-
Our Timeless God In A World Out Of Time
Contributed by Paul Dayao on Aug 27, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: This sermon explores God's eternal nature from Psalm 90:2, offering His existence before, beyond, and after time as the ultimate anchor of security, peace, and hope for believers in a hurried and time-bound world.
Introduction: The Tyranny of the Clock
When people wake up early in the morning, as the sun begins to rise, a familiar pressure is already building. It’s the pressure of the clock.
We live our lives governed by time. We are ruled by deadlines, by schedules, by the rush of traffic that makes us feel like we’re always running late. Our lives are measured in seconds, minutes, and hours. We celebrate birthdays and anniversaries, marking the passing of another year. We speak of our past with regret or nostalgia, we face our present with anxiety, and we look to our future with a mix of hope and fear. Time is a river that is constantly carrying us away, and so much of our stress comes from trying to control it, manage it, or simply keep up with it. Our technology gets faster, our news cycles get shorter, and our lives feel more hurried than ever.
But this morning, I want to lift our eyes from our watches and calendars and fix them on the One who is not bound by time. I want us to meditate on one of the most staggering, comforting, and foundational truths about our Creator: His eternity.
The great prayer of Moses, Psalm 90, begins with this monumental declaration:
"Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God." (Psalm 90:2)
This isn't just a theological concept; it is the anchor for our souls in a world of constant change. Let us explore what it means to serve a God who is "from everlasting to everlasting."
I. God Before Time: The "From Everlasting"
The first part of our text pulls back the curtain on the ages before creation: "Before the mountains were brought forth..." Can you imagine that? Before Mount Apo or Mount Mayon existed. Before the Philippine islands themselves were formed. Before there was a "when" or a "where." Before the first tick of the cosmic clock, the Bible declares a profound truth: "thou art God."
1. This means God is Uncreated
Everything we have ever seen, touched, or known had a beginning. You had a beginning. This church building had a beginning. The universe itself had a beginning. But God has no beginning. He is the Uncaused Cause, the original reality from which all other realities flow. He wasn't made; He simply IS.
2. This also means God is Self-Sufficient
Before He created the angels to worship Him or mankind to have fellowship with Him, God was perfectly complete and content within the fellowship of the Trinity—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. He created us not because He was lonely or needed something, but from an overflow of His perfect love.
3. What does this mean for us today?
It means your life is not a cosmic accident. You were not an afterthought. The God who existed in eternity past conceived of you, planned for you, and created you on purpose, for a purpose. Your ultimate security is not in your job, your savings, or your family, but in the fact that you are the deliberate creation of a God who existed before time itself.
III. God Beyond Time: The "Inhabiter of Eternity"
1. Not only does God exist before time, but He also exists outside and above our timeline
The prophet Isaiah gives us this breathtaking description:
"For thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy..." (Isaiah 57:15)
God doesn't live in time like we do; He inhabits eternity. Imagine a great parade. We are in the parade, on the street level. We can only see the float that is right in front of us. We have memories of the floats that have passed, and we can only guess at the floats that are still to come. But God is not in the parade. He is watching from the top of the tallest skyscraper, and from His vantage point, He sees the entire parade route—the beginning, the middle, and the end—all at once.
This is why the Apostle Peter could write: "...one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day." (2 Peter 3:8)
2. This doesn't mean God gets confused about time
It means He is not limited by it. Your entire lifespan, which seems so long to you, is like a single, brief moment to Him. And a thousand years of human history, which feels like an eternity to us, is like a single day in His sight.
3. What is the practical comfort in this?
It means God is never caught by surprise. The crisis that just shattered your world did not surprise Him. The doctor's report, the unexpected bill, the political turmoil—He saw it all from eternity. Our emergencies are not His emergencies. He is the calm in our storm because He sees the end from the beginning. When you pray, you are speaking to a God who is already in your tomorrow, working all things together for your good.