So when we turn our attention to the universe, we instinctively ask:
What was there before it began?
No matter how we theorize about its origin, we feel there had to be something prior—something that set things in motion. That instinct is deeply human. It reflects how we understand everything else in life. Every event has a cause. Every effect has a source. Nothing appears without explanation.
Or so it seems.
Psalm 33:6, “By the word of the Lord the heavens were made, their starry host by the breath of his mouth.”
Science has taken us remarkably far in answering the “how” of existence.
We can trace the universe backward through expanding galaxies to an early, dense state described by the Big Bang theory. We can move deeper still, beyond matter into energy, and further into the quantum fields that govern particle behavior. At that level, what appears to be space is anything but empty. It fluctuates. It moves. It produces temporary bursts of energy, governed in part by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle.
But this only pushes the question back.
If particles come from fields, where do the fields come from?
If fluctuations arise from laws, where do the laws come from?
We move from one explanation to the next, but the chain never completes. It simply ends—somewhere.
Ecclesiastes 3:11, “He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.”
At some point, every explanation reaches a boundary.
Philosophers such as Aristotle recognized this long before modern science. If every cause requires a prior cause, you are left with two options: either the chain goes back infinitely, or there is something that does not require a cause.
Later thinkers, such as Thomas Aquinas, argued that an infinite regress does not truly explain anything. Instead, there must be something that is—something that does not come from anything else and exists by necessity rather than by chance.
Modern thinkers have challenged that idea. Bertrand Russell famously dismissed the need for a deeper explanation, saying the universe is “there, and that’s all.”
Three different conclusions. Three different stopping points. None of them is fully satisfying.
John 1:3, “Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.”
Part of the difficulty stems from the question itself.
When we ask what came “before” the universe, we assume time existed before the universe. But according to modern physics, time is not outside the universe—it is part of it. It began with the universe.
2 Peter 3:8, “But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.”
If that is true, asking what came before the universe may be like asking what lies north of the North Pole. The question assumes a framework that no longer holds.
And yet, even if we remove time from the equation, the deeper question remains:
Why is there something rather than nothing?
Colossians 1:16, “For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him.”
When we strip everything down, there are only a few ways to answer that question.
These are not scientific conclusions. They are philosophical endpoints. Every line of reasoning eventually lands in one of them.
When we ask what came before the universe, we are not really asking about time. We are asking about dependence.
We can move backward from matter to energy, from energy to fields, and from fields to laws—but eventually we encounter something that does not point to anything else.
At that point, explanation gives way to acceptance.
Hebrews 11:3, “By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible.”
There is a point in this line of thinking where progress stops—not because the question is flawed, but because we have reached the limits of what explanation can do.
Something must exist that does not come from anything else.
It just is.
1 Corinthians 8:6, “Yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we live.”
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