occurs on a weekly basis (Exodus 20:8-11), a seven-year span (Exodus 23:11) a 49-year span (Leviticus 25:8-11), and a 490 year span (2 Chronicles 36:21)). It is difficult to imagine how this would manifest in a multi-dimensional time construct.

What does this have to do with prophecy and predestination?  Our common sense concept of cause and effect is a tiny subset of the nature of God and the universe He constructed. Some consider causality to be a gift of God to humankind, given so that we live in a universe we can comprehend and act in with purpose. The angels behold God’s face, yet a third of them rebelled, knowing and experiencing the consequences (being eternally exiled and imprisoned in the lake of fire), and yet rebelling anyway. We have free will, but not seeing God eye to eye, the consequences of our choices are not visibly evident at the time of decision, so we accept or reject Him by faith. For most, the choice is offered more than once, so that when the curtain rings down, no one can say God didn’t give them a chance. 



Thus prophecy and predestination may be manifestations of God’s use of time, as a construct in which future events are foreshadowed by earlier incidents on a smaller scale. The one difference is freewill - humans can change their mind and repent, and turn to Him. This disturbs the symmetry of fractal constructs, but serves God’s ultimate purpose. If, on a later iteration of a sequence of events, we choose His path, and stick with it, the ultimate consummation is changed. The concept of fractals and the concepts of prophecy, foreshadowing, and repetition are not identical, but related in how we experience time. This dynamic is poetically described in The Four Calls, by Isaiah Baltzell (as L. Baltzall)

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