Greetings again Rosenritter,
Kind regards
Trevor
I suggest that you read Psalm 139:1-18 as some evidence of God’s complete knowledge of all things, and I especially commend Psalm 139:13-16 as a testimony about Jesus’ thoughts about how he was specially formed in the womb, and for Apple7’s benefit also mentions his “mother”, even though Apple7 denies that Mary is the mother of Jesus. Jesus here is depicted as being specially prepared in the womb, not just left to chance. I also recommend Psalm 139:23-24 where God knew fully the heart of Jesus, and as a loving creator was able to fully purify him through the trials and circumstances of life. There is no limit to God’s knowledge of the present and the future. On the next level these are also David's words and this indicates David's trust in God to purify his thoughts and ways, and hence also we should commit ourselves unto God as the faithful creator. I agree that it is difficult for us to fathom that God knows our thoughts and the very process of our thinking, even before these thoughts come into our conscious area.I'm confused here as to your perspective. You are not acknowledging Jesus as God yet his actual thoughts are recorded far in advance in scripture. The only way that can occur is if his thoughts existed at that time, which would imply either:
a) Jesus also existed at that time, thus his thoughts in response to that situation could be known
b) The world is in a timey-whimey state where the past present and future all exist at the same time and God has a magic scrying ball, thus he read Jesus's thoughts "outside of time"
SpoilerWithout trying to pick a fight I'm getting mixed up which of the Unitarians here acknowledge Jesus's prior existence from those that don't. There's a lot of variety, Meshak is Unitarian while even acknowledges that Jesus personally created the whole universe.
Spoiler
I do not believe in the pre-existence of Jesus. Part of this is that I do not believe in immortal souls, and as such both Jesus and the rest of us humans are a product of our parents. Jesus did not have two minds, but was a child that grew in wisdom Luke 2:40,52.
Trevor