One thing cannot have two opposed properties.
Agreed.
One thing cannot both be unchanging and change. If you claim that an unchanging God changes then you are implicitly splitting God into two.
I’m trying to explain that I am not. None of us knows whether or not God’s ‘thought patterns’ are identical to ours.
We can only know what ours are like. If thoughts proceed forward (as: “into the future”) then Time is of the essence, as contracts like to express. But, please explain to me how that is necessarily necessary for an infinite being - one that exists in a Now, in a Now that is outside of time?
So, you now speak of God’s essence, God’s attributes, God’s determinants and God’s nature. Which of these change? Which of these do not change? How do they differ from God, if at all?
If you had read any of the seventy-three books of the library we refer to as the Bible, you would not ask that question; you would
know that his determinants are not subject to change.
Cause and effect. The cause has to have some contact with the effect.
So, the builder must have
contact with every house that bears his name as the builder? The fisherman must have
contact with every fish caught in his nets? He must see to it that the fish is caught: directed towards the nets, entangled within the netting, and unable to get loose? An induction cooking machine must be in
contact with the metal container that houses the food to be cooked? And the
Clostridium botulinum has to be in
contact with a person displaying the symptoms of botulism?
If the effect is inside space-time then the cause also needs, at least in part, to be inside space-time as well.
Is this an
axiom? Perhaps an
unwritten one?
Excellent. We are agreed that an infinite unchanging being cannot act.
I agree that it does not act as its creatures act. That is not the same thing.
You can’t. That rossum is in the past. I suggest that instead you go and step in the same river you stepped in before.
See? I knew it wasn’t
you! The real Rossum wouldn’t be so mean spirited.
Again we can analyse this into “His will” which doesn’t change and “His act of will” which does. These cannot be the same thing because one changes while the other doesn’t.
The best we can describe His act of will, is that it is identical to His will. No thought has to take place. He is in complete receipt of all knowledge. He simply wills. His will contains it all and sustains it all. How can it be otherwise? We view it as a temporal activity; He views it as the activity of his Infinite Present: if it is even
viewed by Him. Perhaps
known is a better word.
This is an unavoidable problem for you.
Not a problem: merely difficult to adequately describe.
You are starting from an unchanging God, and moving towards some changing actions in the world.
Two points: (1) all finite being must be subject to some kind of change: both local motion (change or place) and coming to be. (2) An infinite being cannot be subject to either of them. That is what is logical and what has been revealed to us. Your affectation is your problem.
At some point you have to try to elide over the switch from unchanging to changing. It is at that point I will split things into two.
As I have shown, that is incorrect. And, you know, it really doesn’t matter whether or not you accept it. Christian thinkers have and do.
The current incarnation of JDaniel who has arisen as a result of the previous version of JDaniel and will in turn give rise to the next version of JDaniel.
Not so. I am only modified ever so slightly and not substantially. It is still JDaniel who is undergoing those minor modifications. If you don’t think that you are you, well, I’m so sorry.

Try not to be mean-spirited; at least then you’ll have one thing in common with the real Rossum!
God bless,
jd