themuzicman
Well-known member
If everything was settled, why would GOd have to work at all?
Muz
Muz
Ya know, this is the best response to Nang's misguided point.If everything was settled, why would GOd have to work at all?
Muz
If everything was settled, why would GOd have to work at all?
Muz
So you don't believe there's anything that isn't settled?If we are saved by grace, why are we instructed to "work out" our salvation?
We are living during a temporal process, to achieve eternal and Godly goals, that's why.
Things are settled, but things are not quite finished. The end of all things is yet to come.
"Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ." I Peter 1:13
(I trust this language is not offensive to you . . .)
So you don't believe there's anything that isn't settled?
That still doesn't mean everything.:nono: Is what shirt I'm going to wear tomorrow settled?All things are settled in the mind and purposes of God:
"Declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, 'My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure.'" Isaiah 46:10
That still doesn't mean everything.:nono: Is what shirt I'm going to wear tomorrow settled?
So it is not settled in God's mind?It is settled by God, that most people have the capacity to choose their own wardrobe each day, while others are not.
Be thankful to Sovereign God that you are one of those able to so function.
Nang
So it is not settled in God's mind?
What? So it is already settled in His mind what shirt I will choose to wear tomorrow? How is that a choice?Of course it is settled in God's mind. For He has given you the shirt on your back.
It's slow going. And apparently he has ordained that new ones will always grow in the place of the ones I lose.Every time you lose a hair, God sees it and knows it. God has ordained you will lose your hair, and He alone can keep track and control how many hairs you have left.
I see how your talk is, yes.Do you see how this kind of talk is nonsensical?
God is not fatalistic, period.You are attempting to equate Godly determinism (which is Theology) with fatalism (which is a Philosophy).
I'm not claiming that. I'm claiming the exact opposite. God does not need to control His creation meticulously in order to perform His will. He doesn't even need to know everything that will ever happen to declare the end from the beginning.You are claiming that in order for God to sovereignly control His creation, men are denied the capacity to cause and effect (willfully function). That is philosophic nonsense, seeing that God created all men in His image, giving them abilities that reflect His primary powers.
He gave us control over ourselves. And does not need to compete with us in order to perform His supreme will, seeing as how He is God, and we are not.God does not lose control over His creatures, nor does He compete with them to accomplish His purposes, due to the fact He created them with a capacity to function volitionally.
You've settled when your dog will drink?My dog willfully chooses to drink out of his water dish, but I totally control my dog, in that I have settled when and where the dog will drink. That is because I am his provider, sustainer, and protector of his life.
Nang
This is simplistic and incorrect. God transcends our concepts of time and describing His knowledge of temporal events as “it has already happened” is a gross misunderstanding of the “eternal now” of God.
Not according to C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity, "The difficulty comes from thinking that God is progressing along the Time--line like us: the only difference being that He can see ahead and we cannot. Well, if that were true, if God foresaw our acts, it would be very hard to understand how we could be free not to do them. But suppose God is outside and above the Time-line. In that case, what we call 'tomorrow' is visible to Him in just the same way as what we call 'today.' All the days are 'Now' for Him. He does not remember you doing things yesterday; He simply sees you doing them...He does not 'foresee' you doing things tomorrow; He simply sees you doing them: because, though tomorrow is not yet there for you, it is for Him."
God is infinite in relation to time. (Yes, infinite means all or unlimited in amounts of something. When we say God is omnipotent we mean that he has infinite or all power. When we say God is omniscient we mean he has infinite or all knowledge of things actual and things possible. God's relationship to time is the same, God is eternal means he has infinite or all time.) Time does not apply to God. God was before time began. (You mean before God created it and if God created time, then, there was a time in eternity before he created time for the created world.) God is not restricted by the dimension of time. That God is not bound by time does not mean that God is not conscious of the succession of points in time. God knows what is now occurring in human experience. God is aware that events occur in a particular order. God is equally aware of all points of that order simultaneously. God is aware of what is happening, has happened, and what will happen at each point in time. Yet at any given point in time God is also conscious of the distinction between what is now occurring, what has been, and what will be.
There is a successive order to the acts of God (Yes, this is what OV states, and a succession of events means, this before that, and that is time) and there is a logical order to his decisions, yet there is no temporal order to God’s willing. God’s deliberation and willing take no time. God has from eternity determined what He is now doing. (If you are saying that God is doing something "now" that he was not doing "before", then, you again are saying there is time in God, in the same way we are saying it. If you don't get this, then, it is obvious that you are not reading our posts carefully enough.) Therefore God’s actions are not in any way reactions to developments. God does not get taken by surprise or have to create contingency plans. (Despite all the scripture verses that say otherwise.)
Minor correction, Dave.
DFT_Dave : He doesn't know anything before it happens, because, for him, it has already happened.
There's no past tense either ("already happened"). No present tense, too. But anyway ....
Keep up the debate. It's been good.
Yeah. i don't believe in it either.Eternal now timelessness is simply not found in Scripture.
You mean it took God infinitely long to think of making creation? :think:Temporality in God does not take away from His eternality which is endless time with no beginning or no end.
You mean it took God infinitely long to think of making creation? :think:
"Indeed! This point I have to concede. Infinite regress is a significant paradox within the open view paradigm. One might call it an antinomy if the term weren't so abused by the Calvinist to the point that it is synonymous with the terms "contradiction" and "irrationality". The problem of infinite regress is a paradox but does not imply an incoherence within the open view paradigm. The only thing it implies is that there is something about the nature of infinity that we do not understand. Zeno, an ancient mathematician used a very similar paradox to argue that motion was impossible. Many believe his paradoxes to be unsolved to this day while others insist that Calculus gives us the tool we need to crack the nut but in either case, the existence of the paradox of infinite regress doesn't prove that we haven't made it to the present moment any more than Zeno had proved we can't walk across the room."
Hey Everyone,
I have a thought, it may be a little hard to follow, but here-goes.
1. God cannot make a square circle.
2. God cannot make a stone so heavy he himself can't lift it
I think everyone agrees with that.
If God created time/future, that would mean there was a "time" that it didn't exist. So during that "time", if God was all knowing, but there wasn't a "future"(yet), he couldn't know what didn't exist.
Why? Knowing what doesn't exist is like a "square circle."
Therefore, God didn't know the future if he didn't create it. If he created it, there was a point that he couldn't know it.
Here is another thought.
If creation takes time then how did God create time? (If God created the future, creating is an act, and act's happen within time.)
One more.
If God created time, and it is settled, and God is unchanging, then he will not nor cannot change time. This is like God creating a rock so heavy he himself cannot move it.
I think I'll stop there. Let me know if that makes since........:up:
Yes, an omnipotent God cannot do things that are illogical or inconsistent, such as making rocks that He cannot lift. But, your other observations ignore the idea that God's eternal existence is outside of time in every way we can think of time and has to do with God's pure actuality. See also here.