Shall I have an imaginary good night, or a real one?
:chuckle:
I debated whether to trade jabs. You have one premise that cannot be defeated because of stubbornness and a bit of an Aristotle-delusion. Just one. You believe 'your' logic infallible or at least act as if the premise is true. The center of your objection to everything I said comes from this. I assert you nor I have perfect logic therefore some things in this life will never make sense in this economy. You will acquiesce this of course, but the difference is where we are
drawing the line. I'm comfortable with dichotomy and mystery. Even OV carries much of the same whether it actually eliminates some or not. I assess that it doesn't and makes others in its wake.
From two years ago I said this:
Logic isn't innate, it must be built for understanding over time. There is a whole portion of psychology dedicated to studying this in child development and is the subject matter all teachers must take a course in before they receive their teaching certificate.
Because it is developmental and 'different' for individuals Cellist is correct in asserting that it is more often our perception of truth. In a discussion like this, it is very apparent that our reasoning parameters are different. What is absurd for one of us is completely plausible by the other.
There is perfect math, but no man a perfect mathematician.
Similarly, there is perfect logic, but no man a perfect logician.
We are completely dependent upon the Spirit for placing us firmly in Logic and it is a process in all other respects as conforming to His image. This is exactly why I don't ever call you stupid. I don't believe in 'stupid' Christians but for perhaps the exception of those still on milk (I'd use other terms, however). They may not have the same grasp of a truth, but for His grace alone, we are only a step or two ahead if we are at all. I see growing in logic as part of our reconstruction. Losing objectivity in sin means we must, as new creatures, seek His realities and adjust our own thinking appropriately. When I come to a dichotomy or logical incongruity, I stop and wrestle but not all answers are apparent.
For two years I've wrestled with trying to prove that God is atemporal.
I've known it to be true, but have only recently come to a consideration that I believes presses the truth. My logic needed more information to come to an answer.
A line represents eternity. The arrows mean that God has no beginning and no end, they point to what we cannot draw.
<____________________________________>
Somewhere along eternity past and future we were created.
<__________________0_________________>
Along the line we can plot points and segments:
<____________.__.__.__0__.__.__._____________>
Each of the segments can express a portion of duration: time considerations.
God has never had a beginning. If He were ruled by duration and sequence, the earth would never have been created and here is why.
<_________________________________________________>
First of all, eternity is without end (both directions). As far back as our minds can take us, God is before that. If we exponentially produce numbers increasing by trillions, there is never a time that is expressed for the part of the line we see. Wherever and whenever we stop, even if we allowed computers to crunch numbers for a billion-trillion years, we'd not even be able to distinguish a pixel in comparison with a line that stretch from here to Pluto because eternity past is beyond comprehension.
<__________<_____________________<_________________>
This pattern repeats to infinity. If it is necessary for God to move sequentially in duration, the earth would never have been formed because there is never a time from eternity past that the sequence would reach the point of creation. Why? Because no matter how far you go back, there is always going to be trillions and trillions of durations and sequences progressing because He never had a beginning. In other words, if God were incapable of escaping sequence and duration, 'Now' would never take place for the mere fact that an eternal past cannot ever reach a time called now.
Why God must also be foreknowing. Since it is impossible for God to be considered as progressing through time, He also cannot be constrained to future considerations of duration. This means what God knows, is not contingent upon time parameters. Again, if He could not exist outside of it, the earth would never have been formed because there is never a beginning in which duration can progress other than eternally into the past. Logically, it should be assessed that time duration is a concept based upon that which is created. Because it is created, He cannot be constrained by the mechanics or concept of time. He is relational to it but it is not a logical constraint upon Him, a logical concept in which He must acquiesce.