timelessness - a state of eternal existence believed in some religions to characterize the afterlife
timelessness - a state of eternal existence believed in some religions to characterize the afterlife
Endless duration of time explains God's experiences before and after creation. Timelessness is simply incoherent with no biblical support.
Corporate vs individual election resolves your proof texting. Your exegesis, including attempt to use Greek you don't understand, does not support your preconceived idea.
Why do I find it so difficult to dialogue with you? You are dogmatic when you should not be. Repeating the same verses or misunderstandings over and over is not persuasive nor confirmatory.
As long as you understand why people think you are a joke, no matter what side of the debate you are on.
The few peanut gallery types may think I am a joke, but this is not true of the majority.
satan said:Why do I find it so difficult to dialogue with you? You are dogmatic when you should not be. Repeating the same verses or misunderstandings over and over is not persuasive nor confirmatory.
No, no, you are settling for a half an answer. His direction is at least bidurational having no beginning. He is that by which all other things exist, therefore we as beings redeemed and created in His image have endless duration. God surpasses that as I've repeatedly expressed.Endless duration of time explains God's experiences before and after creation. Timelessness is simply incoherent with no biblical support.
But what AMR doesn't seem to ever address is the fact that some Calvinists themselves affirm a true freedom of man with respect to sin prior to the Fall.
No towel to throw in, especially when the swings are missing altogether.
Yes, we weren't there at the creation. That doesn't mean there is no time until we got watches, but God's existence is without the possibility of any durative measurement, period. Read AMR above as well.
No, to come up with that means you are missing something crucial to the proof. His duration is at the minimum two-way with a past that is going forever (no singular direction).
Again, read AMR above.
I AM.
Look it up. :AMR:
God is independent, and claims it so in his own name-- he makes himself known as absolute being, as the one who is in an absolute sense.
BTW, if your litmus test is explicit words, where in the Bible do we find the word "Trinity"? Best to stick with "by good and necessary consequence" of the whole counsel of God when determining doctrine, no?
AMR
So He has a beginning in your worldview? That is the only way you could assert that.AMR has to answer the same question I'm asking you. Which he can't anymore than you can. To say God's "past is going on forever" is a contradiction of terms and makes no sense, you know that.
--Dave
So He has a beginning in your worldview? That is the only way you could assert that.
Really? Who would these "Calvinist" people be?
Nang
As usual you make an assertion but when confronted with the facts you put your tail between your legs and run. Let us look at the proof texts:.Corporate vs individual election resolves your proof texting.
If He isn't actually infinite, He could not know that He is infinite (and wouldn't be). These semantics aren't working for you, or for me.The answer is, God is "Infinite Potentiallity", not "Pure Actuality", we are "Finite Potentiality". God is free to actualize his own unlimited potential of thought and power do what he wants, when he wants. The infinite past is not a problem for God because his infinite potentiallity can never be exhausted. That's a start, have to go to work.
--Dave
If He isn't actually infinite, He could not know that He is infinite (and wouldn't be). These semantics aren't working for you, or for me.
I don't suscribe to Aristotle but am saying that you seem to be playing with physical concepts in trying to figure out what God can and cannot do. That is, God is limited by the extent of your grasp rather than the exceeding extent of His own. There is no reason to suspect God cannot see the future as scripture indicates to the rest of us, without such limitations. God then, is limited to the finiteness that the open view can conceive of Him rather than clear indications of even the possibility that God exceeds what the open theist has laid out for Him (so that He can somehow be relational and 'in-the-same-boat' for proximal comfort). I too believe that He is relational and proximal, yet I believe He exceeds those parameters.Philosophy 101
A God who is "fully actualized/pure actuality" is Aristotle's "Unmoved Mover". He has no "potentiality" which means he cannot act, and therefore he is not the creator of the world. The eternal "unmoved mover", who is "pure actuality" is the cause of movement in an eternal world of "actuality and potentiality". A God who is "pure actuality" could not create the world or incarnate into it.
Your comment makes not sense. All you are saying is "if God isn't actually infinite he isn't infinite".
"Infinite potentiality" is as reasonable a concept as "finite potentiality", it's not a contradiction of terms. It's simply means God can do anything, there's nothing he can't do. A God who is "infinitely actualized" doesn't do anything other than self contemplation as Aristotle explains, or does everything all at once in classic theism's synthesis of "Unmoved Mover" with the Biblical God in whom there is movement.
There is the impossible infinite regress of cause and effect of activity and movement, but only if the cause is not within that which is affected. Aristotle believed that "nothing moved itself". We believe that God can freely "move himself" and that's why movement/time does not require a beginning point for him.
--Dave
I just understood what you were getting at with this post. I think!I can see that you have fully and completely missed the point. Thanks for trying.
wow. Now I know that you not only believe that God purposed every detestable act throughout earthly history, but everyone of those acts have eternally been in His mind. Therefore, according to you, the god of Calvinism not only eternally thinks about children being molested but has decreed every child molesting act.
I've heard all I need to hear. Thanks for clearing things up.
I don't suscribe to Aristotle but am saying that you seem to be playing with physical concepts in trying to figure out what God can and cannot do. That is, God is limited by the extent of your grasp rather than the exceeding extent of His own. There is no reason to suspect God cannot see the future as scripture indicates to the rest of us, without such limitations. God then, is limited to the finiteness that the open view can conceive of Him rather than clear indications of even the possibility that God exceeds what the open theist has laid out for Him (so that He can somehow be relational and 'in-the-same-boat' for proximal comfort). I too believe that He is relational and proximal, yet I believe He exceeds those parameters.