Where WOULD he even get the view then (unless he hung around BB too much :laugh: )russell55 said:Apparently, there are many published works by philosophers and theologians defending the other three views, but not so for this one.
No, cause some have claimed I am an "open theist." I do believe that God, predicated on His foreknowledge, changes His mind. I also believe that He "injects" Himself into time at important junctures to change to course of events (we call it "dispensationalism," I believe).If you think God knows future events in time because he has foresight of all things, then I'd guess your view is a higher dimension one (under the immutable category). It doesn't seem that you think God knows the events in time only from experience within time.
This might help you understand both me and webdog ---- God the Father transcends all time but changes His mind through forknowledge. Christ the Son (God) is "Alpha and Omega" (beginning and end of time) and interjects Himself and is contained in time, in creation, to accomplish His will in time. Therefore, my suggestion as to how to handle the issue is to see that God operates from without time as Father foreknowing who would believe and Christ operates in time to accomplish God's will. God can't be God outside of time but not inside it so He handles the "contradiction" in the Person of Christ.
skypair
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