freeatlast
New Member
God exists outside of time, but not exclusively outside of time. And, His becoming incarnate does not represent a change in His relationship to time. Why does it not represent a change? Because any fact that is true of a God has always been true of God. Its not that God spent all this time in eternity and then after some time became incarnate. Such a conception simply puts God back within the bounds of time. Instead, the reality of the Incarnation has always been the reality with God (in as far as our time-bound language can explain such a thing).
So, God enters time, but such an entry is not made at some point in God's time. Our mind *insists* on thinking of God's Incarnation in terms of past, present and future. In terms of history, this is absolutely accurate and even necessary. But such a conception doesn't apply when considering God's perspective. To conceive of Christ in terms of a continuum - ie. before He was incarnate He wasn't, and after He entered time He was Incarnate - is to time His eternal existence to our time-bound understanding.
You state that God lives outside of time as if you know it. However you do not know any such thing. You have no scripture to back that up. It would be fine if you said I believe, such and such, but not to say something is fact when there is no evidence. All this high brow mumbo jumbo is nothing but vanity without scripture to back it up.