God rejects human logic that does not rest on the Lord of God. The Greek philosophers, those who wrote the Vedas, and anyone else who does not base his or her reasoning on the Word of God are the ones that God is speaking about in the verses you quoted.
We are to be logical and Biblical, not illogical and Biblical. When anyone is illogical with the Bible they are misinterpreting it. When anyone is logical with the Bible, as we are in OV, they are interpreting it correctly.
--Dave
Again, as if you really cannot fathom this:
Are you 100% logical? Have you ever made a mistake? Have you ever been wrong about something? This seems really pedantic to me, but when are you going to get on the same page with me here? How can you say you are logical when you live with antimony within OV doctrine?
Let's go back and I'll say again what I believe is logical.
1) God has no beginning and all things that are in existence are from Him.
What does this mean? It means, that motion as we know it, issues from Him. He cannot be constrained by His own nature. It is just who He is, but if you see Him as only existing duratively, there is no point at which we can come to a 'now,' ever. It is impossible. God can do the impossible, but you guys assert this in antimony against another impossibility: EDF. Sorry, but what I've shown you is that you are just as illogical as I am. Go figure.
2) EDF and the loss of freewill: Rubbish. Why? Because, obviously God is unconstrained by time, reveals our future to us and is even able to record the number of days of our lives before even one exists (or maybe it was just David-OV will have to make a special case of him to deny what is clear in scripture). So, regardless of your logical constraint, God has EDF and yet we have a sense of freewill and are culpable.
The next OV refrain is: "That is illogical!" Wrong, both are apparent from the Word of God. Just because you choose to eliminate one thing that is rather obvious in scripture, does not mean anything to me. It isn't at all logical to do so in my mind. What does that mean? It means, even if I were in the dark on a particular, it still makes better logical sense than the OV offering where scriptures are explained away. You are culpable, God knows the future. My admittance of being illogical has nothing to do with my perceived logic, it is rather an acquiescence to you. I know you don't see my logic but it is logical to me. That what I've been trying to convey to you and I trust God with questions I may not be able to answer.
When anyone is illogical with the Bible they are misinterpreting it. When anyone is logical with the Bible, as we are in OV, they are interpreting it correctly.
--Dave
I don't disagree with this, what I disagree with is the OV part. I do not actually believe you are being logical when in the wake you are leaving antimonious waves.
How could God require that His prophets foretell the future or be rejected if He does not know the future Himself?
How could David's days be written before he'd even lived one of them?
How could Jesus tell Peter that He'd deny Him 3 times?
How could John be transported to a future where he interacts with an elder if it may or may not take place? Was the elder a fabrication? Did he really not exist?
If God had no beginning, how is it even possible that He could escape succession of endless past duration to ever get to a 'now.' If it goes on forever into our past, it is impossible.
I've got many more scriptures in mind that stop making sense when I consider an OV mindset. In other words, I'll take the tough questions addressed to the traditional stance compared to these ones. They are gaping! Which is really the more logical position? Again, I acquiesce that you view mine as illogical but if my stance is illogical, yours is exponential.
Again, I'd rather be in what 'you' deem the dark. It makes much more sense on my side of the spectrum but I'd never say I'm right about everthing. God is right about everything. I'm trying to follow Him. Only stop feeding me the line that OV is the most logical thing out there since sliced bread and that you are more so than I. I think I'm a very logical person but I have no qualms whatsoever with somebody challenging me about that simply because as logical as I am, I'm not perfect and have no trouble agreeing about that. If you cannot, I see some brainwashing going on. Recommendation? Learn to live with a little dirt, your logical is spotty, just like the rest of us. I see intellect as subject to the fall and our only hope is being united to Him. It is when we see Him (1 John 3) that we'll be like Him, not before. Should we be trying? Yes, but not to the point where we think we've finally arrived on this earth. Learn to be honest with yourself, your logic is just as flawed as mine. I readily admit that there are times in my life I'm illogical. You'd be wise to do the same.