I think that the Scriptures are fairly clear that God is omniscient and has a plan for us. And that we can choose to reject his will for us. The two are indeed contradictory, if we were speaking of a human. But God, by definition, is not, and has attributes we cannot explain or understand (though we can certainly try).
Yes the scriptures may say many things...I just don't believe them. When I put some of the statements under test...they produce contradictions
For all I know, God is like the Kwisatz Haderach from Herbert's "Dune" books, and can see all possible futures and pasts. Unlike him, God can see the best plan for each person. I don't know. The Bible, which tells us a great deal about God's attributes, does not go into the "how" aspects of this.
I also think of God as outside of the time stream. It's a human rationalization, but how else does one understand the many times the Bible explains God's relationship to time as being intimately connected to both what we call the past and what we call the future? What God sees when he looks at my timeline could be the "past" to him, even though I have not done it yet. Again, I have no idea.
But the focus for me is not how God knows this stuff, but rather the hope I have because he knows it. God HAS a plan... a reason for my specific existence... just as he ahs a plan for yours. I can veer from that path; I can even deny him completely. But that doesn't change the fact that he has a plan, and that he sees both my past and my future (or many futures). And that wherever I am, he is with me and loves me.
It's kinda like when people ask me when I was saved. I answer, "Oh, about two thousand years ago on a cross in Jerusalem". Time isn't the point. God's love is. The whole Bible is a story of God reconciling us to himself... the rest is interesting, but not central.
I think that the Scriptures are fairly clear that God is omniscient and has a plan for us. And that we can choose to reject his will for us. The two are indeed contradictory, if we were speaking of a human. But God, by definition, is not, and has attributes we cannot explain or understand (though we can certainly try).
Yes the scriptures may say many things...I just don't believe them. When I put some of the statements under test...they produce contradictions.
Even if we can't understand all of your god's attributes, for the ones that have been described then for them to be true they must not be inconsistent
For all I know, God is like the Kwisatz Haderach from Herbert's "Dune" books, and can see all possible futures and pasts. Unlike him, God can see the best plan for each person. I don't know. The Bible, which tells us a great deal about God's attributes, does not go into the "how" aspects of this.
But even if every permutation of any conceivable collection of events is played out in infinitely many timelines, 'I', Greg[sub]1[/sub], exist in only one of them.
Your god can know all things it is possible for me to do given these other timelines and I say this is fine...but the moment you say your god knows what Greg[sub]1[/sub] actually does then from the point where I live out my existence on this timeline I have no choice but to do exactly what your god sees me do...and since your god can see both the beginning and the end of this timeline simultaneously, then as he creates our universe...he creates the sequence of events that will be played out on this timeline and sees all events on this timeline simultaneously...there can be no variance in this sequence of events since your god sees everything simultaneously.
I also think of God as outside of the time stream. It's a human rationalization, but how else does one understand the many times the Bible explains God's relationship to time as being intimately connected to both what we call the past and what we call the future? What God sees when he looks at my timeline could be the "past" to him, even though I have not done it yet. Again, I have no idea.
No matter how one chooses to wriggle, omniscience implies your god knows precisely what I do at any point on any and all points on a particular timeline...it doesn't matter here how he knows it, it doesn't even matter if he isn't timeless and resides in n-dimensional time free to zip between temporal dimensions willy-nilly (with all the paradoxes that come with this formulation)...all that is important is that given he knows all actions I perform, and he created a universe whereby I would perform them, I necessarily have to perform them actions from the point on this timeline where I exist...otherwise what he sees and knows I will do at all points on this timeline, and then what I actually do are different...a contradiction
But the focus for me is not how God knows this stuff, but rather the hope I have because he knows it. God HAS a plan... a reason for my specific existence... just as he ahs a plan for yours. I can veer from that path; I can even deny him completely. But that doesn't change the fact that he has a plan, and that he sees both my past and my future (or many futures). And that wherever I am, he is with me and loves me
If your god does have a plan...then so long as he doesn't know what actions I will perform I will run with your assertion we have free-will...otherwise repeat what I've said above
It's kinda like when people ask me when I was saved. I answer, "Oh, about two thousand years ago on a cross in Jerusalem". Time isn't the point. God's love is. The whole Bible is a story of God reconciling us to himself... the rest is interesting, but not central.
I have yet to determine that this 'story' is feasible
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