This piece explores the ancient idea of an all-knowing God through the lens of modern physics, arguing that quantum entanglement offers a plausible physical mechanism for instantaneous, universe-spanning awareness, and suggests a fresh image of a Creator intimately linked to every particle of creation.
For centuries people have wrestled with how a divine mind could possibly know everything at once, from the tiniest thought to the farthest star. Many imagine a deity peering down from afar, waiting as signals travel across space until the cosmos finally reports back. That distant-telescope picture has always felt a little lonely and mechanically slow, given the realities of our lived experience and the immediacy we often attribute to the divine.
Materialists tend to dismiss omniscience as an old superstition, impossible under physical laws that limit information transfer. But physics has a way of surprising us, and one of its stranger discoveries opens a different door: particles can be correlated in ways that make distance irrelevant. That discovery forces a rethink of what “knowing” might mean in a universe richer than classical intuition suggests.
The phenomenon at the center of this rethinking is quantum entanglement. Decades of work by great thinkers and careful experiments turned a philosophical puzzle into hard science: two particles that once interacted can remain linked so tightly that a change to one instantaneously affects the other, no matter how far apart they are. That behavior was first raised as a paradox and later confirmed through experiments that left no easy classical explanation.
Einstein famously disliked the idea because it seemed to clash with his insistence that nothing travels faster than light. He labeled the effect “spukhafte Fernwirkung, German for “spooky action at a distance.” Even now, the mechanics behind that instantaneous tie-up resist familiar metaphors like waves or signals; the connection is not communication through space but a fundamental relational property of the system.
Think about how that breaks the usual story: if two parts of a system are entangled, they are not truly separate anymore. They form a single, distributed entity whose state is defined collectively. From this angle, omniscience need not be a passive watching from a distance; it could be the natural knowing that arises when a being is fundamentally woven into the fabric of what it created.
Imagine a Creator whose presence is more like an underlying entangled network than a surveillance camera on high. In that picture, awareness is not gathered bit by bit; it is immediate because the Creator and creation share a deep, structural link. That model reframes questions of distance and delay: nothing is remote to a mind bound by the same architecture that binds particles across light-years.
People are often taught to keep science and spirit in separate compartments, as though facts and faith pull in different directions. But when a physical principle suggests a kind of immediate, nonlocal connectedness, the line between explanation and meaning narrows. Science then becomes a map pointing to how intimacy and presence might operate on the largest and smallest scales simultaneously.
So when you look at the night sky, consider a different image: not a scattering of isolated dots but a woven tapestry where every thread has the potential to respond to every other. That view does not demand belief without evidence; it offers a way of imagining timeless presence through physics we already use in labs and technologies. The wonder that follows is not just spiritual sentiment; it is curiosity invited by scientific mystery and the possibility that the cosmos is knitted together in ways that make universal knowing conceivable.

1 Comment
But this idea is still trapped in the entanglement of mere earthly human being mind and understanding which is so primitive and far off from any complete understanding of anything! It’s folly for us to think we can figure out what must be in order to get the total picture!
Einstein is mentioned, and here is what he said way back in 1954!
“The most beautiful and most profound experience is the sensation of the mystical. It is the sower of all true science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead. To know that what is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself as the highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty which our dull faculties can comprehend only in their primitive forms – this knowledge, this feeling is at the centre of true religiousness.”