An athropomorphism is evident from context and other verses.
Agreed, now I conclude that the verse is from our perspective, based on the context (Alpha and Omega) and other verses (lack of "is to come" later on).
Eternal now simultaneity/timelessness is not explicitly found in Scripture.
Nor is "God is three persons."
It was uncritically adopted by Augustine and others because of their desire to mesh pagan philosophy with Scripture.
That doesn't mean it's wrong, and how do you know Augustine put no thought into whether this was Scriptural?
A word study of Hebrew 'eternal', 'everlasting', etc. does not support timelessness but does support duration or endless time.
Everlasting strength, everlasting rock (Isa. 26:4) indicates an intensive quality of presentness, more than just duration of time, as does everlasting righteousness (Dan. 9:24). Also, "from everlasting to everlasting you are God" (Ps. 90) speaks in present tense of all God's rule from start to finish.
Scientifically, Einstein's relativity does not apply to spiritual beings...
But time is a physics quantity, and relates to matter. Unless you have some different definition of time--in which case we need to hear it.
Physics time has an inertial frame of reference.
We should base our understanding on revelation and Scripture. It clearly presents God as experiencing an endless duration of time or sequence with no beginning and end. Your pet phrases of 'I am' or Alpha/Omega are fully consistent with this.
"Before Abraham was, I am" is not so indicative of God in time, nor is "a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years like a day."
You are simply reading your concept of timelessness back into the text.
But you are simply reading your concept of time back into the text.
It is clear that there is a before and after for God. He uses tensed expressions about His existence because that is true reality.
Just as it is clear he has a real arm?
To say that this really is simultaneous for God and that we are in a Matrix and perceive differently is beyond stupid.
Again, simultaneous is a concept of time, and to repeat this is to miss a basic point. But let's refrain from insults please.
And God speaks of events that were yet in the future as if they were done in the past, really done then:
2 Tim. 1:9 who has saved us and called us to a holy life—not because of anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace. This grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time.
And once you have foreknowledge, and omniscience, you have "eternal now," events are ever-present if all past and present history is completely known. So I don't think the philosophers are even required here to make the case in this area.
Blessings,
Lee
P.S. Why do you skip strong points, Godrulz? Let's be Elijahs of God, and not flinch at the prospect of a radical test to our position.