Z Man said:
So, you believe that eternity simply means time without end? Then how can God be in time and experience one day as if a thousand years has passed, and a thousand years as one day? I don't think that explains eternity as the same time we experience, just without end, but rather, a different eternity/time altogether; one that we do not experience in our own time.
The verses you sited state he was not created. God always is, doesn't say all things always were.
His word was not always flesh with him in heaven, It *Became* flesh and THEN dwelt among us, God wouldn't need for this to be eternally happening to ponder it. He can go to any point in his own thoughts about the future, or his memories about the past and ponder it.
" one day as if a thousand years has passed, and a thousand years as one day"Speaks of His patience: 2Pe 3:8 But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing,
that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. 2Pe 3:9
The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness;
but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.
God's patience is not a slave to time.
Your view says God is realllllly long suffering, he has always been suffering..and waiting..
Was the word always flesh, in real time from God's perspective or did it become flesh at some point in real time?
Jesus died once; yes, we can agree on that. And yes, to us, the universe did begin at some point in OUR time. But try and look at it the way toist has illustrated; God is beyond the book in which we are contained. He wrote the book and all of it's pages, and knows how it will end. To us, we live 'page by page'; we are contained within it's pages. But God is 'outside' of the pages; He can flip them and see what happens in the future, or in the past.
Zman, God, nor you for that matter would need to be outside of time to see the future.
I know my own future based on the choices I make, or will make. You don't need to be outside of time to know if your fighter plane is not fueled up, it's not going to function.
You can be in time and figure this out, with absolute perfect foreknowledge..
Another way to look at it is the way C.S. Lewis describes in his book,
Mere Christianity. In it, Lewis explains that if you draw a line on a piece of paper, then that line can represent time and the paper can represent God. In other words, God encompasses all of time; He overshadows the whole 'timeline'. If you understand these concepts, then it's easy to understand that yes, the universe did begin at a time for us, and Jesus died once in our time. But God encompasses all of time. He is beyond it, and is God yesterday, today, AND tomorrow.
Jeremiah 19:4-5
"'For Israel has forsaken me and turned this valley into a place of wickedness. The people burn incense to foreign gods – idols never before worshiped by this generation, by their ancestors, or by the kings of Judah. And they have filled this place with the blood of innocent children. They have built pagan shrines to Baal, and there they burn their sons as sacrifices to Baal. I have never commanded such a horrible deed; it never even crossed my mind to command such a thing!
God's simply stating the obvious. He's illustrating to Israel how they have disobeyed Him and done things that He has never commanded them to do. God wants Israel to see how far this 'idol worshipping' has taken them off the beaten path. Baal (well, the priests who worship the false god) may command that the Israelites burn their children as sacrifices, but God states He has never commanded Israel to do such a thing when they followed Him. It's a true statement.
Zman, I agree with you, God didn't command them at anytime to do this, in fact He commanded them not to do it earlier.
Lev 18:21 And
thou shalt not let any of thy seed pass through the fire to Molech,
neither shalt thou profane the name of thy God: I am the LORD.
He also repeats Himself on this issue and distances himself from THEIR acts.
Jer 32:33 And
they have turned unto me the back, and not the face:
though I taught them, rising up early and teaching them, yet they have not hearkened to receive instruction. Jer 32:34 But they set
their abominations in the house, which is called by my name, to defile it.
Jer 32:35 And
they built the high places of Baal, which are in the valley of the son of Hinnom,
to cause their sons and their daughters to pass through the fire unto Molech; which
I commanded them not,
neither came it into my mind,
that they should do this abomination, to cause Judah to sin.
He even tells us that they SHOULD not have done this and why this happened to them in verse 4 "Because you have forsaken me" What he wanted, desired, they forsook. It wasn't his presence in their actions that led to this, but his absence as you admitted in your example below.
So then, did God predestine, ordain them to do this? That was my question to you. He doesn't just say he didn't command it, he says it never entered his "heart"/"mind" that they
should do it. Do you not hold to the view that God is the direct cause of every action? Did he cause Judah to sin by his perfect will and actions, or was it Israel that caused them to sin?
Did this event happened because God ordained, ordered, commanded, desired it and Israel simply had no choice to do otherwise?
It looks to me like God is saying, this is not of me.., it's because of you it happened..
And since we are on the issue of time, has this always been going on?
It's just like if you had a girlfriend who left you for another guy. Come to find out while talking to her after seeing her in the mall, she tells you that this guy demands that she keep her nails painted a certain color, her hair a certain length, and that she wear's only a certain type of fashion design. You reply, "Well, I have never told you to do such a thing", in hopes that she'll realize how good she had it with you. The same concept can be applied to this verse in Jeremiah.
Are you saying God didn't know this was going to happen, "Come to find out"?
Don't you believe God knew absolutely that Israel was going to paint their nails and where her hair a certain length because God ordained it to be so and they had no choice to do otherwise? Zman, according to your view as I understand it, Israel never left God's perfect will for them, so why would he say he never thought it or commanded it in "Hope" they would come back to Him (or realize something), whom they never really left..?
Jesus had no choice, because His death was the only way to save us, and thus bring glory to God.
You say he had no choice, Jesus says he did.
Jesus to Zman: "Mat 26:53 Thinkest thou that I cannot now pray to my Father, and he shall presently give me more than twelve legions of angels?"
Zman: No, you can't.
I'm not going down the road of speculation, because it can get pretty nasty for both sides.
You did more then speculate, you said absolutely "Jesus had no choice"
[Quote}Your answer can be found
HERE.[/QUOTE]
I'd prefer if you just answered it here, cut and past if you like, but not some long drawn out commentary by Piper or others.
Question is, if God only does that which is pleasing to him, why does he say he is displeased?