This paper develops a structural account of creation, time, and divine action by distinguishing what follows necessarily from divine being from what requires divine decision. Creation is treated as the natural expression of divine generativity rather than a discretionary act. Possibility arises as the first consequence of divine being, and the created manifold emerges within that possibility. Time is not assumed to precede creation but is shown to arise only when God enters the constraints of the created order. The crucifixion is therefore interpreted as the moment that generates temporal sequence, with the three‑day interval marking the formation of the temporal dimension that structures history. This framework clarifies longstanding theological tensions by grounding doctrines of creation, incarnation, and resurrection in a coherent metaphysical structure. The result is a unified account in which creation follows from divine nature, time follows from divine self‑limitation, and history becomes intelligible through the event that establishes its temporal architecture.
Denis Bailey (Sat,) studied this question.