Lon,
Francis Schaeffer books, He is There and He is Not Silent, Escape from Reason, The God who is There, which are his major Works, are not theological in way that Calvin's Institutes are. His books are apologetic and deal with man as being capable of being reasoned with. Calvin would have maintained that it is useless to argue, attempt to persuade, or reason with sinners who are totally depraved. Sometimes I think reasoning with Calvinists is useless because, as a Calvinist you have dismissed the rules of rationality as in your example:
"An atom is both dynamic and static. It is in place, yet moving. A car engine can be running yet the car static at a stop light. Therefore, I assert you are wrong. Something can both be dynamic and static at the same time."
First of all we are talking about God's nature not the nature of an atom. Atoms internally and intrinsically are always in movement. A car engine is not the same thing as the car it is sitting in. A car engine cannot be running and not running at the same time.
You have broken the rule of identity, that is how we define something. In your argument you identified a car as the same thing as the engine.
A timeless God is "intrinsically" timeless or he is not timeless in his relationship to the world. Timelessness means no-time, no sequence of activity, no before and after, no past and no future, which is the opposite of what time means. No argument can be made for or against God's nature, one way or the other, unless this understanding of the identity or definition of the words time and timelessness are accepted by both parties in this debate.
Biblically speaking, that there was a time in God's eternal past when he existed before he created the world. There was a time in God's eternity that the creation of the world was in his future.
But if God is active and timeless, that is dynamic and static, then he does everything all at once and eternally, and then the world he interacts with would also be eternal. God did not start nor has ever stopped creating the world or anything else he does. It seems differently to us who are finite and bound by time, but not the way it is for God who is infinite and timeless, is the way Calvin put it.
A timeless God; one who does, thinks, and feels, everything all at once and eternally, is not free, neither are we, and all is machine.
--Dave