Is it possible to state, as a fact based on personal emotion, that there is a greater thrill of speeding at 130 mph than at 110 mph, if you have not actually experienced it? God, because of his unboundless nature, is able to know/feel the results of an action before it occurs within our timeline. In our world, time drives everything; but in God's existence, time was created as a tool for us to use as a way to measure all things. To us time is linear and sequential, but He does not live within this concept. As a result, His wisdom drives happiness and vice versa. And as such, He may experience being the wisest and the happiest concurrently.
Is it possible to state, as a fact based on personal emotion, that there is a greater thrill of speeding at 130 mph than at 110 mph, if you have not actually experienced it?
ReplyDeleteGod, because of his unboundless nature, is able to know/feel the results of an action before it occurs within our timeline. In our world, time drives everything; but in God's existence, time was created as a tool for us to use as a way to measure all things.
To us time is linear and sequential, but He does not live within this concept. As a result, His wisdom drives happiness and vice versa. And as such, He may experience being the wisest and the happiest concurrently.