How then does God, in His mind, take into account and not take into account our sins eternally?
Isn't it limiting God's ability to think a new thought if He knows everything eternally?
God does not think as do finite creatures. He is not deliberating. God knows and His knowledge is intuitive--not discursive wherein we as creatures, accrete knowledge proceeding logically from the known to the unknown. God knows in one eternal, all-comprehensive act, not successive.Isn't it limiting God's ability to think a new thought if He knows everything eternally?
I absolutely agree that we can separate His purpose, will, intent, desire, "good pleasure" etc., from what He knows, but again, you are missing the big picture, and I cannot understand how or why you don't see it.You specifically asked about what God has always known. What God has always known is theologically distinguished from God's purposes and good pleasures.
That is not what I'm suggesting at all.God decrees were not based upon His foreknowledge
My view of God is that God is good. Whatever God decrees, purposes, intends, wills, etc., is good. And this is why the god of Calvinism (who is accused of knowing all things) cannot be good. I will explain why (though I'm not sure you'll understand) after I address the other posts.God's decrees were based upon His will, good pleasure and divine purposes to bring glory to His name.
This is a God-centered understanding. (Ephesians 1:9-12; Romans 8:28-30; 9:14-24)
Nope. Not what I believe, nor does it make anymore sense than what you believe.I would suppose you would make the common and erroneous Arminian argument, that God elected to extend grace to sinners according to His foreknowledge of their choices, rather than according to His will, good pleasure and divine purposes to bring glory to His name.
Just like what you believe.Such proves to be a man-centered understanding.
The god you believe in is blasphemous, as you have plainly shown us in this thread, having accused Him of knowing all things eternally. Perhaps you would like to retract that declaration, though I suppose you won't, because you still fail to understand it's implications.Until you are able to distinguish between divine intent and foreknowledge, you will continue to be confused and thus find it needful to resort to emotional tactics; blaspheming and accusing God of causing the sins of men.
Okay Lon, but Calvinism attempts to do this by claiming that God knows everything eternally, which is fabricating a God that is very disturbing, and in fact not a good God. It would be impossible for Him to be.In my estimation, we are guessing because we are trying to apprehend the mind and purposes of God (finite cannot apprehend infinite).
Yet, Calvinism claims to, and attributes to Him eternal knowledge of all things. Would you like to state that Calvinism is wrong about this? I believe that you believe that God is good, and He cannot be if He knows all things eternally.1) God is infinite which means He is beyond our ability to completely grasp.
Really? God is evil and good? Are you sure?2) Nothing is outside of God.
And He never gives us the idea that He knows all things eternally.God has given us glimpses and directions for how to think of Him.
God is the source of all things good, for God is good, not evil.Whatever proceeds, then, must necessarily originate in Him as the source of all things.
It doesn't matter what is new to us. Forget about us, we are discussing what YOU (Calvinism) claim that God knows eternally (all things). Either He does or He does not. If YOU claim He does, then God has never been separated from evil, for it is in His mind eternally (according to you).Let us consider Enyart's question: "Can God write a new song?" In answering, we have to take into account at least two things, that it would necessarily exist only by His sustaining power, and as such, that power has always existed. Also, we must recognize our own finiteness. For us, things are new because we are finite. That is, if we see something outside of ourselves, it is indeed new to us.
Well, that's quite disturbing, but not surprising.Ghost,
This is actually the basic view of Catholic and mainstream Protestant alike. The only group denying God's knowledge of past, present, and future are open theists, who deny God can know the future.
I don't. I think most people who claim to believe in Jesus have a skewed view of God.Don't know why you think this is just a Calvinist issue.
A good starting point is Shaw's exposition here:
http://www.reformed.org/documents/shaw/shaw_02.html
If that is the definition of "all knowing" then who would disagree with that, because there is nothing in what he just said that indicates that God has known all things eternally. God knows all that is "in His sight", that is, all that can be known, or that He chooses to know.God is all-knowing. In his sight all things are open and manifest. He has a perfect knowledge of himself, and he only knows himself perfectly.
There you go, the reformed position is that God knows, and has eternally known all things evil, making them part of who God is.He knows all things besides himself, whether they be past, present, or to come, in our way of measuring them by time.
Again, I have no problem with God seeing all things "in His sight" and therefore knowing all that can be known, but reformed theology makes a leap the Bible does not make, and makes God into a being that eternally has all things evil in His mind.He knows all creatures, from the greatest to the least; he knows all the actions of his creatures, whether secret or open; all their words, thoughts, and intentions.
Again, God knows all that can be known, for all the evil that has been done by man is seen by God, including the thoughts and intents of the heart. Still no Biblical support for the claim that God eternally knows all things.Hence the Scripture declares, "The eyes of the Lord are in every place, beholding the evil and the good."–Prov. xv. 3. "He is acquainted with all our ways, there is not a word in our tongue but he knoweth it altogether, and he understandeth our thought afar off."–Ps.cxxxix. 2-4. "Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world."–Acts xv. 18.
The Bible does not state this, so it is therefore a concoction created by the reformers. Nothing more than an evil attribute attributed to God.Yea, be knows the most contingent events: the actions of free agents, and all events concerned in them, were always known with certainty to him
He is God, He can bring to pass whatever He wills, and He also knows and understands the heart, desires, and intentions of man. For example, God knew and chose Judas, not because He had an eternal view into what Judas would do, but because He fully knew a man who would choose to betray.so that, though they be contingent in their own nature, or ever so uncertain as to us, yet, in reality, nothing is to him contingent or uncertain. We cannot doubt this, when we consider the numerous prophecies, relating to things of this kind, that have received a most exact and circumstantial accomplishment, many ages after the prophecies were announced.
If the temporal events are a fulfillment of His eternal purpose, then would you say that those temporal events were eternally fully known? If so, then how can anything ever be conceived as a purpose?
Yes, I knowYou know that I am not in the camp that believes God knows the entire future, correct?
Calvinism suggests that God has eternally in His mind the knowledge of all things, thus making all things part of who God is. If taking into account our sins is part of the eternal knowledge of God, then at no present reality in His mind is He not taking sins into account. If not taking into account our sins is part of the eternal knowledge of God then at no present reality in His mind is He taking our sins into account. He cannot be both. This is the problem with removing the sequence of events from the mind of God. God moves, creates, considers, acts etc. He is a living God, not the god of the reformers who have limited Him by claiming that He knows all things eternally.I'm not exactly sure I understand the question.
I know all about those two opposing views, but that is not what I'm discussing. It's not so much a question of what God knows, but when He knows it. Your view still has God eternally knowing every detestable act. It has evil being in the mind of God eternally, never not being part of Him.Ghost,
You are thinking of God's knowledge of "future" events as if God is standing at one place in time as we do. If a man tells me today exactly what I will do tomorrow, then my freedom would be limited. That's not what we mean when we say that God knows the future.
If a man tells me that I am eating an apple because he is currently watching me eat an apple, then my freedom is not limited. He knows I am eating an apple because I have freely chosen to eat it. That is precisely the vital distinction that must be seen in the Settled View: God knows our future free choices because He sees us freely choose them. It isn't that we act a certain way because God forces us to act that way by His foreknowledge, but rather that He knows because we act.
-zip :e4e:
Yes, I know
Calvinism suggests that God has eternally in His mind the knowledge of all things, thus making all things part of who God is.
If taking into account our sins is part of the eternal knowledge of God, then at no present reality in His mind is He not taking sins into account.
This is the problem with removing the sequence of events from the mind of God.
God moves, creates, considers, acts etc. He is a living God, not the god of the reformers who have limited Him by claiming that He knows all things eternally.
I know all about those two opposing views, but that is not what I'm discussing. It's not so much a question of what God knows, but when He knows it.
Your view still has God eternally knowing every detestable act. It has evil being in the mind of God eternally, never not being part of Him.
Isn't it limiting God's ability to think a new thought if He knows everything eternally?
GhostThe only group denying God's knowledge of past, present, and future are open theists, who deny God can know the future.
Correct. Yet, you and the "reformers" claim that the evil men do is eternally in the mind of God. God never not having known every evil thought or act of man. God has seen the evil man has done/doing, but nowhere does the bible teach that God knows every evil eternally in eternity.The only reason God sees evil is because we do evil.
Not sure there is a difference.This is Pantheism, not Calvinism.
It does make our sins part of God, if He has never not been apart from them.But knowing of our sins does not make God a part our sins.
No, God has made us in His image. You have it backwards.If you are going to insist that God thinks and works sequentially, then you have lowered Him from heaven and made Him like man.
Well then end the discussion and state that God does not know all things eternally or in eternity and we can agree.God knowing all things "eternally" proves to be more your term than mine.
:thumb:God knows all things about His creation because He is Creator.
God is eternal.Can you even define "eternal?"
Yet you have attributed to God, whom you claim is beyond your human mind, the false belief that He knows all evil eternally in eternity.I doubt so, for such an existence is beyond our human experience and finite minds.
I agree. Where is your proof that God knows all evil thoughts and deeds eternally in eternity.As we discuss and attempt to learn about our Lord, it is best to stick with His revelation of Himself (Holy Scriptures),
Correct. Yet, you and the "reformers" claim that the evil men do is eternally in the mind of God. God never not having known every evil thought or act of man. God has seen the evil man has done/doing, but nowhere does the bible teach that God knows every evil eternally in eternity.
Where is your proof that God knows all evil thoughts and deeds eternally in eternity.
Agreed. Thank you.It isn't a Biblical contention, it is a philosophical one.
But you just said... oh never mind. :doh:I see the Bible's witness that God knows all things as including the future; apparently you don't.
It does limit God, it takes away any ability to no longer know evil thoughts and acts done by man, and it takes away His ability to think a new thought.Point being, the Settled View is not illogical, it does not limit God, and it does not limit our freedom.
I'm not saying, nor have I suggested, that God did not know that man would need a Savior having concluded to "Let us make man in our image".If there was no divine knowledge of sin, there would have been no necessity to provide redemption through Jesus Christ.