I asked that you put it into your own words.Agape4Robin said:Mostly this........"You guys have built up this whole elaborate theism over a confusion of terms. "
What terms are being confused and how?
I asked that you put it into your own words.Agape4Robin said:Mostly this........"You guys have built up this whole elaborate theism over a confusion of terms. "
Knight said:We can measure time, which can be effected by physics but the concept of time (sequential reality) does not exist in a jar or in a beaker since it isn't a "thing" but instead a description of reality.
You seem to have a good handle on this thing. However, wouldn't time travel according to Einstein be limited to something more like this:eccl3_6 said:Time does exist in a jar.....its a product of the jar and of its effects. I understand what you are trying to say but you cannot seperate the two. Time is not a description of reality it is reality. To use your analogy of time in a jar. You can have 'rich time' in a jar. Time which under neutral observation travels faster than time in another jar. Time is just as real as matter and energy, as real as a jar, as a rock, as air or as water that you might put in a jar....
Consider 2 identical sisters.
Both will die as soon as they are exactly 70 years of age.
One flies off in a rocket at near light speed when she comes back on her 69th birthday she finds that her twin sister has had her 70th birthday and has been buried for a good few years. She has experienced time dilation. Both born together and live for 70 years but both die at different times. Consider that an Angel wants to visit both of them when they are 65, the angel needs to be in two different places at the same time but whenether he is at with the sisters it is never the same 'relative' time for the other sister. Confusing stuff but if time dilation didnt work as we understood it we wouldnt have satellite communication which has to account for time dilation in order to work.
If you're going to use time as a description, it has to be relative to something as it different when in 'different jars'.
Yorzhik said:You seem to have a good handle on this thing. However, wouldn't time travel according to Einstein be limited to something more like this:
"Twin sisters are having their 70th birthday. One goes in a rocket and travels near the speed of light (relative to the other sister). When she returns, it cannot be before her 70th birthday, but on her 71st birthday, however, her sister is having her 72nd birthday." If an angel wants to visit them both when they reach 70.5 years old, it will have to visit the earthbound one first, and then the rocket bound one when she reaches that point later?
The Clete and ISOTK said:I want everybody to know that Clete and I have made up! :kiss: SOTK
eccl3_6 said:It wasnt time travel but time dilation. I was assuming that the sister in the rocket left before her 70th birthday..she can return whenever she likes. The sooner she does the less difference in 'time skip' she'd notice. If the angel wants to meet them both at exactly the same age he must divide himself into two as each sister now has a different time reference. If he does the 70.5 journey you suggest he would be able to see the two sisters at the same point in their own lives (70.5) but it would be ay different times to the angel. Hence time is relative and not linear when observed from various points which is why the argument put forward of sequential events doesnt carry.
The angel could watch the earthbound sister celebrate her 69th birthday, watch her die a year later, bury her and then celebrate the 'space rocket' sister's 68th birthday with her. Which event happens first is relative to who you are; the earth sister, the angel or the space rocket sister.
SOTK said:I want everybody to know that Clete and I have made up! :kiss:
Seriously though, I want everybody to know that I was out of line in what I posted to Clete. I am sorry if anybody else took offense to it as well. I think Clete and I found out that we have more in common than what we initially thought. I look forward to discussing this topic with him in the future. He's a great guy!
In Christ,
SOTK
Look, I understand that this is what you believe and that's fine but what do expect me to do, take your word for it? Can you at least try to establish this idea Biblically please?nancy said:Clete, even your own definition spells it out. Predestination is God's foreknowledge, not his will. I have already said that when God through his foreknowledge sees us reach the pearly gates he will give us those graces needed for entrance to heaven.
I didn't say they were totally interchangeable. In fact, I even explained what the difference in the terms is. But even though they aren't perfect synonyms they are generally interchangeable. The one (predeterminism) defines a category that the other (predestination) is in. Thus they can indeed be used interchangeably in most circumstances. The only time you couldn't is when you are intentionally trying to make a specific distinction.Obviously by your own definition, they are not interchangeable and hence the reason for different terms in the first place.
This is a gross overstatement even if your definitions of these terms are correct. Chances are if your definitions are correct, you've been an Open Theist for years and don't even know it. Let's just take a step at a time and see where this line of thinking goes, shall we?You guys have built up this whole elaborate theism over a confusion of terms.
:up:SOTK said:I want everybody to know that Clete and I have made up! :kiss:
Seriously though, I want everybody to know that I was out of line in what I posted to Clete. I am sorry if anybody else took offense to it as well. I think Clete and I found out that we have more in common than what we initially thought. I look forward to discussing this topic with him in the future. He's a great guy!
In Christ,
SOTK
nancy said:Clete, I already did. I told you specifically what the word meant in Greek.
If by open theist, you mean that we are totally in charge of our free will decisions, the I say abosultely yes. I don't see why you have to try to bring down God to a human level for humans to have free will.
nancy said:But the elect is a select group of individuals. In order for God to determine what he wants to do with that group, he would have to determine the individuals of that group's free will in order for the group to be determined the way God wants it to be.
Your argument is therefore flawed and takes away free will.
SOTK said:I want everybody to know that Clete and I have made up! :kiss:
Seriously though, I want everybody to know that I was out of line in what I posted to Clete. I am sorry if anybody else took offense to it as well. I think Clete and I found out that we have more in common than what we initially thought. I look forward to discussing this topic with him in the future. He's a great guy!
In Christ,
SOTK
Awwww... I want a hug!Clete said:SOTK's right of course, we do have more in common than we don't. It is very easy to lose sight of that fact on a website like this where people tend to focus on only a very few issues. When it boils right down to it though, we are all blood bought Sons Of The King.
Resting in Him,
Clete
(I know, I know it actually stands for Servant Of The King, but I still like "Sons" better! )
eccl3_6 said:If you define God (whatever you understand Him to represent) as all knowing, all powerful, and all present regardless of your religion then surely you have to say that He is aware of the future and is entirely in control. In an argument of predestined or predetermined or whatever there is no argumenet to such a defined God, the answer is both or 'all of the above.'
nancy said:You guys, the elect is a SELECT GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS. Your analogies of using planes etc. Doesn't work.
This is what Scripture says, that Christ will send the Holy Spirit to work through us to fulfill his plans. By your argument, the Holy Spirit would have to control our free will choices to fulfill God's plans.
The only way your Blue angels argument would work is if the select group of blue angels indiviudals remain within that group untli they obtain glory.