Nang
TOL Subscriber
Apparently right now!
Nope. That was a trick question, Delmar, and you answered wrong! :ha:
You boys are kinda cute, though, how you go about things . . .entertaining . . . except for the neg reps.
Have a nice evening.
Nang
Apparently right now!
I am going to have to seriously consider not answering you until you either quote my words as a reference or you properly interpret them. Where have I asserted "we cannot comprehend God"? You appear to only read what you want from anything that you see that might disagree with your own assumptions. You make it worse by attributing such things to me when they are actually misrepresentations of my actual words.AMR, if we cannot comprehend God (as you assert) why are you so sure God cannot create something new? (as you assert)
Trick question or not, if God exists in eternal now, I got the answer right and you owe me an A+ !Nope. That was a trick question, Delmar, and you answered wrong! :ha:
You boys are kinda cute, though, how you go about things . . .entertaining . . . except for the neg reps.
Have a nice evening.
Nang
I didn't say He couldn't create something 'new' but that 'new' only has meaning in our temporal context. Our perception is 'new' BECAUSE we are temporal. There is nothing 'new' to an atemporal omniscience. If you know everything, there is nothing outside of 'everything' to know, learn, or experience. If I am the maker of 'all things' nothing 'new' exists. I've made it all. "I am doing a 'new' thing..." New to 'your' perception. It is 'new' to you. It wasn't a new thing to God, He had 'already' (temporal word for our understanding) planned this.You say.... " I know this is troubling to logic parameters you've set up, but it is the truth."
Where do you get this "truth" from? The Bible? If so, can you point me to the place in the Bible where we learn that God cannot create something new?
Gen 1:5 "first"Can you point me to the place in the Bible where it says God created time?
God can create, and move, that wasn't the point. The point is our word 'new.'(seems silly asking you that knowing you believe God cannot create).
Num 23:19 1Sa 15:29 Heb 7:21 (our definition of impassibility may need address)Can you point me to the place in the Bible where it says God is impassible?
Can you point me to the part of the Bible that says God does not experience one event after another?
Pro 8:23 Col 1:16 Jos 10:13 Psa 139:4 Psa 139:16 Rev 4 "was"
If what you say is true you should be able to give a defense for such a notion.
Shouldn't you? :idunno:
:jawdrop:Gen 1:5 "first"
I ask.... "Can you point me to the place in the Bible where it says God created time?"
And Lonster answers....
:jawdrop:
Uh.... if time was created in Gen 1:5 why was there a sequence of events prior to that in Genesis 1:1-4? :idunno:
Sorry, Lonster that ain't gonna cut it.
Job 11:7 "Can you discover the essence of God?
Can you find out
the perfection of the Almighty?
Job 11:8 It is higher than the heavens — what can you do?
It is deeper than Sheol — what can you know?
Job 11:9 Its measure is longer than the earth,
and broader than the sea.
Eph 3:18 you may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth,
Eph 3:19 and thus to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge, so that you may be filled up to all the fullness of God.
I ask.... "Can you point me to the place in the Bible where it says God created time?"
And Lonster answers....
:jawdrop:
Uh.... if time was created in Gen 1:5 why was there a sequence of events prior to that in Genesis 1:1-4? :idunno:
Sorry, Lonster that ain't gonna cut it.
If you take a tape measure and start measuring something so large that it cannot be measured, like time for God, you wouldn't even know where to begin. Let's take numbers. At any point, you can start counting, and can continue forever. Increments are measurements, time or otherwise. First of all, if it is eternal both in past and present, you have no reference for starting and you have no reference for ending. If God is immeasurable as His Word says, then there is no accurate measurement that can define Him. He is too large for a tape measure, He is too large for a satelite laser. He cannot be measured by a watch, or the sun, or anything else. We are are finite (time constrained beings) God is not. There is no measurement that we have that can measure God, including time.
If you take a tape measure and start measuring something so large that it cannot be measured, like time for God, you wouldn't even know where to begin. Let's take numbers. At any point, you can start counting, and can continue forever. Increments are measurements, time or otherwise. First of all, if it is eternal both in past and present, you have no reference for starting and you have no reference for ending. If God is immeasurable as His Word says, then there is no accurate measurement that can define Him. He is too large for a tape measure, He is too large for a satelite laser. He cannot be measured by a watch, or the sun, or anything else. We are are finite (time constrained beings) God is not. There is no measurement that we have that can measure God, including time.
Uh, even if I agreed with you on that point, (and I partially do) it's clear you MISSED the point.Knight, Scripture does not intends to give a highly detailed scientific account of creation. I believe that assuming as such can lead one into error. For that we can rely on science and general revelation. We know from science that time began at the big bang (source). Now, the question is, since no thing is it's own cause and so it is caused by something prior to it, then what caused the big bang when time had not begun and all space-time was contained in the singularity?
I have an incredibly simply question for you, please answer it directly.....'FIRST' day has no meaning to you? How about first hour?
I have an incredibly simply question for you, please answer it directly.....
IF, later this afternoon for some unknown reason the earth exploded into a cloud of dust and it was no more..... would time cease to exist?
Please spare me the "post wasting" answer.... "well it would cease to exist for us because we wouldn't exist". I want to know if the earth didn't exist and there were no days to measure would time still march on for everything else that remained in existence.
Very good! Therefore Gen 1:5 is not a proof text for God creating time.
AMR's answer: Time would exist if the earth did not exist.
You are making the typical mistake of confusing the measurement of time (i.e., measuring time can be effected by physics), with the concept of time (i.e., events happen sequentially).From physics we know that the property, time, is a function of space and matter. For time to cease to exist, all space and matter, not just the earth, would have to not exist. In other words, God's created universe would have to cease to exist. The obvious corollary is that upon God's decree to create, decreed from within His eternal existence, time began to exist, because matter and space began to exist.
Very good! Therefore Gen 1:5 is not a proof text for God creating time.
You are making the typical mistake of confusing the measurement of time (i.e., measuring time can be effected by physics), with the concept of time (i.e., events happen sequentially).
Until you get your mind around the distinction you will always struggle with this topic.
I have no idea what you are talking about. Your frequent, "Aha! Gotchas!" are juvenile. You think these topics are a game that schoolyard children are playing? Let's approach such matters with reverence.Very good! Therefore Gen 1:5 is not a proof text for God creating time.
You are making the typical mistake of confusing the measurement of time (i.e., measuring time can be effected by physics), with the concept of time (i.e., events happen sequentially).
Until you get your mind around the distinction you will always struggle with this topic.
Try spreading the goodness around once in awhile instead of just to your circle of open theists.Grrr, it won't let me award rep points
It is seen as "typical" only by those who would assume God is a temporal being.
These topics need not be diffilcult.I have no idea what you are talking about. Your frequent, "Aha! Gotchas!" are juvenile. You think these topics are a game that schoolyard children are playing? Let's approach such matters with reverence.
With all due respect I have been dealing with this argument almost non-stop for the last 10 years and one of the most common mistakes that settled viewers make is to confuse the measurement of time (that can be effected by physics) with the concept of time (which cannot be effected by physics).And, no, there is no "typical mistake", in confusing the concepts of time.