Time is measured by days. Before days were invented God dwelt in eternity where no time existed.
In addition to what Clete said, don't confuse the measurement of time with time itself, which is what you have done here.
As you said, a "day" is a measurement of time, but it is not time itself.
"Eternity" literally means "endless/infinite time," not "timelessness."
In other words, infinity != 0.
Humans may think it is easier to comprehend God if God is bound by time,
Time is simply an aspect of God's existence.
It's not an ontological "thing."
God being "in time" is comprehensible, even if not fully able to be understood.
God being "outside of time" is not.
but how then do they explain God's eternal existence before time was created?
Simple, time wasn't created, and as Clete mentioned, there is no record of time being created in the Bible, but only life, light, and matter.
Or, to put it another way, did God exist before the beginning and, if so, what was the beginning?
To answer the primary question here, I must answer the follow-up:
The "beginning" is described in Genesis 1:1, where God made the heavens and the earth. In other words, "the beginning of creation," the point at which "creation" first existed.
Which means that yes, God did exist PRIOR to the beginning of creation.
What the beginning is NOT is "time," as "beginning" is simply a point in time.
Time must first exist for there to be a "before the creation," ergo, time cannot be created, because creation necessitates a before and after, in that there was no creation (before), and then God created, at which point creation thus existed and continues to exist (after).
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If God was satisfied communing with Himself for trillions of trillions of years before He created the heaven and the earth, then what caused Him to finally take an interest in fellowshipping with humans?
Simply because He can do new things.
A timeless God cannot do that.
To expand on this point:
God, because He CAN do new things, decided to do something new, to create a universe with living creatures in it.
In other words: God is free to have a new thought, create a new butterfly, write a new song, etc.
According to Jeremiah 18, God is willing to repent of the evil He has thought and promised to do to a nation if that nation repents of their evil and turns to God for mercy.
Which is exactly my point.
That is not failed prophecy,
Saying it doesn't make it so, Mark.
God told Jonah, His
prophet to go to Nineveh and
preach to them that they would be destroyed. That, by definition, is a prophecy.
“Arise, go to Nineveh, that great city, and cry out against it; for their wickedness has come up before Me.” - Jonah 1:2
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jonah1:2&version=NKJV
God said that He would do something. A prediction (definition of prophecy).
Then God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God relented from the disaster that He had said He would bring upon them, and He did not do it. - Jonah 3:10
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jonah3:10&version=NKJV
That prophecy never came to pass because Nineveh repented, and because God is merciful, He spared them from the destruction which He said He would bring upon them.
that is reasonable expectation of mercy should God so decide to show it.
Rather, the fact is that circumstances changed, and so God, who is merciful and free, can change His mind when circumstances change.
Jesus is the "Lamb slain from the foundation of the world." (Revelation 13).
Actually, this is a poor reading of the passage.
"From the foundation of the world" is not a modifier of "the Lamb slain," but rather of "the Book of Life."
This is made explicitly clear when you read Revelation 17:8:
The beast that you saw was, and is not, and will ascend out of the bottomless pit and go to perdition. And those who dwell on the earth will marvel,
whose names are not written in the Book of Life from the foundation of the world, when they see the beast that was, and is not, and yet is. - Revelation 17:8
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation17:8&version=NKJV
Or else, the book of life contains the names of the elect from the foundation of the world. In any case, we are talking about people who lived thousands of years after Adam who are mentioned by name before Adam was created. Have I understood that right?
No.
"The Book of Life from the Foundation of the World" contains the names of those who have ultimately placed their faith in God, which does not inherently imply, as you have, that the names were written before Adam was created, but simply that the names contained within are written there, at the time they do so.
In other words, you've assumed that God knew those names before the people even existed and that they were written down already, but the text says nor implies such thing by necessity.
I may not agree with you entirely
That's why we're here!
because I have some lingering questions as to how that interpretation may address issues not yet discussed. But I certainly believe you are closer to the absolute truth, if not altogether at one with the truth, than are those who misunderstand what the Bible teaches about God's love for sinners and desire that none of them should perish.
:thumb:
I hardly think anyone needs an interpreter or an instructor to demonstrate the fact that it is impossible for humans to comprehend what was going on with God and for 'how long' in eternity past before the beginning of time.
You seem to be conflating two things, or at least blurring the lines between them:
No one can comprehend fully the amount of time that God has existed before He created, simply because we don't have the "frame of reference" for doing so, since we have a beginning, whereas God does not.
However, that does not mean that we can't recognize that He IS beginningless, and that He HAS existed for an infinite amount of time before He created.
In other words: just because we can't understand the extent something is to doesn't mean we can't understand that there IS an extent.
I still find no reason to assume God cannot exist in all places at all times at the same time.
God is not described as omnitemporal in the Bible.
When Reading in the Greek, We See that God:
- is timeless
- in an eternal now
- without sequence or succession
- without moment or duration
- atemporal and outside of time
- not was, nor will be, but only is
- has no past
- has no future.
Of course NOT ONE of these phrases is in the Bible. They're from Plato. And the Platonists.
However, when Reading the Bible, We See that God:
is - and was - and is to come - whose goings forth are from of old, from everlasting - forever and ever - the Ancient of Days - from before the ages of the ages - from ancient times - the everlasting God - He continues forever - from of old - remains forever - eternal - immortal - the Lord shall endure forever - Who lives forever - yesterday, today, and forever - God's years are without number - manifest in His own time - everlasting Father - alive forevermore - always lives - forever - continually - the eternal God - God’s years never end - from everlasting to everlasting - from that time forward, even forever - and of His kingdom there will be no end.
Of course ALL THESE are verbatim phrases from Scripture, some being repeated many times. NOT ONE MEANS TIMELESSNESS. Rather, they mean unending duration.
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opentheism.org