The act does not change the Being, but only changes things that are incidental to the Being.
Then it was not the Being that was doing the acting, but the Incidentals. All hail the Incidentals! Let us praise the Incidentals!
If we can remove the incidentals, and leave the Being behind, then the incidentals are not part of the Being and should be treated separately. My clothes are not me and can be removed and treated separately. Whatever is assigned to the incidentals is relevant to them, not to the Being. My clothes go into the washing machine; I do not.
If I start a fire, I do not become the fire, and neither does the fire become me. The logic you are using is fallacious.
Not my logic. If I start a fire then I strike a match - a change. I rub two boy scouts together - a change. I take some action in time in order to create the physical effect I want. If God takes some physical action then He also has to act in time, and any action in time is a change.
Warpspeedpetey gave you an irrefutable answer.
His answer was nonsensical. The Red is not parted now. It was parted in the past. That is a change. Whatever God sees from the fifth dimension has nothing to do with time, which is the fourth dimension. Change is defined in terms of the fourth dimension, not of the fifth dimension. God@1200BCE was parting the Red sea. God@2011CE is not parting the Red sea. God at the two times is different hence God has changed by all reasonable definitions.
You have not countered the fact that no exchange of properties occurs between the actor and the thing acted upon.
I do not require such an exchange of properties. God has changed from “I will part the Red sea” to “I am parting the Red sea” to “I have parted the Red sea”. Those are properties of God, not properties of the sea.
A clear non-sequitur. The properties have no existence apart from the Actor, but an Actor can exist even without those properties.
A forest can exist without any of its trees? Go through your billionaire and remove a single molecule at a time. Repeat my argument with the forest and trees. No single molecule contains “the billionaire”. Remove all the molecules; what is left is “the billionaire”.
Since an exchange of properties between the Actor and the action or thing acted upon is not necessitated, then your argument fails.
My argument does not depend on any exchange of properties. It merely depends on a close analysis of the actions of the actor. My argument stands.
So, to repeat and earlier statement, though properties/actions are dependent on the Actor, the Actor Himself is not dependent on the properties/actions.
I do not accept an actor who does not act, any more than I accept a creator who does not create. Using an incorrect predicate will not win any arguments.
Again, God is not physical, nor is He bound by physical laws. Your arguments based on the premise that God is a physical Being don’t make the slightest dent in our beliefs.
You describe God as both unchanging and acting. I am showing that such a description requires two different entities. Neither entity has to be physical, though at least one of them needs to be able to manipulate the physical world.
As admitted earlier, we are referring to essence/nature/being. Helen will always be Helen no matter what properties she may display that are different from one point in time to the next. If this is so even for tactile creatures, it is even more so for God who is outside of time and is not a tactile Being.
Christianity generally sees the world as basically static with a veneer of apparent change laid over it. Helen is still Helen, despite the fact that she is now older than she was. The change is ignored as unimportant, not ‘real’.
Buddhism sees the world as fundamentally changing, with a veneer of apparent stasis. The designation “Helen” applies to a series of different persons, each conditioned by her predecessor, which on a casual look appear to be continuous.
One of the Buddhist analyses of the cause of suffering is this error. Looking for the permanent in what is essentially impermanent and changing is a fruitless search because you will never find what you are looking for. “You’re not the person I married,” is precisely true. You wanted to keep that person in aspic, but they have changed. Change always wins over stasis. Expecting stasis to win over change is a foolish notion.
You can never step in the same river twice because it’s not the same river and it’s not the same you.
rossum