Right Divider
Body part
NopeThen it's part of the creator.
No more than a carpenter is part of a table.
NopeThen it's part of the creator.
That was exactly what I was saying.Remember means to bring it up in your mind.
To not remember means to not bring it up to your mind.
That's what forgiveness is ----- no longer bringing up one's faults.
When we are faulted and we forgive them of their faults, we say 'forget about it'.
Where does it says that God forgets?I was asking you based on your interpretation of what I believe.
I think He does what He says He will do. Or do you think He lied when He said He would forget the sins?
First my view regarding God:
I view God as a construction, an idea constructed in an effort to understand our mysterious and uncertain lives, evident by the pantheon of historically existing, primarily irrelevant, gods. As such the question of God's existence between existing as a mere idea against His presumed ontological being maintains a wider gap than the average believer will comfortably admit to.
With this in mind....the answer to your question is, no...quite to the contrary.
Nope
No more than a carpenter is part of a table.
The Bible does not mention that aspect of Him.An attribute? No.
An aspect of His existence, YES.
I cannot understand what you mean by that.I think God had some idea that Abraham loved God, and as you say, God knows what is on a man's heart. But I think God likes to confirm things, instead of just look and see.
Scripture please.God could have, but chose to do it in 6 days, and rested on the 7th, so that He could admire His work. He wanted to intimately know what He was creating.
Nowhere near the same.Yep.
Time is both a collorary of the carpenter's action and his creation of the table.
If I have not ears to hear my neighbor, how can I open mouth towards my neighbor?
Your turn to "shoot". [MENTION=2365]quip[/MENTION]
Unlike the collorary relating a carpenter to his created table....how can God create sans time?
It seems a rational dead-end. Must you simply rely upon the appeal of a inexplicable supernatural explanation?
Unlike the collorary relating a carpenter to his created table....how can God create sans time?
It seems a rational dead-end. Must you simply rely upon the appeal of a inexplicable supernatural explanation?
Those who exist in "time" are constrained by time. They cannot go back in time and they cannot go forward in time. In fact, they cannot even know things which will happen in the future.
In this verse the Scriptures speak of the "foreknowledge" of God:
"Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, to the strangers scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through sanctification of the Spirit, unto obedience and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ" (1 Pet.1:2).
It is obvious that God is not constrained by time because He can know things which will happen in the future. Since He is not so constrained then we can know that He exists outside of time so it can be said that He exists in a "timeless" environment.
The Bible does not mention that aspect of Him.
In the Bible, we see the 7 day week as a MODEL for work and rest for Israel. That is not conjecture like I see you use above.
Unlike the collorary relating a carpenter to his created table....how can God create sans time?
It seems a rational dead-end.
I disagree. It just shows that multiple futures are possible.GOD - I'll do this if and when you do that.
That's not GOD working in timelessness, that's GOD waiting to see what happens before He reacts.
Nope. Same understanding.Greetings Clete,
Perhaps we have a different understanding of the meaning of the word "constraint." I am using that word in the sense of "the state of being restricted," or to confine within bounds.
No one can go to a place that does not exist, including God.As mere creatures we are restricted from traveling into the future so in that sense we are "constrained" by time.
This is an unsubstantiated claim. You have made no attempt to establish this claim. Even if it is true (which it may well be), the fact that we cannot says nothing about what God can or cannot do. Further, what you'll never be able to establish is that God's knowledge or lack thereof has anything to do with existing outside of time.In fact, we cannot have a definite knowledge of very specific things which will happen in the future, such as knowing who will believe the gospel and who will not.
It isn't a fact. Time is not a real thing. It's just a convention of language that we use to convey information about the duration and sequence of events.That is what I mean when I am talking about the fact that we are constrained by time.
We know no such thing.But the LORD is not so constrained (Acts 13:48) so we can know that the environment in which He exists, the eternal state, is one which can be described as being timeless.
No, you haven't. You've argued for your doctrine from your doctrine.I have used the same method which Paul used (he reasoned out of the Scriptures) in coming to my conclusion.
No, you wouldn't! I've done NOTHING at all on this whole thread except talk about what you've said in error and you couldn't care less, which I specifically predicted before I ever finished typing my first post on this thread. Your argument falls apart in at least two different ways which I spelled out very clearly and to which you have failed to respond at all.If you think that anything which I said is in error then I will be willing to listen to what you may have to say.
Thanks!
Says God.
God declares what will come to pass with absolute certainly. He is not guessing.
F=ma
Nowhere near the same.
The carpenter takes EXISTING objects and puts them into a new form.
God created something out of NOTHING.
Do you believe in life after death in any fashion?
:idunno:
Anything more to add?
And the reverse of that, Why does God say that some things will not happen, and then they do?Why then do some prophecies go unfulfilled?