Luke:
Think that through a bit more. Any instantiation of a square can possess differences from another one. But, the essence called squareness cannot ever alter. Unless we arbitrarily call it by another name. But, even that does not alter its essence.
That’s exactly what I said.
Again, think this through a bit more. How can infinity change? How can an exigency that entails the most excellent instantiation of every possible determinant ever change? I say to you that it cannot. If it could, then we are wrong about God and have been wrong since the beginning of Revelation. The Infinite cannot be partly infinite and partly finite. That is contradictory, besides being non-sensical. None of God’s attributes are temporal.
God’s essence as God is eternal. God’s role as creator- which is not a necessary part of his eternal essence- is not eternal. That is what I’m saying.
If you work with clay, say to make a statue, you aren’t clay yourself. You touch it. You maleate it. You apply it. But, you do not become it.
God didn’t become creation, and nowhere did I say he did.
No. The Son is God: always was and never changed. He didn’t assume anything. God united with the essence of “man” to take on the form of a man.
IV. HOW IS THE SON OF GOD MAN?
470 Because “human nature was
assumed, not absorbed”,97 in the mysterious union of the Incarnation, the Church was led over the course of centuries to confess the full reality of Christ’s human soul, with its operations of intellect and will, and of his human body. In parallel fashion, she had to recall on each occasion that Christ’s human nature belongs, as his own, to the divine person of the Son of God,
who assumed it. Everything that Christ is and does in this nature derives from “one of the Trinity”. The Son of God therefore communicates to his humanity his own personal mode of existence in the Trinity. In his soul as in his body, Christ thus expresses
humanly (
not eternally!) the divine ways of the Trinity:98
…
476 Since the Word became flesh in assuming a true humanity, **Christ’s body was finite.**112
There you go, a finite aspect to a divine Person.
Do you understand that an infinite being consumes and subsumes everything?
Absolutely not, because that would make me a pantheist, and make the divine nature of the Son subsume his human nature.
I hate to say this in this way, but, your understanding of it is utterly absurd.
Then correct it. In eternity nothing ever changes, so everything is the same as it always was and always will be. There are no new thoughts or actions possible (analogous to being a frozen statue) because if there were it wouldn’t be eternity. God’s first action apart from his eternal essence as a triune community of loving persons was to create, and that was the beginning of time.
How on earth does that make him in any way temporal?
His essence is eternal, but he must act temporally with things that are ontologically temporal. If I could go back and change my original post and thread title, I would call it an argument against God’s timelessness, not eternity. In other words, God and time are not like oil and water. Just like your essence as a human never changes yet you interact temporally with the world, so God’s essence is eternal and unchanging even though he interacts temporally with temporal things.
First: show me where that is a tenet of Catholicism.
It’s not a tenet of Catholicism either way, as far as I know. So I can propose it and not be a heretic.
Second, Infinite Being cannot possibly exist in time, in any possible way. It is as simple as that. That would be a severe contradiction. That would be timeless time. God would entail timeless time. What is more, God would entail, i.e., consist of, time and timelessness at the same time. How could that be possible?
Good, you recognize that timeless time is a contradiction. Therefore, you should recognize the absurdity of God experiencing and interacting with ontologically temporal things as though they were non-temporal (as in experiencing the whole of temporal history as one, big
now).
What I am proposing is the solution to this contradiction. God’s essence as God is eternal, but he is capable and logically required to have temporal relations with temporal things. His creator-ness, being a relation to a temporal reality, is temporal. His knowledge of the reality of the ever-changing
now of creation is changing. His free will to do something apart from his essence is temporal, since his essence is eternal and anything apart from his essence is non-eternal.