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Objection

Who Created God?

If everything needs a cause, then God needs a cause too. If God does not need a cause, then maybe the universe does not need one either.

Classical Christian arguments do not claim that everything needs a cause. They argue that contingent, dependent, or beginning reality needs an adequate explanation, and that God is the necessary Creator rather than one more contingent thing inside the universe.

The objection at its strongest

If the universe needs a cause simply because it exists, why doesn’t God? Either everything that exists needs an explanation beyond itself, in which case God needs one too, and we are off on an infinite regress, or some things can just exist with no further explanation. But if we are allowed to stop at a brute, uncaused reality, the simpler and more honest move is to stop at the universe itself and skip the extra step. Adding God then looks like special pleading: an arbitrary exception to the very rule that powered the argument in the first place.

The argument never claims everything has a cause

The objection assumes the argument runs like this: everything that exists has a cause; the universe exists; therefore the universe has a cause, and then it notices that God exists too. But no careful version of the argument uses that premise. The premises are deliberately restricted:

  • the contingency argument says that whatever could have failed to exist needs an explanation for why it exists rather than not;
  • the kalam argument says that whatever begins to exist has a cause.

God falls under neither restriction. Classical theism does not regard him as contingent, and it does not regard him as having begun to exist, so the premise never reaches him. Asking “who caused the uncaused?” is not a deep paradox; it misuses the terms, like asking what the bachelor’s wife looks like.

God is not one more thing inside the universe

“Who made God?” pictures God as a very large item within the chain of causes; the first domino in a long row of dominoes. Classical theism denies exactly that picture. God is not the first member of the series of dependent things; he is the self-existent ground of the series, the reason there is any series at all. Scripture speaks the same way: God is the Creator of all things, the one in whom “we live and move and have our being.” To ask who created the Creator is to quietly turn him back into a creature.

Why not just stop at the universe?

This is the honest question underneath the objection, and it deserves a straight answer. The reason we do not simply stop at the universe is that the universe is exactly the kind of thing the principle covers:

  • The universe is contingent (it could have been otherwise), changing, and; on mainstream cosmology and on the kalam argument; had a beginning. It is the sort of thing that still cries out for explanation.
  • God, in classical theism, is necessary, unchanging in his being, and without beginning. He is the sort of thing in which explanation can finally come to rest.

Treating these two differently is not special pleading; it is treating different things differently because they differ in the relevant way. Stopping at the universe is not the simpler move; it leaves the most striking fact about the universe, that it exists at all when it might not have, permanently unexplained.

Full rebuttal

The argument behind the answer

1
Contingency and CreationThe existence of contingent reality is better explained by a necessary Creator than by treating the universe as an unexplained brute fact.

Cosmological arguments do not replace the gospel, but they help clarify that Christian belief in creation answers a real metaphysical question: why anything contingent exists at all.

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Premises

  1. 1Contingent things exist and depend on conditions beyond themselves.
  2. 2A complete explanation of contingent reality cannot be only another contingent thing in the same chain.
  3. 3The biblical doctrine of creation identifies the ultimate explanation as the self-existent God who made and sustains all things.

Begin with dependence, not a gap in the science

The argument does not start from something science has failed to explain; it starts from something science quietly assumes. Every physical explanation accounts for one dependent thing by appealing to another: this state of affairs by a prior state, this particle by a field, this organism by the chemistry that sustains it. That pattern is the lifeblood of science, and the argument leaves it completely intact. This is not a god-of-the-gaps move that waits for physics to stall.

What the argument notices is that the pattern is dependence all the way down. Each link in the chain holds its existence on loan from something else. The first premise claims only that contingent things, things that exist but could have failed to exist, are real. That is not a controversial religious assertion; it is the ordinary furniture of the world: galaxies, cells, you. None of them had to be.

Why the chain cannot fund its own existence

Grant that contingent things exist. The real question is what explains the whole network of them. The tempting reply is that each thing is explained by an earlier one, so nothing is left unaccounted for. But explaining every member is not the same as explaining why there is any series at all. The cars of a train can each be pulled by the car ahead, yet that still never tells you why the train is moving rather than standing still.

The contingency argument presses this with the principle of sufficient reason: whatever exists has some reason for its existence, either in the necessity of its own nature or in a cause beyond itself. As the Stanford Encyclopedia survey lays out the classic Leibnizian version, you begin with a contingent being and ask what could ground it. A purely contingent collection, however large, even infinite, is still the kind of thing that could have failed to be. So it cannot be the place where explanation finally comes to rest. Only something whose existence is not borrowed can play that role.

From a necessary ground to the Creator

The conclusion of the bare argument is modest and precise: there is a necessary, self-existent reality that depends on nothing beyond itself. By itself that is not yet the Trinity, and honest apologetics says so out loud. But it is exactly the category Scripture reserves for God.

When Paul addresses the Athenians he does not argue for one more deity among the city’s many; he names the God who “made the world and everything in it,” who is not “served by human hands, as if He needed anything,” and in whom “we live and move and have our being.” Israel’s God reveals himself simply as “I AM,” being itself, not a being who happened to turn up. Paul’s doxology gathers the whole point into worship: from him and through him and to him are all things.

So the move from philosophy to faith is a genuine further step, carried by the rest of the case: the fine-tuning of the world, the resurrection, the character of Christ. But it is not a leap into a different subject. The necessary ground the argument reaches and the Creator Scripture proclaims are not rivals; they are the same answer described at two different depths.

The strongest counters, taken seriously

The best objections do not attack a caricature, so neither should we.

  • Why not let the universe itself be the necessary thing? This is a serious move, but it has to be argued, not asserted just to avoid God. The universe is a poor candidate: its contents are contingent, it changes, and mainstream cosmology points to a finite past. A whole made of parts that could each have been otherwise is not obviously something that exists by its own nature.
  • Maybe the principle of sufficient reason fails, and some facts are simply brute. Perhaps. But “brute fact” is not an explanation; it is a decision to stop asking. We are free to weigh that choice, and a stopping point that explains (a necessary being) is more reasonable than one that merely halts inquiry (a contingent universe declared off-limits to the question).
  • Doesn’t explaining each part already explain the whole? Not when the property in view belongs to the whole as well. If every sheep in a flock is contingent, the flock is contingent too; stacking up dependent things never manufactures independence. “Why is there a flock at all?” outlives the explanation of each sheep.
  • Then who made God? This quietly re-imports contingency into the one reality the argument defined as non-contingent. The full reply is on who created God?: a necessary being is not the first item in the chain but the ground of the chain, so asking for its cause misuses the terms.

Key quotes

A contingent being (a being such that if it exists, it could have not-existed) exists.
Cosmological Argument, §4.1, the argument from contingency

Scripture References

Bottom line

Contingent reality, everything that exists but might not have, does not carry the reason for its own existence, and explaining each link never explains why there is a chain. Follow the question honestly and it does not trail off into endless dependence; it terminates in a necessary, self-existent Creator. The argument does not prove the whole gospel, but it clears the ground for it and shows that “why is there anything at all?” has an answer with a name.

Open argument page

Key quotes

Everything that begins to exist has a cause of its existence.
Cosmological Argument, §7, the Kalām argument

If they push back

But isn’t calling God “necessary” just defining him into existence?

No. The argument does not define God into being; it reasons to a necessary being and then asks what such a being must be like. If a complete explanation of contingent reality exists at all, it cannot itself be one more contingent thing, or the explanation is left unfinished. “Necessary being” simply names that conclusion; it is not smuggled into the premises. Whether that being is the God of the Bible is a further step, argued from other evidence.

Couldn’t the universe itself be the necessary, self-existent thing?

It could in principle, and some people hold exactly that. But it has to be argued, not just asserted to avoid God. It also sits badly with what we actually observe: the universe changes, its parts are contingent, and the mainstream evidence points to a finite past. A collection of dependent, changing parts is a strange candidate for something that exists by its own nature.

Isn’t “God did it” just a lazy stop to scientific inquiry?

The argument is not a shortcut around physics; it works one level up. Science explains things within the universe by other things within the universe. The question here is why there is any contingent universe to investigate at all; a question that science, by its method, does not reach. Pointing to a necessary cause is an answer to that question, not a substitute for ordinary explanation.

Common mistakes

  • Accepting the objector’s premise that “everything has a cause” and then scrambling to make God the exception. You never held that premise; correct it first.
  • Describing God as the first link in the causal chain instead of the ground of the chain. That invites the very regress you are trying to avoid.
  • Letting the talk stay abstract. Ask what the person thinks the ultimate explanation actually is; usually “the universe just exists”, and weigh that as an explanation next to God.
  • Overclaiming. The argument reaches a necessary, self-existent cause; it does not by itself reach the Trinity. Say so, and point to where the rest of the case is made.

Bottom line

The objection only defeats a premise no one defends. The argument never said everything needs a cause; only that contingent or beginning reality does. God is neither, so “who created God?” asks for the cause of something that by its nature has none. The real question underneath is “why not stop at the universe?”, and the answer is that the universe is precisely the kind of thing that still needs explaining.

Sources

Reference

Cosmological Argument

Academic reference article surveying cosmological arguments from contingency, causation, sufficient reason, and beginnings.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, “Cosmological Argument,” accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Secondary context

The Kalam Cosmological Argument

Popular-level apologetics article presenting a kalam argument for a beginning and cause of the universe.

William Lane Craig, “The Kalam Cosmological Argument,” Reasonable Faith, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Secondary context

Wes Huff Debunks TOP 7 Atheist Arguments

Long-form apologetics interview addressing common atheist objections about creation, morality, religious exclusivity, Jesus’ existence, and the resurrection.

Wes Huff, “Wes Huff Debunks TOP 7 Atheist Arguments w/ John Lovell,” The John Lovell Show, Warrior Poet Society, YouTube, November 6, 2025, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source

Reference

BibleRef

Reference pages used for BibleRef-first links to Scripture passages.

BibleRef, accessed June 16, 2026.

Open source