J
James_S_Saint
Guest
Yeah, I knew that you were going to bring that up.One essential tenet of Christianity is that the Son was NOT created! So yes, I am indeed saying that “God did not create God’s Son.” And your notion of the “Spirit” is also not one of Christianity – the Holy Spirit is a Person, not mere “energy,” “motion,” or “change.”
First, a “Son” is not “The Father” and how is a father, a father if not by the instigation of a son? I don’t propose to argue that point against the Church’s teachings. I just wanted to mention a difference in conceptual understandings since you brought it up.
Secondly, the Holy Spirit IS a life. Life IS energy and motion, but a specific type. The fact that “spirit” means energy (as per Strong’s Concordance, I believe) does NOT mean that a particular spirit is not a life, the “spirit of a living being/existence”.
“Eternity” means “ALL time”.Another point: you made the statement that I am assuming that “time was spent before its creation.” No; that is the whole point of the OP, and my argument is that there was no time before any creation – there was just eternity.
Main Entry: eter·ni·ty
Pronunciation: \i-ˈtər-nə-tē
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural eter·ni·ties
Etymology: Middle English eternite, from Middle French eternité, from Latin aeternitat-, aeternitas, from aeternus
Date: 14th century
1 : the quality or state of being eternal
2 : infinite time
3 plural : age 3b
4 : the state after death : immortality
5 : a seemingly endless or immeasurable time
e·ter·ni·ty (-tûrn-t)
n. pl. e·ter·ni·ties
a. The timeless state following death.
- Time without beginning or end; infinite time.
- The state or quality of being eternal.
b. The afterlife; immortality.
4. A very long or seemingly endless time:
This is what You keep asserting. Where did you get that notion? Is it in your Scriptures somewhere? {or have you been infected with materialism?}Time is a function of the created world,