It isn't that she 'needs' omniscience to know something.
She does according to your view of what knowledge is!
You are just talking about assumptions, educated extrapolation etc.
The same kind of knowledge that God has about things yet future.
The only difference is that He has access to FAR more information than any human ever could in order to make such predictions, extrapolations, etc.
I'm not saying God 'needs' omniscience to know Abraham's heart. I'm rather saying it is 'why' He knows (incidental to omniscience).
That's called "begging the question."
It's a fallacy for a reason.
There is no need for God to be omniscient for Him to be able to know Abraham's heart, because other things can account for the knowledge God would have about Abraham.
If He knows the # of hairs on my head, right after a shower (or before), for me, 'omnipresent' and something linked near enough to omniscience holds water.
Omniscience removes God's ability to count.
I blame "immutability" and "timelessness" for this.
WRONG!
I was mocking you because of how ridiculous your position is, Lon!
And you completely missed it, because you're too focused!
STEP BACK.
GET THE BIG PICTURE!
Read what I said again!
I was not agreeing with you!
I was showing how irrational your position was, because it DOES NOT FOLLOW!
There is LITERALLY ZERO reason to think that the knowledge your wife has of you going to work tomorrow is any different than the knowledge God has of the future. NONE!
ONLY ACCORDING TO
YOUR VIEW MUST IT BE DIFFERENT!
As we've said, the knife never plunged.
The knife was never raised to begin with!
As you've said, Abraham was wrestling. It was at this point God did know, but how did He know? Was it 'now?' I'm not sure that is accurate. If Abraham just went all in, God knew the conflict was over, that He was going to love God and do what He was called to do. That, however, isn't God's 'now' but Abraham's.
No, that doesn't work, for two reasons:
One is that it begs the question that God's "now" is different than our "now," when there is no reason to believe it is.
Two:
I read it.
That's nice, but completely irrelevant. A casual Bible reading is enough to glean the meaning from the Bible.
You don't need to be a studied professor of Hebrew or Greek to know what the Bible says at face value.
It's easy enough for a child to understand.
I'm not sure what you were trying to prove here.
None of this goes against anything I said.
The point was that God, prior to Abraham reaching out and grabbing the knife, did not know whether Abraham would not withhold his only son, and that, "henceforth," "this time forth," "whereas" Abraham had not, and "now" he did pick it up, NOW God knows.
Thanks for proving my position and falsifying yours.
The very definitions which you provided do not comport with the idea that God knew "now" earlier (which is a contradiction, by the way, and contradictions mean that something is false).
---
I was watching a video of a sick infant. In the head of the child every time the child learned something, synaptic nerves connected. It was fascinating. In Abraham's brain, most connectors were in place. There was one that had to be connected for Abraham to sacrifice his son. At the moment of connection, God was aware of it, the need for the obedience. It could be that 'now' was the moment of connection, but that Hebrew can mean 'Upon this I know.'
But that's not what "ki attah yadati" means.
It has a 'now' sense to it, but God directs our paths and interacts in a way that connections are both made and unmade in our brains when He relates to us and molds us into His image.
Again, you're overthinking this!
What does scripture say?
Then they came to the place of which God had told him. And Abraham built an altar there and placed the wood in order; and he bound Isaac his son and laid him on the altar, upon the wood. And Abraham stretched out his hand and took the knife to slay his son. But the Angel of the Lord called to him from heaven and said, “Abraham, Abraham!”So he said, “Here I am.” And He said, “Do not lay your hand on the lad, or do anything to him; for now I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me.”
Then they came to the place of which God had told him. And Abraham built an altar there and placed the wood in order; and he bound Isaac his son and laid him on the altar, upon the wood. And Abraham stretched out his hand and took the knife to slay his son. But the Angel of the Lord called to...
www.biblegateway.com
Does the passage give any indication, at face value, for what you're trying to say?
NO!
It simply says:
1) Abraham and Isaac arrived at the place of which God had told him.
2) Abraham built an altar, bound his son, and put him on it.
3) Abraham reached out his hand and took the knife to slay his son.
4) God stopped him, and said "Do not lay your hand on the lad, or do anything to him; for now I know that you fear God, since you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me."
Obviously Abraham feared God prior.
There is no "prior" for God, according to your view!
In fact, God cannot know what time it currently is, if your position is true!
Which means that for God to say "now I know" makes even less sense!
But "NOOOOOOOOO Let's just stick with my beliefs and assume that "Now I know" doesn't mean exactly what it says, and that somehow God is omniscient!"
That's you right now!
This was one more item in a series of faithfulness on Abraham's part. "Would you even sacrifice your son?"
There cannot be a series if God is outside of time.
That's YOUR view, not mine.
Because I believe God knows what we will do, before we do it,
I reject your opinion, because Scripture does not teach this.
It teaches that God predicts people's actions, and then later they change, and falsify whatever prophecy God had given!
Don't believe me? JUST READ THE BOOK OF JONAH!
'now' would be rather a comment on Abraham's commitment and neurology such that it isn't God 'knowing now' but that the point of going back was 'now gone.'
No.
Abraham likely had not decided whether to follow through, until he reached out and took.
Yes, there was no going back once he took the knife.
But that's MY position, not yours.
Your position is that Abraham was going to take it, that God infallibly knew that Abraham would take the knife, from eternity past. No?
If so, then Abraham's choice was settled, predetermined, known beforehand.
I'm simply saying God did not know, because Abraham himself did not know, because God cannot know infallibly that which has not happened yet, because the future does not exist, and God cannot know what does not exist.
But once Abraham committed, and took the knife, that's when God knew, because that's when Abraham knew, thus "NOW I know that you fear God."
I realize, for the Open Theist,
these answers aren't direct for them (a good list of omniscient grounded scriptures in there). Perhaps the best that can happen is a realization of the other's whole thinking behind why they read scriptures a certain way.
None of those "answers" requires omniscience (knowing literally everything). I.E., the classical, pagan doctrine of omniscience.
And the fact that they don't understand that Psalm 139 is not about our entire lives, but rather about fetology, tells me that they're just prooftexting, and have no idea what the context of those verses is saying.
With this you literally just said that "now I know" does not mean exactly what it says.
You're literally calling God, the author of Scripture, a deceiver.
Shame on you!
Quit with your heresy!
"Now we both know something" might make better sense etc.
That's simply not what it says!
"Now" isn't the only English word that Attah is translated into. "Wherefore, henceforth, etc."
I addressed this in post #1067.
A few other items: "Angel of the Lord." If God had given this job as His own representation, then the angel wouldn't have had omniscience.
1) Lon: "A few other items"
Also Lon: *proceeds to only give one item*
2) The Angel of the Lord is generally understood to be a theophany of Christ, preincarnate, and certainly is in this passage! "... You fear God... since you have not withheld your son ... from
Me."
:mock:
For me, the easiest fix is simply to relook at the translation.
See post #1063.
Even for Open Theism on point?
No. Open Theism allows the passage to say exactly what it says, no interpretation needed!
At the point Abraham took the knife, God can say "now I know" because at that point, He knows, whereas before He did not know!
In essence, would we be on the same page?
No, because on your view, God knew "before," rather than "now."
If Abraham wasn't sure, the God could not be sure, because Abraham had not yet made the decision.
God cannot know what decision someone makes until they make it!
It depends on how much you are on page with the 'now' question. I think a connected synapse can answer the Open question, that at that specific point God [or the Angel of God representing Him],
Supra.
saw the connection and intent. Barring that, 'now' couldn't even have been quite known. Even an Open Theist would.
You're getting too hung up on the "now."
Again, if God knew "before" Abraham made the decision, then "now I know" makes no sense.
If God did not know "before" Abraham made the decision, then "now I know" makes perfect sense.
Might have to go a bit of distance on it. For instance, an Arminian will assert that God knows all possible outcomes (possible nerve connections) ahead of time. For me, Arminian thought has to qualify omniscience and are not quite on page with others who believe God is completely omniscient, for example.
I can't speak for Arminians, though they are closer to Open Theists than they are to pagans, at least.
I'm not sure I went so far as to say God cannot know something even if we never do it.
God cannot know something that never happens.
He can predict outcomes, and those outcomes might not come to pass, if circumstances change.
It seems to me that God does know what 'didn't happen' but such presents problems for thinking what God can and cannot know, especially when we are qualifying or trying to qualify 'what' that entails.
If God cannot know even one thing, then He is, by definition, not omniscient.
Whatever that's supposed to mean here...
God never asked this of anybody else other than Himself before or since. That alone makes it a difficult passage as we try to make sense of it.
It's not a difficult passage at all, Lon!
Take off the "omniscient lenses" for a moment and just read the passage plainly!
Presentism also carries the idea that Revelation 'is happening' now.
No it doesn't. Where did you get THAT wacky idea from? If only the present exists, and Revelation is yet future, then of course Revelation isn't happening now!
It also doesn't hold that anything God says about the future is 'true' per say.
So what?
What God says is true at the moment He says it.
It may not be true later, but that's not because God was wrong, it's because circumstances changed.
This is presentism:
en.wikipedia.org
I'm not aware of anything about presentism that would indicate that what God says about the future isn't true, at the moment he says it.
What about it? Prophecy is God's prediction of the future. It's not saying "this will happen." It's saying "this will happen if things continue as they are."
God's prophecies fail, and in fact, God wants certain prophecies to fail, because God cares more about His creation than He does about His prophecies coming true!
I've heard this, but don't agree.
It's not a matter of opinion, Lon! Scripture says it!
See the
https://opentheism.org/verses page.
Not sure it needs another long discussion. I'm pretty sure you are aware with the contention. A quick 'presentism' search brings up all the issues fairly quickly.
But you won't post the issues here?
Just "it has issues"?
Yes, which still brings up problems with 'now' in light of such.
There is no problem with "now" except in your own position.
Drop your position, and the problem(s) go away.
This is Pantheism.
Not Panentheism.
Pantheism.
God is not the only thing that exists.
And it has nothing to do with what I said!
I said THE FUTURE DOES NOT EXIST.
I said God cannot know what does not exist!
THUS
GOD CANNOT KNOW THE FUTURE!
"Without Him nothing exists that exists?"
That's not what John 1:3 says.
It says "without Him nothing was made that WAS MADE.
The future does not exist.
It was not made.
It would be whatever He says, no?
That would violate the law of non-contradiction.
God is not irrational.
Don't be irrational, Lon.
Things come into existence by His word.
None of those things exist ontologically, because they are all contradictions in terms.
God cannot force a contradiction in terms to exist ontologically. That would be irrational.
God is rational.
That's where the question comes in. Why can't God know whether Abraham will obey or not?
Because Abraham himself doesn't know.
He hasn't made the decision yet.
I'm not sure why this is so hard for you to understand, Lon.
What 'keeps' it from happening?
Abraham keeps God from knowing his choice simply by not deciding.
You ask as if there is some other answer.... I can assure you, there is not!
Does God purposefully limit Himself so He cannot know?
More question begging.
It's not a matter of God limiting Himself.
It's a matter of the future not existing, and thus God not having future knowledge.
My question is simply 'why not?' Because I would have no freewill? What really 'keeps' God from knowing anything? If He is infinite, and His thoughts are infinite, isn't 'infinite' already involved in every thing we'd ask?
God cannot know what does not exist.
If the knowledge does not exist, then He cannot know it.
It's literally as simple as that!
Plunging a knife comes a few steps after "reaching out and picking up the knife."
No, was just saying I believe God knew everything with me as well.
From eternity past?
Yes, but it is whole knowledge.
Only if God chooses to find out.
God is not required to know every single detail down to the subatomic level about your current situation.
I read John interacting with individuals 'in the future' in Revelation, remember?
I'm no expert on Revelation.
All I know is that Revelation was just that, a revelation to John.
It doesn't mean that everything in Revelation will come to pass (Matthew 24:22).
I'd have to 'be' Open Theist to even say 'okay' here.
Which just shows how stubborn you're being.
There are all kinds of priori.
So question them. Don't assume.
I'm going to stop here and come back to tackle your link indepth.
Don't forget the rest of my post. And make sure you include post #1067 as well.