excerpt from SUMMA THEOLOGICA I, Question 2, Article 3 - Whether God exists
It must be said that God's existence can be proved in five ways. The first and most
obvious way is based on the existence of motion. It is certain and in fact evident to our senses
that some things in the world are moved. Everything that is moved, however, is moved by
something else, for a thing cannot be moved unless that movement is potentially within it. A
thing moves something else insofar as it actually exists, for to move something is simply to
actualize what is potentially within that thing. Something can be led thus from potentiality to
actuality only by something else which is already actualized. For example, a fire, which is
actually hot, causes the change or motion whereby wood, which is potentially hot, becomes
actually hot. Now it is impossible that something should be potentially and actually the same
thing at the same time, although it could be potentially and actually different things. For
example, what is actually hot cannot at the same moment be actually cold, although it can be
actually hot and potentially cold. Therefore it is impossible that a thing could move itself, for
that would involve simultaneously moving and being moved in the same respect. Thus
whatever is moved must be moved by something, else, etc. This cannot go on to infinity,
however, for if it did there would be no first mover and consequently no other movers,
because these other movers are such only insofar as they are moved by a first mover. For
example, a stick moves only because it is moved by the hand. Thus it is necessary to proceed
back to some prime mover which is moved by nothing else, and this is what everyone means
by "God."
The second way is based on the existence of efficient causality. We see in the world around us
that there is an order of efficient causes. Nor is it ever found (in fact it is impossible) that
something is its own efficient cause. If it were, it would be prior to itself, which is impossible.
Nevertheless, the order of efficient causes cannot proceed to infinity, for in any such order the
first is cause of the middle (whether one or many) and the middle of the last. Without the
cause, the effect does not follow. Thus, if the first cause did not exist, neither would the
middle and last causes in the sequence. If, however, there were an infinite regression of
efficient causes, there would be no first efficient cause and therefore no middle causes or final
effects, which is obviously not the case. Thus it is necessary to posit some first efficient cause,
which everyone calls "God."
The third way is based on possibility and necessity. We find that some things can either exist
or not exist, for we find them springing up and then disappearing, thus sometimes existing
and sometimes not. It is impossible, however, that everything should be such, for what can
possibly not exist does not do so at some time. If it is possible for every particular thing not to
exist, there must have been a time when nothing at all existed. If this were true, however, then
nothing would exist now, for something that does not exist can begin to do so only through
something that already exists. If, therefore, there had been a time when nothing existed, then
nothing could ever have begun to exist, and thus there would be nothing now, which is
clearly false. Therefore all beings cannot be merely possible. There must be one being which
is necessary. Any necessary being, however, either has or does not have something else as the
cause of its necessity. If the former, then there cannot be an infinite series of such causes, any
more than there can be an infinite series of efficient causes, as we have seen. Thus we must to
posit the existence of something which is necessary and owes its necessity to no cause outside
itself. That is what everyone calls "God."
The fourth way is based on the gradations found in things. We find that things are more or
less good, true, noble, etc.; yet when we apply terms like "more" and "less" to things we
imply that they are closer to or farther from some maximum. For example, a thing is said to
be hotter than something else because it comes closer to that which is hottest. Therefore
something exists which is truest, greatest, noblest, and consequently most fully in being; for,
as Aristotle says, the truest things are most fully in being. That which is considered greatest in
any genus is the cause of everything is that genus, just as fire, the hottest thing, is the cause of
all hot things, as Aristotle says. Thus there is something which is the cause of being,
goodness, and every other perfection in all things, and we call that something "God."
The fifth way is based on the governance of things. We see that some things lacking cognition,
such as natural bodies, work toward an end, as is seen from the fact that they always (or at
least usually) act the same way and not accidentally, but by design. Things without
knowledge tend toward a goal, however, only if they are guided in that direction by some
knowing, understanding being, as is the case with an arrow and archer. Therefore, there is
some intelligent being by whom all natural things are ordered to their end, and we call this
being "God."
St. Thomas Aquinas