I already explained that?
Do you actually read my posts or is this well and truly just a blatant waste of my time?
Time is an idea, not an ontological thing that can be controled. God is quite fully capable of controlling any natural process or any other thing that is used as a clock but controlling clocks is not at all the same thing as controlling time.
Yeah, sure! How's the entire bible for you?
Where is the evidence that God can go back in time and change things? It's not there! God has never shown His power by intervening to change the past, not a single time. Instead, He must allow His Son to suffer in order to fix problems created in the past.
How about all the times when God prophesied something would happen and then it didn't happened?
I could go on for quite a while but to save time....
When Reading in the Greek, We See that God:
- is timeless
- in an eternal now
- without sequence or succession
- without moment or duration
- atemporal and outside of time
- not was, nor will be, but only is
- has no past
- has no future.
Of course NOT ONE of these phrases is in the Bible. They're from Plato. And the Platonists. For
the Reformation broke with Rome, but not with Greece. (See this in
Post 5B of Bob's debate with D. James Kennedy's Professor of New Testament.) So these philosophical terms are uncritically repeated by the Christian authors of typical systematic theology textbooks, and therefore, taught to young ministers in seminary.
In the section heading just above, the word Greek does not refer, as many would assume, to the text of the New Testament that was originally written in Greek. Rather, it was used to refer to pagan Greek philosophy, which insisted that God exists outside of time. In contrast, the Hebrew and Greek terms in the Bible about God and time are TOTALLY different and refer not to timelessness but to unending duration. The phrases in the Scriptures all speak of God existing through unending time and an everlasting duration. The above timelessness terms are foreign to the reader of God's Word, whereas the Bible's many terms, as listed below, are all so very familiar from our reading of Scripture.
When Reading the Bible, We See that God:
is - and was - and is to come - whose goings forth are from of old, from everlasting - before all things - forever and ever - the Ancient of Days - from before the ages of the ages - from ancient times - the everlasting God - He continues forever - from of old - remains forever - eternal - immortal - the Lord shall endure forever - Who lives forever - yesterday, today, and forever - God's years are without number - rock of ages/everlasting strength - manifest in His own time - waiting until - everlasting Father - alive forevermore - always lives - forever - continually - the eternal God - God’s years never end - from everlasting to everlasting - from that time forward, even forever - and of His kingdom there will be no end. (references
here) - Excerpted from
HERE
And here's more evidence that you will not read....
Do you understand what it means to "beg the question"?
Whether or not "God is eternal (i.e. "timeless) is what is being debated. If you use the question that is being debated as a premise for an argument then you have "begged the question". It is a fallacy for a great reason which I would certainly hope you have the brains to see intuitively.
If that were so, you would not be here defending Pagan Greek ideas about God because that is precisely where all this horse hockey comes from.
Is repeating yourself all you've got at this point? Have a really exhausted your entire arsenal of arguments in defense of your doctrine to the point that all you can do is repeat the same mindless, intentionally out of context irrelevancies over and over again?
Clete