Your coffee gets cold. Your car rusts. Your body ages. Stars burn out. Buildings crumble. Civilizations fall. Everything moves from order to disorder. This isn't pessimism — it's the most confirmed law in physics.
In any closed system, total entropy (disorder)
can only increase or stay the same. Never decrease.
Arthur Eddington — the astronomer who confirmed Einstein's General Relativity — put it this way: if your theory contradicts the Second Law, "there is nothing for it but to collapse in deepest humiliation." It is the most certain law in all of science.
What Entropy Actually Means
The One-Way Street
Entropy is not just about heat. It's about information. High entropy means indistinguishable states — you can't tell one part of the system from another. Low entropy means distinguishable states — structure, pattern, meaning. When entropy increases, meaning dissolves.
This is why the Second Law is the physics underneath the moral-physical dictionary. Decoherence, disorder, noise, disease, confusion, falsehood, evil — they're all high-entropy states. Coherence, order, signal, health, clarity, truth, good — they're all low-entropy states. The Second Law says the universe naturally moves from the second list to the first.
The Problem
If entropy always increases in closed systems, and the universe has been running for 13.8 billion years, then one of two things should be true:
Either the universe should have reached heat death by now — maximum entropy, no structure, no gradients, no life, no information. Just a uniform soup of particles at the same temperature. Nothing distinguishable. Nothing alive.
Or the universe is not a closed system.
Look around. Stars are still burning. DNA is still replicating. You are reading this sentence — which means your brain is processing information, maintaining extraordinary low-entropy organization in a universe that should have dissolved all organization billions of years ago.
The question: What is holding the universe open against the Second Law?
Something is continually inputting order into a system that should have run down. Physics calls this negentropy — negative entropy, the input of structure from outside the system. What is the source of negentropy for the entire universe?
The Three Escape Routes
"The universe started with very low entropy." True. But this pushes the question back: WHO set the initial entropy so precisely? Penrose calculated the precision required as 1 in 10^(10¹²³). That's not an explanation — it's an even bigger question.
"Local entropy can decrease if it increases somewhere else." True. Life creates order locally by exporting entropy. But this requires an energy source (the sun) which is itself burning down. Every local decrease in entropy is paid for by a global increase. The books still balance toward death — unless something outside the ledger is subsidizing it.
"We don't need an explanation — it just is." This is the brute fact position. It amounts to saying "the most confirmed law in physics has a universe-scale exception and I don't find that interesting." That's not science — it's incuriosity elevated to principle.
The Theological Translation
Physics: "Something external must sustain order against the universal tendency toward disorder."
Theology: "In Him all things hold together."
Same statement. Different vocabulary. The Second Law is the physics of why the universe needs what Colossians describes. Without continuous coherence input from outside the system, everything dies. That coherence input has a name in the Master Equation: χ. And it has a name in Scripture: the Logos.
Grace is negentropy. Every theologian who ever described grace as "God sustaining creation" was describing the same phenomenon that physicists measure as negentropy — the external input of order into a system that would otherwise die. Grace doesn't violate physics. Grace IS the physics.