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title: "Unit 3: Why Did God Make the World?"
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# Unit 3: Why Did God Make the World?

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Question: Why did God make the world?

Answer: God made the world from love, for his glory, so creatures could receive life, reflect his goodness, and live in communion with him.

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## Read

- Genesis 1:1--31 (NIV): God makes the world and calls it good.
- Psalm 19:1--4 (NIV): the heavens declare the glory of God.
- Psalm 104 (NIV): creation receives life from God.
- Isaiah 43:7 (NIV): God names his people as created for his glory.
- Revelation 4:11 (NIV): all things exist because God willed them.

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## What the Answer Means

God did not make the world because he was lonely, bored, needy, or incomplete. God is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God is perfect life and love before anything else exists, so creation begins with gift rather than lack.

The world is not God. We do not worship the world. But the world is also not trash. God made it, named it good, filled it with order, beauty, life, and meaning, and gave human beings a real place inside it.

That means ordinary created things matter: bodies, food, sleep, work, gardens, mountains, music, language, friendship, marriage, children, homes, cities, animals, bread, water, and time. These are not distractions from spiritual life. They are created gifts to receive before God.

But gifts can be twisted. We can worship creation instead of the Creator. We can use creation without gratitude. We can damage bodies, places, and people as if they have no meaning. We can turn good things into ultimate things. We can also despise created life and pretend holiness means escaping the world God made.

Christian faith teaches a better way. We receive creation with gratitude. We use created goods with wisdom. We refuse to worship them. We let them lead us back to the God who gives them.

Creation has purpose because God gives it purpose. The world is ordered toward God's glory. Human life is ordered toward communion with God. Good things become most themselves when they are received, loved, used, shared, and offered back to God in worship.

DDF calls this governing truth the Axiom of Purpose: created reality receives existence, intelligibility, goodness, and ordered ends under the personal Word. Empirical inquiry discovers created entities, processes, constraints, histories, and forms of organization and governs claims about them. Metaphysical and theological inquiry asks about that same reality's source and final good, while remaining answerable to what empirical inquiry discovers. Purpose belongs to God's good creation and its end in Christ. Evil can corrupt a good creature, relation, or system; abuse, disease, disaster, and sin remain evil rather than hidden goods.

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## A Walk Around the Block

Sometimes receiving creation begins by going outside, not to have a grand spiritual experience, but to step onto the sidewalk and notice what is there. The neighbor's porch light. Wet leaves pressed against the curb. A dog barking behind a fence. The smell of cut grass. A child's bike left on its side. A body walking through a world it did not make.

One evening a man walked the same block he had walked a hundred times. Nothing was wrong enough to name as crisis. He was simply cramped inside his own thoughts. The phone in his pocket had been feeding him other people's vacations, kitchens, children, bodies, opinions, and successes until his own apartment, paycheck, and Tuesday dinner seemed thinner than they were.

Then a boy came running from a driveway and shouted, "Can you help?"

The bike chain had slipped. The man knew almost nothing about bikes, but he knew enough to set it back on the teeth, turn the pedal, and wipe grease on a napkin from his pocket. The boy said, "Thanks," and shot down the sidewalk as if the whole evening had opened.

The man laughed before he thought to be spiritual.

Then the boy's mother came to the porch and said, "Thank you. We just moved in, and I still cannot find the box with the tools."

He almost said, "No problem," and kept walking. That would have been fine. But the evening had already pulled him out of the small room his phone had built inside him, so he said, "I have a little chain oil in the garage. I can bring it by tomorrow if that helps."

The cost was small, and still real: ten minutes, the comfort of not knowing his neighbors, and the private story that his life was too small to offer anything.

That laugh mattered. So did the next sentence. Creation is a theater of gift: a chain catching, a child pedaling, a body bending down, light on a wet curb, breath in the lungs, a neighbor's ordinary need becoming a small invitation out of self-enclosure.

The walk became prayer after the joy, not before it:

> Father, this is your world. Teach me to receive it without grabbing it.

Doctrine touched pavement. If God made the world from love and for his glory, ordinary things can become places of reception: not objects of worship, not proof that life is easy, but gifts that lead the heart back to the Giver.

Christian faith teaches you to receive the world without asking the world to save you. Sometimes that reception comes with tears. Sometimes it comes with grease on your fingers, a laugh you did not plan, and a reason to learn your neighbor's name.

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## Receiving Gifts Without Grabbing Them

Good gifts grow heavy when we ask them to become God. Work begins to prove our worth. Money promises control. Beauty becomes a mirror we must obey, and family is asked to answer every loneliness. The gift has not become evil; we have required from it what only the Giver can provide.

Gratitude puts the gift back in its place. Thanking God for food receives it without asking it to cure every sadness. Thanking God for work lets it become service instead of salvation. Family can remain precious without becoming lord.

Ordinary gratitude can become a small act of freedom. Try this with one good thing you often grab. Name it. Thank God for it. Then say what it cannot do.

> Thank you, Father, for ___. It is a gift. It cannot save me. Teach me to receive it and offer it back to you.

This makes joy cleaner rather than smaller. Gifts become more enjoyable when they are no longer forced to carry the weight of God.

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## How God Acts in the World

God is not one more cause competing with rain, medicine, gravity, skill, cells, memory, or human decision. The Triune God gives and sustains the whole created order. Within that order, creatures really act. Seeds grow, weather develops, bodies heal or fail, people choose, artisans make, doctors treat, parents nurture, and communities build or damage shared life. Calling God Creator does not make those causes unreal. Studying the causes does not make God unnecessary.

Providence is the name Christians give to God's wise sustaining and governing care. Providence is broader than a list of interruptions. God can care through ordinary created means: rain, food, rest, medicine, friendship, law, skill, timing, courage, or a neighbor who notices. We can thank God for healing and thank the physician. We can pray for bread and still plant, work, cook, share, and correct unjust systems that keep bread from people. Divine action and created action are not rivals.

Created history can also produce higher-level organizations whose stable patterns and causal roles are not captured merely by listing their parts. Life develops, organisms mature, minds learn, languages grow, and communities form through real relations over time. DDF uses emergence for this scale-structured historical formation: the Creator's finite order can be historically fruitful through the powers, constraints, histories, and relations God gives it. The term names a scoped pattern rather than a universal law or moral verdict; new order can heal or destroy and must still be judged by its actual fruit.

Scripture also gives signs, wonders, and mighty works. A miracle is a marked, purpose-laden act of God within his wider providence, directing attention to his identity, promise, kingdom, judgment, or saving work. The exodus signs reveal the Lord who liberates and judges. Jesus' signs identify the Messiah, restore persons, announce the kingdom, and point toward resurrection. The Incarnation and resurrection are God's unique saving acts within created history: the Son personally enters creation and raises human nature into incorruptible life. Emergence names scale-structured creaturely formation; Incarnation and resurrection name God's personal action and the beginning of new creation.

This makes Christians open to wonder without becoming gullible. A claimed miracle should not be believed merely because a story is intense or a leader benefits from it. Ask what happened, what records or witnesses exist, whether ordinary medical or physical causes have been examined, whether the account changes as it spreads, whether vulnerable people are being pressured, and whether the sign bears truthful fruit under Christ. Careful testing keeps wonder truthful and protects God's name from error, manipulation, and stories that have not been checked.

Prayer belongs inside this same world. We ask God because creation depends on him and because he is Father, not because prayer is a technique for controlling hidden machinery. We also act through the means he gives. A person can pray for healing, seek medical care, receive the Church's help, and admit uncertainty without dividing the world into a spiritual part and a real part.

When the outcome is painful, providence does not give permission for a quick secret-purpose explanation. Christians can say God sustains creation, opposes evil, can bring good through suffering, and will finally restore all things in Christ. We may still not know why this event was permitted or what God will do through it. Lament can remain truthful while trust waits.

> Father, sustain us through the means you give. Keep us open to your power, honest about what we know, and faithful while we wait.

Watch for this.

Creation can be despised or worshiped. Both responses miss the gift. God made creation good, and only God is God. The Axiom of Purpose does not make an evil event good, and providence never erases created causes.

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## Practice

Each day, receive one ordinary created good with thanks. Eat one meal slowly. Go outside and notice one created thing without rushing. Sleep without treating rest as wasted time. Do one piece of work as service before God. Thank God for one person without trying to use them.

Then let those words become a small prayer before God:

> Father, teach me to receive your gifts without worshiping them.

<a id="questions-for-conversation-3"></a>

## Questions for Conversation

- What ordinary created gift is easy for you to receive without gratitude?
- What good thing can become too important in your life?
- How does creation being good change the way we think about bodies, work, food, rest, and place?
- How can we thank God for providence while still naming created causes, acting responsibly, and testing miracle claims?
