Lon
Well-known member
Perhaps you aren't understanding what I'm trying to get you to distinguish? Let's apply this specifically to a clock and I think you'll agree, then let's take that "understanding" back to God's immutability.Lon... think again. For God to be outside of time, the experiences would have to be the same for God outside of that which you designated that time is created. They are not.
Sound good?
A clock intrinsically doesn't change insomuch as it remains working (no problem with this kind of necessity with God). It is the same exact clock I bought 10 years ago and nothing at all has intrinsically changed.
The clock, however extrinsically changes. This isn't talking so much about what the clock is that is changing, but what it does. It displays in durative increments what is needed for its relation to me.
So in a nutshell and somewhat simplistic, God doesn't change but what He does makes or is seen as change. Or, who God is doesn't change, what He does, exibits change or at least perceived change (the clock doesn't ever jump to 24:01).