You equated my affirmation that God makes choices (which is what he said, not me) with the apocalyptic symbolism symbolism relating to God having horns. You do this every time I say something like, "We know God makes choices because he tells us that he makes choices," and you reply dismissively saying something like, "I suppose you think he has horns too?"
Does that demonstrate how you have done this clearly enough?
Suppose if you said, "God says he doesn't approve of homosexuality," and a homosexual advocate responded saying, "I suppose you think God has horns too?" You would say, "What? That doesn't even relate." I agree. It doesn't. Just like you saying it doesn't relate to God's revealing that he makes choices.
No, but this pretends that the lines for when to apply and when not to apply anthropomorphism to God are blurry.
They are not.
They are clearly defined. Whenever, whether in apocalyptic, poetic or didactic language the Bible ascribes some human-like characteristic to God which contradicts what the whole of Scripture clearly defines him as- then it is anthropomorphic.
God cannot consider in the sense that he needs to make up his mind what to do about something because the whole of Scripture clearly reveals that God is omniscient.
So we understand texts that say he considers, chooses, imagines, etc... to be anthropomorphic.
The homosexual in the anecdote you provide is not dismissing a surface teaching of a text based on it violating the nature of God clearly revealed throughout the whole of Scripture.
Thus, what the homosexual in that anecdote is doing and what I am doing by identifying such texts as anthropomorphic in nature cannot rightly be equated.
A = not A (law of non-contradiction)
No, no. That is not an accurate representative formula of what I am purporting.
A= anthropomorphic language not actual choice just like in another text A= anthropomorphic language not actual right hand.
Right, but your not going around to your church members contradicting that teaching by saying, "Jesus doesn't sit at the right hand of the Father." Do you?
I am not talking to my church members- I am talking to a seminary educated man.
And, actually, some of my church members DO understand this and do not choke on it and with them I do speak in those terms.
Of course you don't. Instead you probably say something like, "that symbolizes Jesus as in a place of authority with God." You are affirming the symbol not denying it. With the choice thing you are just denying it, you aren't offering anything except a A = not A.
Answered above.
God says he makes a choice and you believe he doesn't really make a choice, period. You think it just is, which isn't a choice, thus A = not A and you violate your own laws of logic.
God says Jesus sits at his right hand until he makes Jesus' foes his footstool too.
He doesn't really sit at the Father's actual right hand and the foes are not going to be literally turned into a footstool.
a= anthropomorphic language- not actual choice and not actual right hand and actual footstool.
As I said, even with man the concept of 'forgetting sins against you' has never meant an inability to recall them...so I don't see how this supports your point? We both affirm its actual meaning because neither of us think it means God doesn't have the ability to recall sins committed against him.
Yes, but I think God never has to RECALL it as if it is ever knowledge stored away that he needs to tap into. The knowledge of it is ever before him.
The reason I think this is because I believe the whole of Scripture teaches that God is TRULY omniscient.