eccl3_6 said:
Give one example of absolute time then....one
I am not conversant with the technical aspects of 'time' discussions.
Let's start with God before the creation of the material universe. To be personal (will/actions, intellect/thoughts, emotions/feelings), God must experience succession/sequence/duration. If time is not a created thing (we are talking about the eternal, uncreated God), then it is simply an aspect of His being (cf. God is love, truth, light, uncreated, infinite, omni., faithful, holy, etc.). God experiences absolute time. There is no issues of relativity within the triune God's relations from everlasting to everlasting. Trillions of years ago, it simply was not a possible object of knowledge to know that I would be typing these exact letters in a contingent response to your creative, new-entity posts.
I cannot do justice to your relativity arguments. I know my limitations at this point. I trust Craig's article and books by Lucas, "The Arrow of Time", etc. would eventually frame your perspective in a more balanced way. I suspect the answer to your assumptions is out there. Some great thinker would be able to show the strengths and weaknesses of your argument.
If I could end again on a metaphysical note (I cannot deal with your line of thinking because it is over my head...could you have the courtesy to refute Lucas in "A Treatise on Time and Space" and Wolterstorff in "God and Time: 4 views IVP"...good luck...you will need more than science to do it)?
e.g. Lucas
"Time is more fundamental than space. Indeed, time is the most pervasive of all the categories. Some theologians say that God is outside time, but it cannot be true of any personal God that He is timeless, for a personal God is conscious, and time is a concomitant of consciousness. Time is not only the concomitant of consciousness, but the process of actualization and the dimension of change...time is connected with persons, both as sentient beings and as agents; it is connected with modality, and the passage from the open future to the unalterable past; it is connected with change, and therefore with the things that change and the space in which they change...we are rational agents who make plans for the future and choose between alternatives presented to us...without time no agent could act, for to act is to bring something that we want to come to pass, and time is the passage from possibility to actuality, from aspiration to achievement....without time their could be no activity."
God experiences an endless duration of time. He is not timeless or He would not be personal, nor could He have created our temporal world to interact with. We are in the image of God and experience time even as He did in the Godhead. Relativity may affect our perception of time on moving trains, but it does not change the fundamental nature of an open, unsettled future known and experienced as such.
e.g. Wolterstorff (unqualified divine temporality)
Is God timeless? no...talks about change in a personal being, including God...change in action, thoughts, feelings= change in knowledge (vs 'eternal now").
God has a His Story...take His representations in Scripture as literally true vs figurative.
"Ps. 90:14 What it says on the face of it is not that God is timeless but that God existed BEFORE creation, indeed from everlasting to everlasting. How could God exist before creation and yet be timeless?
...Evidently to God's experience there is a felt temporality (1000 years like a day is not timeless, but perception of time 2 Peter 3:8)...
Jn. 8:58 Jesus not affirming that God is outside of time, but the fact He existed before Abraham means "I am" is not timeless.
Is God ontologically immutable? no...another wrong assumption.
On the nature of time. God does have a history and is accordingly not timeless, but everlasting. A vs B series (overlap)...all events are ordered in terms of some happening now, some having happened in the more or less distant past, and some going to happen in the more or less distant future...preceding or simultaneous...
Present...the past would then be whatever precedes that, and the future whatever succeeds it. ..tenseless theory of time? vs tensed theory of time!
What's fundamental in time is the occurrence of events...when an event occurs, that's when it is present (to God and others...relativity notwithstanding...rulz)...very technical arguments after this...
Outside of time? Events are obviously within time. If something/someone has a history, they are in time (experience it). God has a history. Aquinas...Deism...God has a history, so He has tensed knowledge...change in God's knowledge...God intervenes/acts...thinks...feels...in time.
Time but no space? Deals with spatial/omnipresent issues...
Does God change? Yes, in some ways, but not in other ways...
"What one says about God's relation to time involves a very great deal of the rest of one's theology."
(this is why science arguments alone cannot resolve the biblical issue)