stellar renegade wrote:This is what I've asserted for a long while:
God the Father is timeless. In conjunction with your argument I'd say that he knows and wills.
God the Son created time in a sense, and therefore is not bound by it necessarily, though he acts within it, and doesn't know everything quite yet, eg. "No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father."
I think that accords quite nicely with trinitarianism.
...the ‘whole’ truth about God (whatever it is) spills over and outside the boundaries of our language on EVERY point. We can never speak so unequivocally about God that our claims admit no qualification. I like to say that while God is always more than what he reveals himself to be (there’s the apophatic), he’s never ‘less’ or ‘other’ than what he reveals himself to be (there’s the cataphatic). But we can never collapse the tension between the two. As created and limited, our existence IS the tension between the two...The very best our ‘language’ can do (creeds included) is to describe the reality of God.
I think what you’re really asking is whether God has ANY involuntary functions, functions that define him as God and which are NOT voluntary, functions God doesn’t choose that they should be what they are and which he doesn’t not manage via his will. Would that be closer to what you’re asking?
I also appreciate Bill Craig’s case for the impossibility of an actual infinite and thus the impossibility of a temporally infinite past. So he argues that God must be atemporal sans creation but temporal with creation, and thus the temporal status of God’s experience must be a contingent and not a necessary property. God was timeless. When he created he became temporal. So creating was a kind of kenosis for him as well.
But contra Craig, the idea of an absolutely timeless God getting off the dime (so to speak), and creating—the supposed transition from atemporal to temporal existence that the atemporal God makes—is as impossible for me to conceive as is an actual infinite.
...the ‘whole’ truth about God (whatever it is) spills over and outside the boundaries of our language on EVERY point. We can never speak so unequivocally about God that our claims admit no qualification. I like to say that while God is always more than what he reveals himself to be (there’s the apophatic), he’s never ‘less’ or ‘other’ than what he reveals himself to be (there’s the cataphatic). But we can never collapse the tension between the two. As created and limited, our existence IS the tension between the two...The very best our ‘language’ can do (creeds included) is to describe the reality of God.
a LOT of philosophers don’t buy the argument that an eternal temporal past constitutes the sort of actual infinite that is problematic. They’re not convinced there really is a problem here.
God’s presence and peace be yours Bro. Be encouraged. God give you grace.
Tom: Help me get on the same page as you Mike, ‘cause I’m interested in this. Just what PROBLEM are you attempting to solve? All this is motivated, I take it, by some perceived problem. What’s that problem? It seems to me that the problem is you want to say God is atemporal sans creation but that since atemporal existence cannot be personal existence, you prefer to say God is atemporally impersonal sans creation and then BECOMES a person in/with/by the BECOMING of creation into existence. So God constitutes himself a personal triune being in his determination to create. Is that it? God self-actualizes via creation.
Mike: P.S. Though controversial, isn’t the whole idea of Sophiology impersonal--I mean, if what Bulgakov (and other Orthodox Theologians) meant by "Sophia" were personal, wouldn't it be a fourth member of the Trinity?
Tom: Indeed it would. But even as it stands, Sophianism was condemned as heresy for pretty much this reason.
In other words, God is "the most perfect beauty and the most blessed delight." For the Eastern Fathers this loving experience of satisfaction subsists (to stretch for a term) in and through and by means of the personal relations
Tom: Whatever the more is, it can’t negate or falsify God’s fully personal existence. And if God were more ‘persons’ than three, then God wouldn’t be tripersonal at all. He’d be quadra- or pente- or whatever. SOMETIMES being ‘more than X’ entails not being X. Sometimes it doesn't. Depends on what X is.
Mike: I began engaging in conscious activities only after I woke from my dream because I’m a creature of time and space.
Tom: Not really. You also dream as a creature of time and space. We don’t become timeless entities when we sleep. That’s why I’m having some difficult connecting the dots to get at just what the issue is here.
Tom: But contra Craig, the idea of an absolutely timeless God getting off the dime (so to speak), and creating—the supposed transition from atemporal to temporal existence that the atemporal God makes—is as impossible for me to conceive as is an actual infinite.
Mike: But is that because you’re conceiving of it as sequential?
Tom: How else might I conceive of the movement/transition from one mode of being (atemporal) to it’s contradictory (temporal)?
I wouldn’t call it timeless at all, Mike. And I don’t know how you could speculate, given the thoroughly temporal nature of your experience (including dreams), on the possibility that (look at the concepts involved) the ‘feeling’ of ‘love’ you ‘experience’ could be called timeless. Just going on what you describe here, I’d call it anything but that. It looks fully temporal to me. The very notion of an atemporal experience seems meaningless.
The very notion of an atemporal experience seems meaningless.
Tom: Interesting. I can’t seem to find a need for an atemporal anything. I think ‘experience’ is the common denominator to all things, and that’s inconceivable to me apart from time. So it’s temporal from there on up. And I don’t have any problems that are solved by positing an atemporal experience at the foundation of all things.
TGB wrote:And I don’t have any problems that are solved by positing an atemporal experience at the foundation of all things.
TGB wrote:By what means does he “effect” the creation of time freely and contingently by an exercise of will sans time?
He chooses to create. And this choice is as contingent and unnecessary as creation (since creation follows necessarily from the choice), so it's not an aspect of God's atemporal and self-defining experience
The kenosis in creation of God Who is in the Holy Trinity signifies His self-diminution with respect to His absoluteness. The absolute God, correlated with nothing but Himself, becomes correlative with something outside Himself. That is, positing relative creaturely being, He enters into a relation with the latter: the Absolute becomes God, and God is a relative concept: God is such for another, for creation; whereas in itself the Absolute is not God.
what those who determined the final form said outside ecumenical gatherings carry tremendous weight
If they didn't explicitly mention, say, divine "self-sufficiency" in so many words, that may be because they had no demand to do so, not on par wih other pressing theological concerns.
Mike: And perhaps temporal time begins where the atemporal God wills someone other than Himself to love (The Son), to know and return His love (The Holy Spirit), and to share that love with non-God entities (Sophia--you and me.)
Tom: That sure looks like a denial of God's essential triune nature. In other words, God "becomes" triune when he creates time and the world.
if God is necessarily triune while the world exists contingently, then neither creation nor the determination to create (both are inseparable) can DEFINE God necessarily.]
what those who determined the final form said outside ecumenical gatherings carry tremendous weight
If they didn't explicitly mention, say, divine "self-sufficiency" in so many words, that may be because they had no demand to do so, not on par wih other pressing theological concerns.
Mike: And perhaps temporal time begins where the atemporal God wills someone other than Himself to love (The Son), to know and return His love (The Holy Spirit), and to share that love with non-God entities (Sophia--you and me.)
Tom: That sure looks like a denial of God's essential triune nature. In other words, God "becomes" triune when he creates time and the world.
if God is necessarily triune while the world exists contingently, then neither creation nor the determination to create (both are inseparable) can DEFINE God necessarily.]
TGB wrote:Stellar: How is God's plan perfect if he's not in control of the future at the same time as the present or the past?
Tom: As an open theist, my answer would be a bit controversial!
Let me ask it this way.
My son plays chess. He's OK, but nothing special in the way of chess geniuses. Let's say he were to play Kasparov or Fisher. Is there ANY doubt who will win? I don't think so. Is there any doubt who is in control of the flow of the game and where it ends up? Nah. Kasparov is. But Kasparov doesn't need to be timeless or even have a print out of all the game's moves ahead of time in order to secure the win. My son can be free to move in ways NOT determined by Kasparov (or foreknown "as certainties" or "foregone conclusions") without undermining Kasparov's control over the outcome of the game. Kasparov can perfectly anticipate all the possible moves and have adequate responses prepared. And that's just how he wins.
So I don't think God needs to be as certain of what future shall be as he is of what the past is in order to be in control enough to secure his goals for creation.
I'm rambling.
Tom
TGB wrote:Since I don't know how to establish or conceive of inter-personal relations between atemporal and temporal persons, I can't imagine the Father being absolutely timeless/atemporal and the Son as temporal. Their relation is the most deeply personal and loving imaginable.
stellar renegade wrote:Then (not to make this post too convoluted, though) the issue comes up: what of cause and effect? How can everything happen at once if one event causes another? My answer is that this is an illusion. Events are connected; however, it is the sovereign God who causes them all by His very existence.
Michael wrote:stellar renegade wrote:Then (not to make this post too convoluted, though) the issue comes up: what of cause and effect? How can everything happen at once if one event causes another? My answer is that this is an illusion. Events are connected; however, it is the sovereign God who causes them all by His very existence.
I think that's the answer to Tom's question concerning how a God who was/is atemporal sans-creation "got off the dime" and became temporal in creation (if indeed He did, and I think He did.)
Michael wrote:I also think Zimmerman may have hit on one or two points in that paper (have you had a chance to look at it?)
Michael wrote:I think Zimmerman is saying that there's a sense in which (physical) time began with creation, but there's also something like time behind creation (only it's part of God Himself.)
Michael wrote:Try to take a look at it and give me your thoughts when you can (and forgive me if some of my comments seem heretical to you, I'm just trying to sort this out here.)
stellar renegade wrote:Michael wrote:I think that's the answer to Tom's question concerning how a God who was/is atemporal sans-creation "got off the dime" and became temporal in creation (if indeed He did, and I think He did.)stellar renegade wrote:Then (not to make this post too convoluted, though) the issue comes up: what of cause and effect? How can everything happen at once if one event causes another? My answer is that this is an illusion. Events are connected; however, it is the sovereign God who causes them all by His very existence.
Became temporal? I think that God is temporal, in the Son.
stellar renegade wrote:Michael wrote:I think Zimmerman is saying that there's a sense in which (physical) time began with creation, but there's also something like time behind creation (only it's part of God Himself.)
Interesting, that's possible! I think it may even be the most satisfactory answer, if I understand it aright.
stellar renegade wrote:Heretica? hah. The label "heresy" is for witch-burners. I merely sort out by what's relevant to a good keeping of the faith in practicing the presence of God. If a belief both doesn't seem to accord with the truth and doesn't jive with the Spirit within, I'm going to end up rejecting it. Of course, I have to develop my counter-arguments as well to be able to defend my belief. But I'm definitely not just going by some council.
TGB wrote:Hi Bros!
Dean Zimmerman is a great guy. Interestingly...he's an open theist AND an A-theorist presentist. I'm familiar with him just because we linked up at an open theist conference a couple years ago in Boston where John Polkinghorne (another open theist, Anglican priest, and famous physicist). JP, what a brain!
Stellar, as far as I can tell from what you're describing, you're a B-theorist. Lots of scientists and philosophers are B-theorists. That's basically the block theory of time and the universe. An easy way to describe it is to compare it with physical locations. Just as NY, Paris, and Tokyo all exist simultaneously but in different physical locations, so past, present, and future events all exist simultaneously in different temporal locations. So Caesar's crossing the Rubicon, Hitler's ascent to control in Germany, and the return of Christ to the world are all EQUALLY and simultaneously actual, not just from God's point of view, but really, actually. The relations of "earlier than" and "later than" aren't objective. They only represent subjective points of view. God sees all these events simultaneously because they are in fact, independently of his perception of them, simultaneous. God just views it all where we are only able to view the single moment we're in.
I think this is philosophically, existentially, and morally problematic. If cause and effect are only illusory, then so is responsibility. But the me of today is held accountable for the me who committed some deed last year. But on the B-theory, these two me's are REALLY not the same me at all. Personal identity doesn't PERSIST THROUGH time. There is no abiding identity per se. Each is separate individual reality. What connects them is not "temporal becoming" (there is no such thing for the B-theorist) or "cause/effect." What connects them is a kind of stream of consciousness that flows through them and gives to each its own "moment" of awareness. So We don't "become." Rather, all the several and temporally located me's each experiences its own spark of awareness.
I don't think ANY of this works. If I am not the cause of what actions follow me but God is cause of it directly by creation, then you don't even have secondary causation. You just have straight up occasionalism. God creates the entire timeline from beginning to end--poof--and it's all equally THERE. Then a stream of awareness runs through it so that each instant enjoys its own individual "moment."
Tom
TGB wrote:Who is "they"?
Tom
If we’re one person with different temporal parts, what’s the causal relation between the parts that comprise or compose the whole person?]
what if we say that what WE are CALLING "time" is a feature of interpersonal relations, so that time is more like the "how" of loving relations? That avoids claiming that "time" is some THING that's part of God but which is an impersonal thing, as if God was composed of this and that "part" and were a "composite" being.
TGB wrote:Stellar, as far as I can tell from what you're describing, you're a B-theorist. Lots of scientists and philosophers are B-theorists. That's basically the block theory of time and the universe. An easy way to describe it is to compare it with physical locations. Just as NY, Paris, and Tokyo all exist simultaneously but in different physical locations, so past, present, and future events all exist simultaneously in different temporal locations. So Caesar's crossing the Rubicon, Hitler's ascent to control in Germany, and the return of Christ to the world are all EQUALLY and simultaneously actual, not just from God's point of view, but really, actually. The relations of "earlier than" and "later than" aren't objective. They only represent subjective points of view. God sees all these events simultaneously because they are in fact, independently of his perception of them, simultaneous. God just views it all where we are only able to view the single moment we're in.
TGB wrote:I think this is philosophically, existentially, and morally problematic. If cause and effect are only illusory, then so is responsibility. But the me of today is held accountable for the me who committed some deed last year. But on the B-theory, these two me's are REALLY not the same me at all. Personal identity doesn't PERSIST THROUGH time. There is no abiding identity per se. Each is separate individual reality. What connects them is not "temporal becoming" (there is no such thing for the B-theorist) or "cause/effect." What connects them is a kind of stream of consciousness that flows through them and gives to each its own "moment" of awareness. So We don't "become." Rather, all the several and temporally located me's each experiences its own spark of awareness.
Of the works of this mind history is the record. Its genius is illustrated by the entire series of days. Man is explicable by nothing less than all his history. Without hurry, without rest, the human spirit goes forth from the beginning to embody every faculty, every thought, every emotion, which belongs to it in appropriate events. But the thought is always prior to the fact; all the facts of history preexist in the mind as laws. Each law in turn is made by circumstances predominant, and the limits of nature give power to but one at a time. A man is the whole encyclopaedia of facts. The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn, and Egypt, Greece, Rome, Gaul, Britain, America, lie folded already in the first man. Epoch after epoch, camp, kingdom, empire, republic, democracy, are merely the application of his manifold spirit to the manifold world.
TGB wrote:I don't think ANY of this works. If I am not the cause of what actions follow me but God is cause of it directly by creation, then you don't even have secondary causation. You just have straight up occasionalism. God creates the entire timeline from beginning to end--poof--and it's all equally THERE. Then a stream of awareness runs through it so that each instant enjoys its own individual "moment." But in that case I'm not causally related to what I did yesterday in any way, or to anything that happened in the past. God is sole and exclusive cause. Events arn't related sideways to each other.They're all related (simultaneously) vertically to Gd as direct cause.
Michael wrote:Here's an interesting t.v. interview with William Lane Craig.
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