Michael Bird interviews Brandon Smith on why he wrote The Trinity in the Book of Revelation
The Trinity in the Book of Revelation: Interview with Dr. Brandon Smith
https://youtu.be/rF95ts2Ezq0
Michael Bird interviews Brandon Smith on why he wrote The Trinity in the Book of Revelation
The Trinity in the Book of Revelation: Interview with Dr. Brandon Smith
https://youtu.be/rF95ts2Ezq0
In what sense is God "eternal"? I'm not dogmatic on any particular theory of God's relation to time. Whether the various A-theories, or B-theory etc. My default position is divine timelessness [i.e. B-theory]. But I'm not wedded to it, and there are alleged problems with it for Christianity. William Lane Craig, for example, proposes that God is timeless sans creation, but temporal since creation. Others, like Ryan Mullins, believe God is everlastingly temporal. However, on the face of it, that seems to lead to opening the door to a denial of the Trinity and the affirmation of some kind of Arianism (e.g. Semi-Arianism). Ryan T. Mullins addresses that concern in his paper, "Divine Temporality, the Trinity, and the Charge of Arianism." Here's the link:
https://journals.tdl.org/jat/index.php/jat/article/download/jat.2016-4.172413122018a/298
Or:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1W4AakFLihD562LFoV4aqi0cMsQ_hbUY2/view?usp=share_link
Having read the paper, I'll likely review it in the future. Long story short, Mullins' answer is to reject the traditional doctrine of the eternal generation/filiation of the the Son and the eternal procession/spiration of the Holy Spirit. I'm open to that view, but lean toward an affirmation of both traditional doctrines.