Much I read in Scriptures indicates temporality as we know it may not apply to the afterlife. But that is beside the point.
No, it is not beside the point. It is the point. What you believe, however tentatively, is either biblical or it is not. And if it is not, then say so plainly. I myself hold some extra-biblical beliefs (i.e., not drawn from Scripture), and I am perfectly willing to admit that candidly when they arise in discussion.
But if what you believe is biblical, then you need to show the biblical evidence that led to it. You provided six scriptural quotations (Isa. 55:8-9; Ps. 103:12; Num. 23:19; Eph. 1:23; Ps. 113:4-6; Rom. 11:33). Are those the texts that bring our view of temporality into question, that led you to believe temporality as we know it may not apply to the afterlife?
All six of those quotes from Scripture concern divine incomparability or the unsearchableness of God’s deeds or judgments. They establish that God is not like us, that our guilt is removed farther than gone, and that the fullness of Christ is brought to bear in and through his body, the Church. All of that is well and good, but none of this addresses whether creaturely existence is temporally conditioned, either in this life or in the life to come.
What is particularly astonishing is that you allow this nebulous speculation—which you admit is suspect and perhaps even wrong—to govern your reading of texts that directly speak to the afterlife. That is simply incredible. An ill-defined Tier 3 conjecture that is acknowledged by its own advocate to be leaky and doubtful ought to remain subordinate to clearer biblical statements (e.g., Rev 22:3-4). What God clearly reveals should govern our thinking; our thinking must not govern what God clearly reveals. Tier 1 is not governed by Tier 3.
My inability to show any Tier 1 indicators does not invalidate my point. It only makes it suspect.
I agree that it does not invalidate your point, but it does create a useful contrast. What I believe is established by and subordinate to certain clear texts. What you believe is not established by any texts thus far produced, and yet it functions to qualify and govern your reading of what God has said. You have Tier 1 being subordinate to Tier 3. That is a gutsy move.
I can quote many passages that bring our view of temporality into question—even in this temporal realm …
I will make it easy for you: Provide just one. (If you think any of the aforementioned six biblical texts do this, please show how it does so.)
[I can think of biblical passages that point to] a lack in our current understanding of just what temporality means, if there even is such a thing in the afterlife.
That seems to reflect something I said in my post, that time in the afterlife “may be insignificant, unmeasured, or phenomenologically unlike our present experience”—which, in fact, is close to what I believe. But that is very different from saying that creaturely existence in the afterlife is not temporally conditioned.
So this is precisely the distinction I have been pressing: transformed temporality is one thing; no temporality is another. The former is at least intelligible and arguably consistent with Scripture. The latter is a much stronger claim, and one which seems to have no biblical warrant.
Which is why I find it curious that you won’t take this obvious off-ramp.
But you won't see these the way I do.
Of course not, because I don’t subordinate divine revelation to the filter of suspect, ill-defined human speculations.
And please don't argue that that view removes all meaning from "temporal", which sort of argument seems to be your penchant.
I have never argued that our epistemic limitations render certain terms meaningless. If you think I have—and often enough to call it my “penchant”—then you have badly misunderstood something I have argued or said. But since you don’t quote me to that effect, I have no idea how you reached this.
This is exactly why statements being critiqued should be quoted, preferably with a link (Rule 2.2).
What I have argued is that drawing conclusions about the creaturely from statements about the Creator commits a radical category error. And that is what I have seen you do, repeatedly: We don’t know what x is like from God’s point of view, therefore we cannot say that x applies to creatures. That is invalid because it blurs the Creator–creature distinction. There is what is proper to the Creator, and there is what belongs to creatures. Indeed, the inference fails doubly here, because we actually can say it applies to us, as God himself has said so.
Of course we can’t know the way God sees things. That is precisely the Creator–creature distinction: His knowledge is archetypal, necessary, original; ours is ectypal, contingent, analogical. So yes, “our concepts are short of facts,” but they are not necessarily “meaningless or useless.” But here is the thing: God knows as God knows, and he is the Author of what we find in Scripture. We can doubt ourselves and what we think, but we ought to trust God and what he said.
“We don't really know what we are talking about,” you said, and I agree. But God knows what he’s talking about.
That I am unable (or unwilling) to invalidate your argument does not render my statement logically invalid …
True. However, my view and its arguments are not relevant here. The controversy is about your view and its arguments. From time to time I may contrast your view with mine, but I will never evaluate it in light of mine.
That I am unable to adequately represent what I want to say, or even to inadequately hold a cogent concept in my head that I wish to represent, does not render that concept/statement invalid
Being unable to formulate an idea clearly or express it adequately is normal enough; I have experienced that myself. But if the idea remains nebulous—indeed, if it may not even be cogent in your own head—then there is no reason to treat it as warranted, much less to let it function as
a controlling interpretive principle for Scripture.
I think it is legitimate to hold space for an unclear idea, but one should not rest there indefinitely. The proper movement is from basic intuition, to clarifying articulation, to critical evaluation, with every stage subordinate to the norming authority of Scripture.
The argument you present, if I may try to represent it here—that to “remove” the temporality from creaturehood removes the distinction between creature and Creator—to me is at best puerile and at worst superstitious, and neither one logical.
You did not represent it accurately, so the invective is directed at an argument I did not make.
My argument is not that removing temporality from creaturehood would somehow make the Creator and creature indistinguishable (“removes the distinction between”). My argument is that you are reasoning from what is proper to God as Creator to conclusions about creatures as such, and that this is a fundamental category error. A non-temporal mode of being is proper to God, but it is not, simply on that account, transferable to creaturely existence.
Not that this following makes any real difference, but let me restate with a slight difference: While I agree with the fact that [forever we are] creatures, I don't agree that temporality necessarily applies to the afterlife.
I mean to show a difference in the realm I commonly refer to as “temporal” versus the “heavenly” realm. And that I say we don't even know enough about existence to see how God sees temporality in THIS realm, does not mean that I have removed distinctions between it and God's economy ('spirit realm', heaven, or whatever other levels or realms there are outside of or enveloping this one). It only means that I don't categorize in the firm clear-cut, concrete, distinctions you do.
So, while you may say that now I have changed my parameters, (I have only restated to try to show my view more expanded: my view remains the same), I am trying to help you see that I don't hold the distinctions you do between, 1. Temporal vs Eternal as necessarily separate (at least, in the WAY you see the distinctions); and, 2. Temporal vs Eternal as necessarily coincident (at least, in the WAY you see them as coincident). I see the temporal as swallowed up into the eternal, and this little view we have now as mere humans as stilted and necessarily childish, ignorant.
You have not actually argued or shown that temporality may not apply to creaturely existence in the afterlife, so it remains unclear what exactly you are basing that claim on. You have argued only that human concepts are limited and that your own distinctions are looser than mine. That is fine as far as it goes—which isn’t very far. More to the point, the relevant categories are not self-generated human concepts, for they are revealed in and governed by Scripture, so they are given to us by God.
I may get the rest of your post later, but I want this much understood and answered. I don't categorize how you do, and I don't think concretely how you do. I don't mean to criticize as though you should do different, but I DO think believers should have some healthy self-skepticism about their concepts and conclusions.
There is nothing objectionable to that in the abstract. But in context, it functions as a substitute for argument. The dispute is not whether Christians should be self-critical. The dispute is whether an ill-defined and poorly supported speculation, which you admit is suspect and probably wrong, should be allowed to function as a controlling interpretive principle for Scripture.