J
JamesCaruso
Guest
Time is the measure of movement. God doesn’t move. I am who am is always the same. That does not mean that God cannot observe movement. I pray. He hears. I walk. He sees. I am the one involved in movement; I am the one involved in time. But just because God is not subject to time, does not mean he is present to something I have never done, that is, my future actions. It is so simple it almost defies explanation: if I have not done it, God can not be present to it. He may foresee it, but he cannot be present to what does not exist.For time to actually exist we do not have to be able to traverse one way or the other, it simply means it is an actually existing component of the universe.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacetime
It’s wiki, but it seems fairly accurate.
I’m not sure why you’re having problems with this, as God created time (hence being unconditioned by time) does it not follow that time is an actually existing component of our universe?
Also please look up the definition of ‘strawman’ as I never made an argument for time travel (I believe the mere conception of it is incoherent). What I did make an argument for is that God is unconditioned by time and is not limited to our restricted view of past, present, and future which we experience of recurring moments of the ‘present’.
The Divine foreknowledge follows from this: God doesn’t ‘experience’ (I know this term is deficient, I can’t think of anything better at the moment) past, present, and future like us finite beings in a conditioned existence. It isn’t a form of hard determinism, or a violation of free will, it is simply a point of reference. We shouldn’t place any restriction onto God that are of our existence, such as time.
I keep hearing people talk about time as if it were a ball or an apple. God did not create time per se, but he created a universe which moves, and the way we measure that movement is called time. Tick, tock, tick, tock… the clock hands move, the pendulum swings… time is the measurement of movement. It is not a “thing” in the sense of a ball, which I can easily see that God can be all around, front and back and inside at the same time, since God is everywhere. But time is not a place, or an object… it is only a measurement. How that fits into Einstein’s mathematics, I don’t think matters… time is not a physical thing, it’s a measurement of the movement of physical things. God cannot be in the (our) future because we have not moved there yet. We move, time stays in the present. Time measures the movement between what was, and what is, and it can measure the movement between what is and what will be, from present, to present, to present. Time doesn’t move… things do. Even with Einstein’s theory of relativity, if you ask any observer what time it is, the response will always be the same, “It is the present.” Consciousness is always in the present.