As a personal agent, God's act of creation involves deliberation
about
His possible courses of action, a decision to act in a certain way, and
the execution
of that decision. In this paper, I argue that there is good reason to suppose
that
God's deliberation of the possible worlds cannot make Him temporal.
Furthermore,
whether we favour a deterministic and indeterministic version of freedom,
a model
can be constructed of how God timelessly decides to create this world and
respond
to His creatures. Finally, I argue that the problem of how God executes
His decision
dissolves, if we adopt a pantheistic viewpoint. This rather unorthodox
viewpoint is
compatible with other important theistic doctrines.