
Originally Posted by
PrinceMyshkin
I would imagine that many peolpe who want to get to the bottom (or top) of this mytery may have started with Aquinas (although that is certainly not necessary). Personnaly I pleasantly had the wind knocked out me by Aquinas and Augustine, being the rosary toting, novena celebrating, mass going Catholic kid that I was. But the quotes here all pose incredibly intelligent questions and statements.
And so I don't have to keep stating that this is just my opinion, I say it here at the top. As I have stated elsewhere, I generally step on tender areas unintentionally when I attempt this, so forgive me if I do.
First, Bii hit the year-nail on the head. All of the debate from time immemorial speaks from the position of God hanging around for a google of millenia and then deciding to create the universe. I don't see it that way. The purported supreme intelligence of God is predicated on intelligence as we experience it. The same goes for the characteristic of omniscient, omnipotent and infinite. We see intelligence mostly as something focused. We have to see it that way to analyze it quanitatively. God is outside these types of analyses because the intelligence of God is somewhat an unfocused intelligence. The closest example we can identify with in abstract art, Jackson Pollock, if you will.
The focus of God's intelligence comes from us!! We invented the awareness of God and thus are responsible for God's existence. This is not meant to be a figurative statement. Before us we had a spontaneous transformation of highly concentrated matter and energy intrinsically endowed with intelligence as ubiquitous and embedded as cosmic background radiation has come to be known. As we evolved, so did the focus of God. This is not to detract from the eternal nature of God, not as depicted in the Holy books of the world's cultures, but nevertheless always was and always will be. As Prince points out, inspired humans wrote the bible, humans like we who are discussing this very matter here. They tried to express the same thoughts as we. Our advantage is the insight into ourselves and the universe and the very nature of matter and energy, which in fact is God's insight. God is alive through us. God knows God through us. We are the image and likeness because we are a mirror.
So how does God know what will happen for all time? God doesn't know that. We have all heard that time itself does not exist, it is a construct. We have all heard that one of the current hypotheses for reality is that it is multi-layered, there are many universes within the fabric space/time. So, everything happens at once. Past, present and future are fabrications we use to make sense of something "beyond our existence." The idea of an omnicient God is an attempt to reconcile a multi-layered universe with what was available in 3000 B.C. for the Bible, much earlier for Hebrew, Muslim and Hindu holy books, I think.
This way of God existing is quite backwards from traditional thinking as far as I know. It is present in the poetry of Rilke and possibly others. God knows what we are thinking because we know what we are thinking. We know what we are going to do (if even unconsciously) before we do it.
However, there are unpredictable events in the universe(s). Although, given a high-level view of all parallel realities, that would be much diminished from what we mean by that in this reality, given this hypothetical scientific POV.
In the end, this should not diminish one's faith or belief, just as knowing the way a play is written does not diminish our enjoyment of it. God is much like these boards, given they would not shut them down if no one posted. They would still exist, the intelligent idea behind them would be there, but they would have no focus or life. The End.