Greetings Logikos,
I have a few thoughts concerning your post that I want to comment on. I'll do so in order as I have read your post to civic, which I find some disturbing views concerning the Godhead, which you put a small "g" on godhead when you used the word, maybe no big deal we shall see.
The small g was a typo, nothing more.
Is your name Graig Brown @
https://logikosministries.com/ ? If no, then accept my apologies.
No. Never heard of him or his ministry. That's a cool name for a ministry though!
Well sir, your definition of eternal is wrong. God is eternal both ways! First scripture:
Your posts are all but impossible to respond to without having to spend a bunch of time undoing your formatting. Ugh!
Deuteronomy 33:27 “The eternal God
is thy refuge, and underneath
are the
everlasting arms: and he shall thrust out the enemy from before thee; and shall say, Destroy
them.”
Well, that scripture doesn't help you. I have no problem with the use of the term "eternal" but with the erroneous idea that it means timelessness. It does not mean that and no one believed it before Augustine imported the Greek notion into the church in the 5th century.
Eternal, as used in the above passage merely means and infinite amount of time.
1828 Webster: Without beginning or end of existence. Without end of existence or duration; everlasting; endless; immortal.
Again, no help here for you. There is nothing there that contradicts a syllable of what I've said. Indeed, it affirms it!
You are creating your own definition sir,
No SIR, I am not.
because it does not fit with your greek philosophy that your name tells me whence comes the source of your information.
By this ridiculous logic, pretty nearly the entire new testament is Greek philosophy by virtue of the fact that it was written in Greek!
Eternal does not mean you can put God in a time box, so you reject the true meaning eternal,
There is no such thing as a time box. Time is not a thing at all. It is an idea, an abstraction. It applies to anything that exists because the concept of existence implies duration. If God experiences duration and a sequence of events then He experiences time, by definition.
God did exist BEFORE creation and did so for an eternity.
because you desire to have a god that does exist in time............
I desire to have a worldview that comports with reality, nothing more, nothing less.
yet time means nothing to God.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
One day with God is what? a thousand years, or even million,
Yes, God is patient! An attribute that has no meaning at all if, as you say, "time means nothing to God".
God does not exist in time and neither will his people after this world is destroyed by fire......... time will forever cease to be.
Saying it doesn't make it so.
God is waiting right now for His enemies to be made His footstool.
The Bible records the saints in Heaven asking God, "How long, O Lord will you wait..."
The angels that surround the throne of God say "Holy, Holy, Holy". How do you suppose they ever get that second "Holy" out of their mouths if time doesn't exist?
After this Heaven and this Earth and the rest of this creation are all gone, the Tree of Life will be in the New Heaven and it will produce twelve different fruits, but not all at once! No! One fruit from the Tree of Life will come ripe each month.
You labor to use the vain reasoning of a mortal mind as your primary source and scriptures as your secondary choice.
The alternative is irrational nonsense. All you're really saying here is that you have no answer for my arguments and that we're to believe you whether it makes any sense or not.
I will assure folks if they do so, they will end up like others that Paul mentioned in Romans one:
Silly nonsense. You used logic and reason to type this post.
Time was created for us~days, months, years when God created this earth in six literal days and rested the seventh.
Where was it recorded that time was created? Chapter and verse please.
Such a verse does not exist.
Time is simply a convention of language we use to communicate the duration and sequence of events. "Days", "Weeks", "Years" are merely the words employed by that convention of language.
We still to this days observe TIME, since it was God who created light and darkness and divided them for our benefit, not his.
You are speaking here of clocks, not of time. There's a difference. A clock is any regularly occurring set of events used to compare the duration and sequence of events relative to those regularly occurring events. You can use any regularly occurring event you want. The spinning of the Earth, the Earth's orbit around the Sun, the Moon's orbit around the earth, the dripping of water, the swing of a pendulum, the bounce of a spring, the vibration of an atom. All make excellent clocks and clocks are extremely useful things indeed!
All of creation was done for us as mortal being so that we could live, work and rest,~ and likewise the four seasons, were given for the benefit of man. God, who is a Spirit,
This much of what you said is not in dispute.
dwells in eternity from everlasting and will until everlasting.
AMEN!
You didn't notice that you were contradicting yourself there, did you?
This will never change, The only God we shall ever see will be Jesus Christ in his glorified body living on the new earth world without end with his people whom God gave unto him.
Oh! That's as close to blasphemy as I'm willing to tolerate. Not that you'd care about that.
My first point is finished.
This is all I'm going to have time to respond to today.