Hi Lon,
Sorry for taking time to respond. Been busy
Your answer to there being synchronized time in heaven was "Yes, where they intersect," but I hope we can get a full "yes" answer.
I didn't have the "half hour" verse in mind. Instead I had the story in Daniel 10 in mind:
2 At that time I, Daniel, mourned for three weeks. 3 I ate no choice food; no meat or wine touched my lips; and I used no lotions at all until the three weeks were over.
4 On the twenty-fourth day of the first month, as I was standing on the bank of the great river, the Tigris, 5 I looked up and there before me was a man dressed in linen, with a belt of fine gold from Uphaz around his waist.
......
12 Then he continued, “Do not be afraid, Daniel. Since the first day that you set your mind to gain understanding and to humble yourself before your God, your words were heard, and I have come in response to them. 13 But the prince of the Persian kingdom resisted me twenty-one days. Then Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me, because I was detained there with the king of Persia.
From the story above, you can see the angel was sent to Daniel the moment he prayed, yet was held back for 21 days until the angel Michael came to help.
If time in heaven can come and go in and out of sync, why not just come to earth at a time before this Persian prince was making trouble? You see, even the angels can have great power by being in a world that has the advantage of being outside of earth's time.
The passage above shows linear events. He was sent, he was held back for 21 days, Michael came to help at the end of the 21 days, he was free, now he comes to speak.
So with this example, I hope it is more clear that heavenly events synch with earthly events. Another example would be the saints in Revelation who were killed, asking God "how long" He will take to avenge them. Why ask that if time isn't the same in heaven?
Yes, I agree, but it doesn't follow, other than in extrapolation here, that Saul was the plan. I Samuel 8:18 seems to point away from the idea.
It seems precarious to me, to build a doctrine upon a whim. That is, I understand why you read this as God not knowing, but it does damage to other passages like Revelation.
Again, this is building doctrine upon a whim. Yes, I can see how you come to this conclusion, but it is too vague for a doctrine to stand or fall upon when we provide others that point in a different and orthodox position with substance from scriptures and sound thinking.
I protest the word "whim," there Lon
I was a settled theist for about 10 years and it took considerable thought to get me to change.
I think this passage out of 1 Sam helps my case in a big way. You can see God working this new kingdom system into his plan. The thing is, God was always their king. But when he setup this system and he worked Jesus into being an heir of the kingdom as the story progresses.
God could have made Jesus' earthly lineage trace back to Saul. The passage I quoted last time really shows that God considered doing it until Saul sinned. Then after David replaced Saul God made the promise to David.
Regardless of the kingdom system, Saul, David, and the millions of other freewill agents on earth, heaven, and hell, God was able to bring plan A into fruition. The idea that along the way he worked people in and out of that plan is amazing and exciting, as it shows the willingness of God to share his blessings with mere men. What amazing love and grace!
This has been discussed as above at length with scriptural support. I used to try strongly, in vain, to get OV to realize that such doctrine is built off of story (narrative) rather than pedantic 'teaching' texts that are more explicit. It is my estimation (guide/rule) that the narrative supports pendantic texts and what one brings from them must adhere to scriptures clear teaching.
Lon, I think we all could do better at discussing this. I am trying to do better myself. I say the "teaching" and the "story" go together, and they both give clarity to each other. With patience we can understand each other's views on these passages, and I pray we can come to unity.
You seem to downplay the story in favor of the teaching. In the
story from Daniel 10 we
learn that angelic intervention can be postponed.
In a book that doesn't really think of time like we do today(as a dimension), so that doesn't mention it, we must rely on what we have.
So to wrap up:
The spirit world, heaven, hell, wherever there are spirits, has synchronized time with earth. I hope you will agree based on scripture this is true.
God's plan for salvation was always assured. The path from Genesis to Calvary show a God who interacts and plans but never loses sight of the goal.
I'd like to tackle the synchronization of Gods time with creations time next, but this will be a little easier to do if we can agree that time is the same time for all of creation. I believe Scripture backs this up.