S
Shike
Guest
Yes you are right, but only from the stance of temporality. You need to realize that God’s unchanging and eternal moment would “stretch” so-to-speak to cover both the times when Derek was and was not in heaven. Also, is it right to treat heaven as a place in the sense of spatio-temporal reality? When you say that God is “in” heaven it seems to imply that God is corporeal unless you understand the proper background.…well, it actually would still be a contradiction. If eternity is one unchanging moment, it would be contradictory to say “I am in heaven with Derek and simultaneously I am in heaven without Derek.” It is logically impossible to be both of those things simultaneously within one moment.
I am having a hard time using language for this because we are really on the edge of what we can know through natural theology. That is why there is room for mystery that induces wonder and awe.
You switch from the nature of God to the nature of God’s knowledge. Which is it?If God’s perspective (knowledge concerning his position in relation to other beings or his place in time, etc.) changed, it would not necessitate that the nature of God as it regards God’s knowledge had ever changed – the only possible way that the nature of God’s knowledge could change…
Wonderful! By the way, I took a ancient history of philosophy class in college and it greatly helped me by teaching me some of the technical terms that Aristotle, and hence Aquinas, employed. For instance, be careful whenever you read words such as: cause, causation, change, form, possibility, necessity, ect. They have very precise meanings that are not the same as contemporary philosophy and science. Let us know if you have questions!I actually stumbled upon Summa Theologica and my brain is getting exercised now. Thank you very much sir!![]()
Ciao,
Michael