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Douglas_Kraeger
Guest
I believe the it is philosophiscally provable that God must be an infinite spirit, He must be infinite in all His attributes, All-Knowing, All-Powerful, and All-Loving, with one, single, always in the present tense, outside of time and space, thought. He must be doing everything all at once because you can not have half a God, or separate thoughts or actions in a perfectly simple infinite Being. Therefore to say that God would have to change his mind, or be changing is wrong.Motion is merely change specifically referring to change in location.
Time is a measure of the motion of one thing in motion compared to another thing in motion and that is ALL it is. From any motion or change, there is a time to be measured, whether it actually has been measured or not.
When measuring time, we typically use the motion of a clock or the motion of the Sun or stars. We use something with which others can also relate so as to have a standard. But as relativity points out, if everyone’s standard for the measurement of motion, time, slowed down equally, there would be no means for anyone to realize it. Time is just a comparison so if the motion being measured as well as the motion that it is being compared to change together, there is no means to perceive that anything has occurred.
But a “beginning of time”, a beginning of any change to measure, implies that no change had occurred before that moment. That means that no changing could happen. If no changing could happen, how could anything start? Even God would have to decide, make a decision, change his mind, in order to cause the initial change that began time, yet God would have had to already been in a changing state in order to do that and thus not actually begin time.
How long did God wait before he decided to start time? He could not have waited. Thus if God is eternal, changing and thus time must also be eternal.
It actually violates no Scripture, only your misunderstanding of Scriptures. Wouldn’t you prefer to ensure that you understand them properly and not be accidentally worshiping the wrong idea?
And btw, the “entropy of the universe” concern is merely one of being on the down sides of a pendulum swing. After the entropy has consumed it thrust, the opposite begins to have the more fundamental influence as the universe no longer seemingly expands, but seemingly contracts toward a central point. The process is endless and must be so, else the entire universe could not exist.
You say, “But a “beginning of time”, a beginning of any change to measure, implies that no change had occurred before that moment. That means that no changing could happen. If no changing could happen, how could anything start? Even God would have to decide, make a decision, change his mind, in order to cause the initial change that began time, yet God would have had to already been in a changing state in order to do that and thus not actually begin time.”
Why can not an infinite God create all space, and time, and all matter, and energy, and souls that men and angels posess all at once? You say “Even God would have to decide, make a decision, change his mind, in order to cause the initial change”, but just because you say it, the theory is not proven. Can you imagine a God so infinite as to be outside of space and time? Try it. If you say that is not possible, maybe your idea of God is too small?
The fact that time would begin by it’s creation with everything else, as a gift to men, can be seen as thelogical conclusion and therefore acceptable, with no contradictions to the truth, although our theories and understandings may need adjustment.