He is not right at all. Some of the Early Church Fathers, most notably Origen, who was probably the greatest of the early Christian theologians, believed in the pre-existence of spirits. The church didn’t seem to be too worried about that at that time. There are also biblical passages that indicate the pre-existence. To Jeremiah the Lord declared: “Before I formed thee in the belly I knew thee; and before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations” (Jeremiah 1:5). If God knew Jeremiah before he was born, then he existed before he was born. To Job the Lord declared: “When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy” (Job 38:7). This speaks of a time before the foundation of the world was laid. Who were those “sons of God” who “shouted for joy” in the pre-existence when the world was created? When the Lord’s disciples questioned Him concerning the blind man who was born blind, this conversation took place: “And his disciples asked him, saying, Master, who did sin, this man, or his parents, that he was born blind? Jesus answered, Neither hath this man sinned, nor his parents: but that the works of God should be made manifest in him” (John 9:2-3). How could the blind man have sinned if he had not pre-existed before he was born?
zerinus
OK, a quick :twocents: then I’m off to bed. I need some sleep so that my term paper will come out making a little bit of sense.
I’m not going to research and pick apart the various bible translations of these verses tonight, although that might shed some light on this. As I said, I need to sleep sometime.
Z, what you have stated about the ECFs and preexistence sounds logical if you hold also that both the universe and God are bound by time. If God exists wholly within Linear Time, one way for God to personally an individual before he exists in bodily form is for the spirit to exist first.
Two considerations arise as alternate ideas on how God can know someone before the body/soul are created, and both do not require pre-existence. The first is the omniscience and omnipotence of God. Omniscience, of course, is part of the basic definition of God. If God knows all things that have happened, are happening, and will happen even before they come about, God can know us personally before we exist.
The second alternative has to do with the nature of Linear Time and its relation to God. Now Linear Time deals with Past, Present, and Future. Those three words only make sense within time. If time does not exist, neither do Past, Present, or Future, and there is no way to distinguish between their essences. Man mortal existence is wholly within time, and by requirement, therefore, his whole perspective is colored by Past, Present, and Future (Before, During, and After).
So, here we go with the second alternative: God is greater than everything, therefore God is greater than time. God created everything, therefore God also created time. This means that God existed when and where time did not exist. In a nutshell, God’s basic nature is completely outside of time, although God, being omnipotent, has the ability to enter time and follow the rules of time, as Jesus Christ did during His mortal life.
The end result of this: God can know something “before” it exists (“before” is Man’s perspective), because God is outside of time where Before, During, and After are meaningless.
And as you ponder that one, you get to join me in staying up all night thinking. At least you’re not also writing a term paper.
Nan