So, when I posted my last post 5 minutes ago, that event is present? Isn't it past now?
Its just an illusion.
So, when I posted my last post 5 minutes ago, that event is present? Isn't it past now?
Its just an illusion.
Ah, I see. So you don't have a coherent explanation for anything. If time is an illusion, how can you know it is infinite? Maybe infinity is one of your illusions too (beside it being illogical anyway).
As I said, you are confusing time with eternity. I keep trying to separate the two and you keep confusing them.
Time without beginning or end; infinite time.
They're not separate, eternity:
There’s an order of succession to what God or any creator does, that makes them exist in time. Denying that is either misusing or misunderstanding the term time.
It shows that God defies his own laws of physics. If these stories are true then tell me what is the use of science at all if God can just discard his "rules".
To say that God exists in time is not Biblical. It's not a Christian conception. It might be a Mormon conception of things (which I think is where you are coming from based on earlier posts), but its not Biblical. As the Bible describes God, He doesn't exist in time, He created it.
tttppp:
“My theory is that the universe exists because zero = infinity. Therefore the universe has always existed and was not created by anyone.”
This exchange has not been bout your Biblical or Christian definition of God or time. tttppp’s post to which you first replied (below) wasn’t about “Biblical" God or Christianity. And your reply to it wasn’t about “Biblical God” or "Christianity". On my part it’s been about the concept of time as it relates to the universe and creation, starting with my reply to tttpp’s post with “Fire away.” When I mentioned “God” to you I meant the term in the objective sense, creator of the universe, not your “Biblical” and subjective definition and all its implications. Your replies to both me and tttppp immediately turned into a “Biblical” circular argument.
All of my responses to tttppp have been from the Biblical worldview (however consistently or inconsistently I am able to apply it).
Why would you expect me to argue for any other conception of God other than the God of the Scriptures? I am a Christian...that's what Christians do. A Christian should never accept a non-Biblical conception of God and then argue for it, because
1) he would be arguing for an idol, and
2) it will lead to logical inconsistencies
I ONLY defend the Christian worldview and how God revealed Himself in the Bible..and I am happy to be "guilty" of circular reasoning here, because God's Word is the axiom of my knowledge.
Any Christian who does not begin with God's Word is employing an incorrect method of apologetics. But, from your posts, I get the feeling that you are not a Christian anyway. Am I right? Why have you never told anyone where you are coming from?
Has your epistemology ever lead you to skepticism?
All of my responses to tttppp have been from the Biblical worldview (however consistently or inconsistently I am able to apply it).
You mean your worldview of predestination and however you consistently or inconsistently apply it.
It certainly wouldn't sound 'Biblical' to Christians circa 33 AD.
And unless one humbles themselves to Jesus Christ Who is the Life and the Way, and to His Body the Church which is guided and anointed by the Holy Spirit, we run the risk of making gods of our own minds and make our own interpretations that which is 'Biblical'.
History does reveal certain truths when one believes in a God Who keeps His promises and Who died on the Cross for the salvation of all. For any god who did less would be no god.
And the Christian God took on our flesh and our weaknesses in order to heal our flesh and vanquish our weaknesses. In order to reconcile us back with our Creator and have us share in His divine nature and the eternal joy and glory of His Heavenly Kingdom, He humbled Himself and taught us to be humble.
Born in a cave surrounding by beasts of burden, He showed us the Way to the Kingdom, and that is in humility, forgiveness, mercy and love.
And we are commanded to follow Him. Not to accept our fate, but to follow Him.
Our fates may be known to God, but for us and according to us here in this world, it has not yet been decided.
And unfortunately, our actions and the stances we take are not always according to His will, and like the prodigal son we follow our own will and seek to live life according to our own terms and understanding and not in obedience and humility to our father who loves us dearly and desires to share with us His Kingdom.
.Thus, we should search for those stances and study those understandings which demonstrate fidelity, consistency, antiquity and truth. These are the assurances for the followers of Christ found in the historical records and timelines and most importantly found and experienced in the worship of God by His Church
And most centrally, in the Body and Blood of the Lord Jesus Christ. For St. Peter, Who shared in these Holy Mysteries said:"Cloth yourselves, all of you, with humility toward one another, for God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble. Humble yourselves therefore under the mighty hand of God, that in due time he may exalt you." (1 Peter 5:5-7)
1st Peter 1:1-2
Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ,
To God’s elect, exiles scattered throughout the provinces of Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia and Bithynia, who have been chosen according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, to be obedient to Jesus Christ and sprinkled with his blood:
Grace and peace be yours in abundance.
And in the way only a God of Love would do, in selflessness and without sin, righteous and pure in every way, the Savior of Israel and of all the nations of the earth, the Lord and Prince of Peace Jesus Christ Who is Risen from the dead, humbled Himself, took on our flesh, and came down to us so that by doing so He might restore us, fulfill us, sanctify us, indeed bring us all up to Him - our deification and partaking of the divine nature of God. The very reason of our existence. The little thing Mr. Einstein could not accept because he could not measure it or describe it.
The Biblical worldview is more than just predestination. It is justification by grace alone as well, for example. But to just explain away the predestination passages in the Bible is just...I don't know, not Biblical.
When do you think Paul wrote his letters? In the 50's or 60's? Because Paul talks about (and explains in depth) predestination in numerous passages and in more than one book.
So, we should submit our minds to another set of fallible minds? That sounds nuts to me...and not Biblical. That is the SURE way to make gods out of men...by giving men the authority that belongs to God alone.
Sola Scriptura is not "my interpretation alone". It's "scripture alone". Scripture stands above my interpretation, and every other interpretation, and judges it rightly or wrongly.
God would be less than God if He created a world which He knew He would be eternally frustrated and eternally defeated. He wants everyone to be saved, but they aren't. He sent His Son to die and shed His blood for men that will be in Hell forever? That isn't a god...that is a scizophrenic and illogical figment of someone's imagination. It's not the God of the Bible who makes everything He intends come to pass infallibly.
"Share in the divine nature"??? How? Metaphyiscally? If so, then that is surely not Biblical.
Wrong. That is not the way to the kingdom. The path that leads to destruction is full of men who are humble, and have love and show mercy. That is NOT the way to the kingdom.
The Gospel of Jesus Christ is not "experiences". The Gospel of Jesus Christ is a declaration of an event that happened wholly outside of man (on the cross of calvary).
This god that you speak of is not worthy of worship. This god you speak of cannot even bring His purposes to pass. Why should I worship a Being who cannot even bring His purposes to pass? Why should this Being deserve glory if He cannot bring His purposes to pass?
"Share in the divine nature"??? How? Metaphyiscally? If so, then that is surely not Biblical."
I said, “You are gods, and all of you are children of the Most High.” (Psalm 82:6)
"To those who have obtained like precious faith with us by the righteousness of our God and Savior Jesus Christ: Grace and peace be multiplied to you in the knowledge of God and of Jesus our Lord, as His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him who called us by glory and virtue, by which have been given to us exceedingly great and precious promises, that through these you may be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust." (2 Peter 1)
The references to theosis and to the faithful partaking in the divine nature of God and becoming adopted sons of the Most High is found throughout the Scriptures and writings of the Church Fathers. Indeed, Christ went on the Cross in order to send us the Holy Spirit so that we might share in the Kingdom and that is why St. Paul tells us to 'put on Christ'.
Wrong. That is not the way to the kingdom. The path that leads to destruction is full of men who are humble, and have love and show mercy. That is NOT the way to the kingdom.
It is astounding that you object to humility, forgiveness, mercy and love as being the path to the Kingdom. You should reread the Beatitudes.
TER,
1. You have the same interpretation of Psalm 82 that cultists and polytheists have.
No, he doesn't. It isn't just or right for you to put these words in his mouth. And if this is the best interpretation of his statement you can come up with, it doesn't bode well for your interpretation of the epistles.
You have said more than once that you seem to insist on the idea of predestination because you don't consider God worthy of your worship if He doesn't know how the game is going to come out before it's over.
Well, I don't put such conditions on my adoration. Any more than I believe that when Jesus said, 'Take, eat, this is my body', the disciples became cannibals. And I don't look at you putting this sort of precondition on your adoration as the result of a humble spirit.
Furthermore, despite all of your relentless trolling I still believe that Jesus teaching us what we need to know to walk with God is God's grace. And that instruction from the One the disciples called Teacher is only useful to those who have free will to learn from it.
1. You have the same interpretation of Psalm 82 that cultists and polytheists have. Psalm 82 is not saying that there are many gods in the universe or even lesser gods in the universe. The term "elohim" that was applied to the judges who were falsely judging was not a reference to their deity, it was a reference to their position as the judges of Israel. It could not be a reference to deity because the Lord declares that they will "die like men". Deities do not die.
And when Jesus referenced this in the gospel of John, He applied this to the false judges who were falsely judging Him by saying He wasn't God Himself.
2. Man does not ever participate in God metaphysically. There is a vast and unpassable metaphysical chasm between God and man. The two can never mix, and one cannot ever become the other.
Jesus put on flesh, but He didn't become a man. He remained God, and His nature did not mix with His human nature. We participate in God's nature ethically, not metaphysically. And a man can only participate in the ethical nature of God because God imputes the righteousness of Christ to that man. Purely by grace.
Have you read the book of Romans? Have you understood that man's righteousnesses are filthy rags in the sight of a holy God? Do you know that we are not justified in any way by our works of mercy, love, or forgiveness?
What good works are you going to offer up to God on the last day TER? Why would you think your works mean anything to the Lord? Don't you know that your works will condemn you on the last day? There is nothing more Pharisaical than to believe that you have some righteousess that you can offer to God. We have no righteousness. A man is saved by faith in Christ's righteousness alone.
The Gospel of Jesus Christ is justification by faith alone. Every false gospel in the world will say that man's works will be acceptable to God. The only works that are acceptable to God are Christ's works.
Yes. He does. If he believes that this verse teaches that there are other gods or we can participate in God metaphysically and become part of God...then that is the same interpretation that various cults have. Specifically Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses.
No, I never said that. I said that a God who cannot bring His purposes to pass is not worthy of worship. If man is more powerful than God and can frustrate His will, then man is more deserving of worship because man is more powerful than God (and of course this view of God leads to the worship of man anyway).
You are correct in that we cannot experience the essence of God which is unknowable and unreachable to us created beings. However, we can experience and participate in the energies of God.
The Trinity comes dangerously close to that, bud. So does the concept of 'letting God into your heart'. That said, I still don't believe he said or intended the words you're putting in his mouth.
You did say that. Or, if you did not, you said that you presume what God's will is.