Things are 'new' to us because we do not know everything. When God does a 'new' thing, in Isaiah, is it 'new' for Him or 'new' for us?
When God created the heavens and the earth, and Adam, the
first man, was it new to God? If NEW to God, then God must have done something new, so your point is moot.
Conveyance and context suggest 'to us' only, right? God already truly knew He was going to redeem mankind through His Son.
Importance: We are trying to conceive of something about God and extrapolate. I believe 'in Him' means necessarily that God is 'already there' as far as what we 'can' do like writing a 'new' song. Here is the question: If you have a bump on your navel you never saw before (humorous hint at navel-gazing), is it a 'new' bump? Answer: No. It is a discovery
I have an innie, so a bump would be new, to me and to God. I haven't ever had such a bump on my belly.
. Writing a new song isn't writing new notes, nor even putting notes together in a way that has never been done before. It just 'seems' new to people who do not know everything. IOW, it is indeed 'new to us.'
Except every (every) area in a space can be anticipated/known already by a computer program else a computer couldn't render it. A computer 'can' render a lego house that is in your head, because it is 'already' in the software. I suggest 'new to us' is what you are talking about.
Yes, and no. Legos are new to us, and to all humankind, I'm guessing. (You can guess otherwise, but we're at an impasse to know who's right.)
The problem is that it 1) cannot be new to the computer nor 2) is it good to think of God without the where-with-all to have all of this figured out already, especially if like the computer analogy, everything that 'can' exist is 'in' God's wheel-house already as it were. John 1:3 "Without Him, nothing exists that exists. Doesn't that scripture fill in the blanks quite well?
No, because there are other scriptures that explain that one better. Adam didn't drawn on a list of names generated by God, but Adam drew on the brain God gave him to create the names.
We both should be concerned what Solomon meant, no?
If not, what would be the point of discussing anything with you?
I appreciate that you are holding steady to your theme of Solomon's words.
He also said this a few verses later:
Ecclesiastes 1:14 KJV — I have seen all the works that are done under the sun; and, behold, all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
That seems to mean that Solomon's words about nothing new was from experience, not from inspiration (I'm not saying his words weren't inspired, but they were a personal testimony, and only as true as his knowledge and experience). And if the current things were from experience, that means he also must have known (through writings or some such)
all the things that had ever been done under the sun.
Or, which is more likely, it was hyperbole or only applied to a subset of
all.