Derf
Well-known member
Hope your Christmas was full of Him. In a nutshell, we are either man-focused from our perspective, or we are trying to ascertain things from God's perspective. We know implicitly that His thoughts and ways are not ours and that 'so far above' are His thoughts than ours. What we have is revelation else we'd always think anthropomorphically. Bad? No, but God Himself, does remind us that He is different and not like a man. Scripture implicitly gives us some Omni's and at other times, a paragraph, chapter, or book describes one of His qualities as we understand the omnis.
A few of your questions intermix these (as well as does my analogies). I used a wholly physical fish example, but my premise is trying to reach beyond that: God is and isn't in a 'where.' That is, 'where' is hard for us, it is a physical construct. God told Moses he could not see Him, just His glory as He passed by. It is somewhat akin to my finger in a fishbowl. You said 'lied' but I think the 'lie' is formed from our limited understanding, such that it isn't at all a lie, we just 'think' (limited, wrongly) it is. God can't lie.
As far as your other comment about the verses being promises to us? Agree, but it doesn't remove the idea that time began, for us. For me, it rather enforces it. God created us in a physical universe and/or created a physical universe for us.
I hope your Christmas was very blessed and your new year is full of Him -Lon
I think the "man-focused" vs "God-focused" is usually a red herring--what we are trying to do is figure out what God tells us about Himself. Any view that doesn't get it right is the man-focused one--since we are using our own view of God over His.
His thoughts and ways are not ours, but He provides, or "reveals" His thoughts to us, at least some of them. Admittedly we are also limited in our understanding, but that doesn't mean God has to turn a "this" into a "not this" for us to understand His thoughts, else we start to think that His thoughts are really the opposite of His thoughts. God's word then is one mass of contradictions.
Sorry for the intermixing--it's coming from trying to understand time as we understand space. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn't. Time is really a measure of one thing against another, at its basic level. Space is, too. And if God is the only thing, I admit of a fault in my measuring rods (which don't exist). When we get down to it, we are both coming from the same basic premise--God can't lie--and branching off from that to see if we can figure out what He's telling us about Himself. But my "lie" accusation was what we make God to do if we anthropomorphize too much of Him and His revelation to us, to the point where He is contradictory to His revelation.
Time definitely began for us! Time began for angels. Time began for God when you talk of Him interacting with other things/beings, I suppose. In that way, if God has always been trinitarian, then He has always interacted with "others" in relationship. That implies progression of time of some sort, doesn't it? Maybe not, but We have so little else to go on except that God did things "before" time, which means there was something that marked progression for Him even before we had something to mark progression for us.
I always tend to go back to a definition of our time that includes corruption--entropy is the best I have to offer--which is inadequate even within the created realm (oops, there's that concept of space again). And when we will no longer be corruptible, we will no longer experience "time" as we know it. But we will experience something--learning, perhaps, since we won't know everything God knows.
Is "knowledge", then, our third "dimension of dimensions"--Space, Time, Knowledge? Your fish analogy suggested such. Did God always know He would make the earth (fishbowl)? Or did He decide at one point to do so? Can He still decide today, or is it impossible for Him to do so, making the earth and its inhabitants an eternal thing. This was the argument from Duffy (can God create a new butterfly?) in the debate, if you watched that.
Christmas was very nice. Laid back, except staying up too late wrapping presents. This was the first since My daughter's wedding, so she wasn't here for it. The concept of the infinite being birthed the same way we are is mind-boggling--even more so now than before (and getting more so every year).