godrulz said:"Back to the Future" is science fiction, not Scripture.
It isn't?? well I better stop taking my "Back to the Future" script to church......
godrulz said:"Back to the Future" is science fiction, not Scripture.
Maybe you forgot to put the crystals in your time machine?kmoney said:What!?! Time travel is absurd? You MUST be joking. And I've wasted all those hours on that stupid time machine....
Party pooper!godrulz said:"Back to the Future" is science fiction, not Scripture.
A meteor is not a freewill agent.intro2faith said:Let's say there is a meteor that is headed directly for Earth. We know that it is going to hit Earth. It hasn't hit yet, but we know it will. Does the fact that we know it's going to hit MAKE it hit?
That is a hypothetical situation, but in essence, it is the same thing with God. Just because He knows that something is going to happen, does not mean that He MAKES it happen, and we have no free will because of it.
Sorry, but I will not take anyone seriously who is willing to rape scripture the way you just did simply to make a point. :vomit:Quasar1011 said:Revelation 10:6 KJV
"And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time no longer:"
Knight said:A meteor is not a freewill agent.
Therefore your analogy is fatally flawed.
I quoted the King James there. The Bible version I like to study from, is the NIV. And the NIV pretty much says what you just said.Knight said:Sorry, but I will not take anyone seriously who is willing to rape scripture the way you just did simply to make a point. :vomit:
The verse you referenced does not say time will stop! Yet that God is not going to wait any longer in other words God is saying "time is up!"
Quasar1011 said:Revelation 10:6 KJV
"And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time no longer:"
Certainly, in eternity future, there will be causes and effects. But this passage could mean that time will no longer function according to the physical laws of the universe, regulated by the sun, moon, and Earth's rotation. In fact, there will be no need for such measures, at least to those who are redeemed. Why? Because in the new heavens and earth, the thought will be the act!
deardelmar said:Why do you assume that God's time line does not, since creation, run concurrently with Earth's?
Freewill does not give us superhuman powers.intro2faith said:Ok, let us say a HUMAN is falling down to Earth Just because we know he will hit the Earth(yikes) does that mean we made it happen?
It makes no difference what version you use, the KJV is fine with me. That wasn't my point.Quasar1011 said:I quoted the King James there. The Bible version I like to study from, is the NIV. And the NIV pretty much says what you just said.
However, I didn't say what you said I said. Let me re-post it:
I didn't say "time will stop", in the sense that there will be no cause and effect, or nothing happening. I simply said that the reckoning of time will have to change. We know it will have to change, because of Revelation 21:23
"The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp."
Now, that doesn't say there will be no sun, nor moon, but that they are no longer needed for their original purposes. One of those purposes was light. But another was timekeeping.
Kindly refrain from using words like raping scripture, when you do not read my post closely enough, thank you.
Quasar1011 said:Lastly, time is one of the 4 dimensions of the physical universe. I say physical, because string theory asserts there are perhaps 12 total dimensions in our universe. These would be spiritual dimensions where angels and demons dwell; in other words, Heaven and Hell. The same timeline would connect all of them. But, since God is not constrained within our 3 spatial dimensions, nor any number of spatial dimensions, He would not be constrained within any dimensions of time. For in First Kings 8:27, we read,
"But will God really dwell on earth? The heavens, even the highest heaven, cannot contain you. How much less this temple I have built!"
intro2faith said:Let's say there is a meteor that is headed directly for Earth. We know that it is going to hit Earth. It hasn't hit yet, but we know it will. Does the fact that we know it's going to hit MAKE it hit?
That is a hypothetical situation, but in essence, it is the same thing with God. Just because He knows that something is going to happen, does not mean that He MAKES it happen, and we have no free will because of it.
intro2faith said:Ok, let us say a HUMAN is falling down to Earth Just because we know he will hit the Earth(yikes) does that mean we made it happen?
godrulz said:This is a predictable cause-effect situation that is knowable. It still does not preclude God from using His free will and zapping the meteor at the last minute resulting in a different future/outcome that was possible, but not certain. The analogy is not relevant to future free will moral contingencies. The fact that your view relies on weak analogies shows that it does not have as much strength as suspected. The alternate view relies on common sense and straightforward revelation in Scripture.
intro2faith said:So you're saying that God doesn't know my future any better than I do? Yikes, that's a scary thought!
Obviously knowing everything about the past and present tells you much about the futureintro2faith said:Let's say there is a meteor that is headed directly for Earth. We know that it is going to hit Earth. It hasn't hit yet, but we know it will. Does the fact that we know it's going to hit MAKE it hit?
That is a hypothetical situation, but in essence, it is the same thing with God. Just because He knows that something is going to happen, does not mean that He MAKES it happen, and we have no free will because of it.
intro2faith said:Let's say there is a meteor that is headed directly for Earth. We know that it is going to hit Earth. It hasn't hit yet, but we know it will. Does the fact that we know it's going to hit MAKE it hit?
That is a hypothetical situation, but in essence, it is the same thing with God. Just because He knows that something is going to happen, does not mean that He MAKES it happen, and we have no free will because of it.
Knight said:Maybe you forgot to put the crystals in your time machine?