I want to address this comment you made: "If time is part of God’s essence, he is not “subject” to it because it is part of who He is.".
I think you have the wrong concept of what "essence" is. Essence, has to do with the intrinsic nature of a thing or said another way, the quality that makes a thing what it is. No matter the subject under discussion, "time" would not be a quality of a thing nor would it be it's intrinsic nature but its realm of existence.
When talking about the essence of God, we see the Bible says He is Holy, Omnipresent, Omniscient, Immutable, Spirit and so on. Time is not part of God's makeup. Time is a construct for mankind and God uses it but it has no meaning truly to Him. As Peter wrote: But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day. When you are an eternal being, a thousand years is no different than a day. One is not longer than the other or vice versa.
You think because God is in an eternal state - the ever present now - He cannot operate within time. You use the term "frozen", which is wholly inappropriate. God is not frozen in eternity. The concept behind "the ever present now", simply means there is no past and there can be no future. If there were a past, then God had a beginning and if He has a future, then there are things He does not know. Yet Scripture says, He knows the end from the beginning. This proves that God resides within an eternal state. Everything that was, is and will be, are in the mind of God all at once. For temporal creatures such as ourselves, this makes no sense to us.
[Oh by the way, "Foreknowledge" does not mean to know the future, It means to have knowledge beforehand and is not limited to time.].
God's Decrees, are like a long single file cabinet. If He were temporal, then it would take time to move from the first decree to the second and so on. However, God's Decrees move from one to the other without time passage. There is order with God but not time. Again, for us, this makes very little sense because that is impossible for us.
Therefore, a decree of God's can come from eternity, in it's proper order and exist within time if time is necessary to carry out that decree. However, time cannot invade eternity or exist within it.
As temporal beings, it is very hard to keep ones mind on the eternal. We have a tendency to slip out of that gear and fall back into temporal thinking.
Those that say this eternal existence, as I am discussing it, causes problems, only say that because they personally don't like the implications that it enlightens.
Thanks for your reply. I disagree with pretty much everything you wrote. Allow me to explain…
First, when we speak of essence, we. are talking about God’s being or ontology. Essence is defined as “the permanent as contrasted with accidental element of being.” Thus, if part of who God is by his very nature is one who, as a personal being, has a past, present and a future. I would argue that this is the most natural way to understand the biblical texts. In fact, describing God as “eternal” suggests an endless duration
through time. Passages that speak of God having no beginning or end indicate a persisting through time rather than transcending it. God is described as being one who “lives forever” and “our God forever and ever.” He is pictured as one who has been “enthroned from of old; you are everlasting.” “Even they will perish, but you endure…But you are the same, your years will not come to an end.“ All these texts indicate an unending duration and a past that spans throughout time, not independent of it. So yes, as the texts describe God, his everlasting nature is a fundamental part of his being. In fact, I would argue that those who argue that God stands apart from time are also staking a claim on his essence. I just dont think the Bible supports it.
If anything, I think the verse you quoted supports my claim more than yours. The author does not say that time does not apply to God. Rather, the statement is that time applies
differently to God which supports a metatemporal view rather than an atemporal one. Since God is eternal, his experience of time is far different than moral beings…especially if God’s time is different from our own.
I never said that God cannot operate in time if atemporality is true. I said that time does not apply to Him. So, even though he may interact in our time, for him, if time does not exist, there is no before or after. He never thinks a new thought or performs a new act. All of these things demand a before and after. In order for God to “create” anything, there has to be a TIME when something did not exist and a TIME when it existed afterwards. Yet, if God does not exist in time, all things are present. So, while he may interact in our ”time” for him, all things are immediately present. So while for us, God’s acts may be sequential, for him, they are not. Moreover, a timeless being, imo cannot represent the God we see in the Bible who is a personal, caring, involved God who “remembers, deliberates, anticipates, decides, intends, is grieved, becomes angry, and rejoices” (Hasker, 150).
This is incompatible with a God for whom all events are simultaneously present and never experiences a new moment or thought.
I dont understand your point about foreknowledge. It seems you are undermining the point you are trying to make. To have knowledge “beforehand” indicates TIME. Before means prior to the event itself. Thus, to know something before it happens is to have knowledge of things before they happen. Now certainly this could apply to both an atemporal or temporal God if we are speaking of Gods knowledge of things from our perspective. Certainly God has foreknowledge in either case, but if God himself possesses foreknowledge from his perspective, it would imply he exists in time. I just brought up foreknowledge because of the notion that a temporal or metatemporal God necessitates he does not know the future. I dont think we have to conclude God does not exist in time to possess knowledge of things prior to their occurrence .
Im not arguing that an atemporal God is “impossible.” Certainly it is a valid theory and I can imagine a God that exists outside of time. However, I cannot imagine that God being the Christian God. I cannot reconcile God’s engagement in the world as a personal, engaged and interactive Creator who becomes man as being a God who exists in an eternal present and is not genuinely shocked, saddened, angered, or blessed by our temporal actions.