sentientsynth
New member
Ummm.... wasn't that what Evo's entire post just explained?ON what basis do you claim that OVT says that God has had an infinite series of thoughts?
Ummm.... wasn't that what Evo's entire post just explained?ON what basis do you claim that OVT says that God has had an infinite series of thoughts?
Ummm.... wasn't that what Evo's entire post just explained?
God wants all to repent, love one another, minister to the sick, etc. They do not. I don't think that God really, really does not want this, only that He wants something more--that His Holy will be glorified.
Yes, God is love, but He also possesses other perfections and we must be cautious in trying to elevate one above the other.
To show how illogical your position is.Other than sophistry, what is your point?
Nope.Do you believe that some will spend eternity in Hell?
Nope.Are you an annihilationist?
Haven't heard that one yet. Did you just make that up?Aha! You are a universal restorationalist.
Whatever.We are done now.
Evo,
You went through a lot of trouble to make an argument that I've addressed many times before. The problem of infinite regress is probably the most significant rational hurdle the Open View has to deal with.
I've dealt with this issue before and don't mind doing so again but for brevity's sake (mainly because of time constraints at the moment) I wonder if I could get you to simply answer a couple of questions for me as directly as you possibly can - please.
Do you believe that the argument you presented actually does falsify open theism on rational grounds?
Have you ever heard of Zeno's paradoxes?
If not, and you don't want to bother reading that whole article to figure them out, the paradoxes deal with infinite series. Aristotle stated it briefly like this...
"That which is in locomotion must arrive at the half-way stage before it arrives at the goal."
The point being, of course that now the half way point has become your goal and thus you must arrive the new half-way stage (1/4 of the original goal) and on ad infinitum. Thus one must accomplish an infinite number of acts in a finite period of time which cannot be done.
In short, we move through an infinite series of points in time all the time! You just accomplished an impossibility by having read this sentence (according to Zeno)! Now, with the invention of Calculus most mathematicians agree that Zeno's paradoxes have been put to bed but don't be so sure. There are still quite a number of prominent philosophers who disagree and with good reason. Either way, however, I submit that the problem of infinite regress, while a significant philosophical issue, does not prove that God could not have arrived at the present any more than Zeno proved you couldn't have reached the end of this post. It's a paradox, nothing more. And what's more its the only one that I have yet discovered within the Open View paradigm, while the Settled View, in whatever form, is chocker block full of not only paradoxes but outright blatant contradictions which are simply ignored and called antinomies to make everyone feel pious about their intellectual dishonesty.
Resting in Him,
Clete
I think we've covered this before, but "Thousand years as a day" passages point to transcendence. I also pointed out that it takes almost 6 minutes to get a message just to Mars and another 6 to get a response from the rover. God hears our prayers instantly so already transcends our time limitations. That God transcends our time frame is already obvious. Omnipresence already transcends the contraints of time as we know it. I concede logic problems but not the truth of His trancendence of time. Trancendence here being by definition outside of time.
It may very well be as you have observed.
In my experience, a person makes a change in their faith is usually going to make radical changes. Yes, I know of some that made the changes gradually, say from Catholic, to Episcopal, to Baptist or Lutheran, then to Presbyterian (or the reverse). But most I have encountered made big jumps.
I just think that a Calvinist, who had obviously embraced a very tight view of God's sovereignty would cast a very wide net when leaving and land in open theism instead of just "half way" into true Arminianism. Conversely, an open theist that had embraced such a wide view of sovereignty would, when leaving, run head long into the welcoming, and very tight, arms of Calvinism.
I once took a transpersonal psychology course, wherein the personalities of persons who believe in some form of deity is studied. There was quite a bit of discussion about what types of personalities gravitate towards certain denominations. No one was convinced that the correlations were actual causations, but there was an element of truth in some of the discussions. For example, the reason most of the well-known biblical scholars from history were Reformed, and the same is true in most seminaries today, might just be partially because the academic types appreciate the tight coherence and consequent complexities of the Reformed doctrines. It is intriguing, something that I can spend my retirement pondering some day.
Ummm.... wasn't that what Evo's entire post just explained?
Quite right. And IIRC, even the philosophers of Zeno's time saw this. Calculus methods (analysis of converging series) have proven (mathematical definition of proven) that it's no paradox at all. If one were to take the same amount of time to cross each subsequent "half", you've got a problem. But we don't. So it ain't.So basically Zeno's paradoxes are mathematical word games?
Lonster if you read my post carefully I never mentioned "us"."Time" is the keyword of understanding. We are constrained by our temporal existence in even the question for understanding.
Are you kidding me????All that has been created out of nothing, and manifested in time, always existed in the mind and heart of the Godhead.
"Because what may be known of God is manifest in them (creatures), for God has shown it to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead . . ." Romans 1:19&20
Are you kidding me????
Is this really where we are in this debate?
How can you trot out a completely unrelated verse such as Romans 1:19-20 and expect that we believe it somehow supports the point you are making??? Romans 1:19-20 has NOTHING, zip, zero, NADA to do with when or if God designed, created, imagined all that exists prior to His act of creation. Instead Romans 1:19-20 is about God explaining that we will all be without excuse because He has written the truth in our hearts and given us ample physical evidence to make the proper eternal choice... which of course flies directly in the face of Calvinism.
I realize you hope unsuspecting readers will be fooled by such sloppy obfuscation but you aren't going to fool anyone who is actually paying attention to what is being discussed.
:up:(Get used to it Knight. That's her MO.)
Muz
Kidding? She is DEAD serious. And as you know, that is why this debate is so important.
Have a nice day . . .
Nang
You need to take your own offered advice. You have not read carefully what I have written. I take a long time to write my posts because "language lawyers" like yourself will pick at a word or two and miss the entire message contained in my posts. Your comment below is ample evidence of this behavior. Slow down.Lonster if you read my post carefully I never mentioned "us".
Nang can speak for herself. As for my previous posts, I have never implied a "was"; instead I have explicitly implied a "now". Your ending comment should read "simply always is" or "is eternally present in God's mind".Both Nang and AMR assert that God never designed, never created (in His mind), never imagined. Our design, the design of creation and everything else simply always was.
:jazz:if you truly would desire to know God your Maker, you would throw yourselves into (humble) study of His Word, rather than (pridefully) inventing ways to bring God Almighty down to your level of thinking and understanding.
Nang
Again, Nang can comment. But I will interject that I think the relevance of the verse is seen from all the arguments for the existence of God. The verse states that in God's general revelation, His created universe, the question is clearly begged by anyone, whether they have heard the Gospel message or not, that the universe had to have been created. From this point, the theologians and philosophers, have started with the examination of exactly "how" did the universe come to be. Hence, the various cosmological, ontological, teleological, and moral arguments spring forward. Contained within these and other arguments, if they are to withstand scrutiny, are the requirements that God possesses certain attributes, else the arguments themselves would not stand. My point is that we cannot discuss the fact that the universe was created without also discussing the attributes of its Creator. I think the verse clearly is relevant in this context.Are you kidding me????
Is this really where we are in this debate?
How can you trot out a completely unrelated verse such as Romans 1:19-20 and expect that we believe it somehow supports the point you are making??? Romans 1:19-20 has NOTHING, zip, zero, NADA to do with when or if God designed, created, imagined all that exists prior to His act of creation.which of course flies directly in the face of Calvinism.
I realize you hope unsuspecting readers will be fooled by such sloppy obfuscation but you aren't going to fool anyone who is actually paying attention to what is being discussed.
Instead Romans 1:19-20 is about God explaining that we will all be without excuse because He has written the truth in our hearts and given us ample physical evidence to make the proper eternal choice
You need to take your own offered advice. You have not read carefully what I have written. I take a long time to write my posts because "language lawyers" like yourself will pick at a word or two and miss the entire message contained in my posts. Your comment below is ample evidence of this behavior. Slow down.
Nang can speak for herself. As for my previous posts, I have never implied a "was"; instead I have explicitly implied a "now". Your ending comment should read "simply always is" or "is eternally present in God's mind".
Moreover, I have carefully stated that God decrees, and He acts in the temporal continuum He has created. Sitting transcendentally above this continuum He sees it all "equally vividly", or if you prefer, "in the eternal now". If you are going to summarize what I have stated, then I humbly ask that you either quote my own words or you carefully interpret them in your own words. It is these same sort of knee-jerk generalizations that have contributed to the non-orthodox doctrines that the open theist clings to as a rationale for their beliefs.