This answers no questions. If time is relative, relative to what? How do measure/quantify it? Do we transcend to dimensional time as a prospective property of universal existence? How do we define that?dad wrote:Time as we know it is not the only time. Time in this natural universe is based on what we know, like light speed, space, etc. Time as we know it will forever disappear as the new heavens are revealed. Nevertheless, though it will be not a limoting factor then, as it now is, time will likely exist. God made the world, and we know there was at least one witness to that, as we see the lady in Proverbs 8 talk about that day! Therefore She existed before the creation of the universe, and knew what a day was! Days did not start when this universe came to be.Mastriani wrote: If the universe is now, and has been, and it is agreed that it came from some point in time, how could there not be a "before"?
If time is also a property of the universe, it must have existed before the universe? Or is this another philosophical conundrum of the watcher being absent, so it couldn't have existed?
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The light in a merged universe is also spiritual, so is not limited by our physical only universe speeds as the light here is. This is why Adam, in that merged past world, saw the light that then was from the far stars almost right away.
Time is relative. Our time we know is relative to the physical only universe. Our light is relative. It is relative to the physical universe it exists in, with it's speeds and properties. Everything is relative, but, where Einstein fell short is that everything is relative to the spiritual and physical, not just to the PO universe! He only had a part of the big picture.
I am well aware of the presence of Sophia (French translation of the Hebrew word for wisdom), but this has been dropped by both the Judeaic and Christian communities as "mysticism". It is one of the most essentially misunderstood deletions of the Torah, but I digress, that is for another thread.
I have asked this question before, but apparently no one has wanted to answer the question: How does one condescend to understanding the measure of a "day" to an eternal being such as the Creator? There is little we can define with certainty in our observable universe, how arrogant to presume to know the nature of time in reference to The One. Yes, I scoff at scientists, and anyone else, who dares to presume to know the definition of such.