What are the general arguments for that perspective? I should probably know this, since I've had The Christian God lying on my nightstand for some time, but I'm pretty new to academic literature, so it's a rather thick read.
The main ones are:
(1) The notion that God is literally atemporal is unbiblical.
(2) It is hard to explain how an atemporal entity could have relations with a temporal world, particularly how it could act upon the world, especially if causation is a temporal relation.
(3) If God is atemporal it means that he doesn't exist now (although it is now true that he exists), which is a bit hard to stomach.
(4) The notion of atemporality is just incoherent anyway.
In Swinburne's case, he thinks that before God created anything, time did not exactly exist as we know it because there were no events to demarcate it, so before creation God existed in a sort-of timeless state. It wasn't really timeless, but it was much like it. After creation, however, God is as temporal as anything else.
So they either made it up or they had access to a version that identified the ocean as the source.
Yes. The question is why the latter of these two options is to be preferred to the former. And if it is, then why must that source have been correct?
I dont know what the author(s) knew but I do know Genesis describes a water covered world in darkness acquiring spin closer to a star.
Honestly, you must be reading a different Genesis from the one I know. It doesn't talk about the world acquiring spin. It doesn't talk about being close to a star. It talks about things happening that,
if they were really to have happened like that,
we know would have been caused by the planet starting to spin near a star. But to assume that this means that the author of Genesis was talking about that is completely unjustified. It's like saying that a child who tells you that his dog is ill understands precisely what causes canine diseases. Of course he doesn't understand it, and to assume that anyone who describes a phenomenon must understand the causes of that phenomenon is to make a very big mistake. In the case of Genesis, just because the author describes certain phenomena such as the succession of day and night doesn't mean he understands what causes those phenomena. To say that any ancient author who talks about the succession of day and night is talking about the revolution of the earth is nothing short of disingenuous. This is so even when the phenomena described by the author are real ones - let alone when they're not real ones, as is the case with Genesis. After all, Genesis makes it pretty clear that the sun was created after the earth, which is somewhat hard to square with science.
And its also clear the author described a world (covered by water and darkness) before Heaven and Earth are "created". Why is that? Why did the author of Genesis make the effort to explain that a dark, water covered world existed before God gave it day and night? Thx again...
I don't know, but again, it's quite inconsistent with science, since there is no way there was ever a time when the earth was covered with liquid water and yet not spinning on its axis.
I don't want to carry on arguing the toss about this, so I will restate my position: I see absolutely no reason to read into ancient creation myths any great and wondrous wisdom about the true nature of reality or the actual history of the cosmos. I see no reason to suppose that the people who wrote those myths had any insight into these things, despite being just as intelligent as us, because they did not have the means to learn them. And I think that trying to read into these myths ideas consonant with modern science is nothing more than an exercise in wishful thinking which only works if you use selectivity and eisegesis - i.e. focusing only on those elements that match and ignoring the others, and reading into them ideas that aren't really there in the first place.
In the post above your's Plotinus said that Aristotle belived in God, but that God did not create the universe. Time is as much part of the universe as anything else to the human perspective.
Aristotle believed that the universe had no beginning. Of course it doesn't follow from that that he didn't think the universe depends upon God in some sense, but as I understand it our knowledge of Aristotle's theology is patchy because it was covered mainly in his lost works.
My question on the matter, is: I cannot be the first one to propose that time started when Adam was cursed. No one has ever mentioned it in a theological reference? IMO time is a restriction just like decay and entropy.
I have never heard such an idea before and I'm afraid that it makes no sense to me. As Arakhor says, if there were no time before Adam were cursed, then how could he have done anything to warrant being cursed? Indeed, if you accept that time had a beginning, how could there have been anything before that at all? Suppose that time starts at t=0. Then if there were anything before this, it would be at t=-1. But then there must be a progression of time in order to get to t=0. In which case, time has already begun before we ever get to t=0, which is contrary to the hypothesis. So if you really think that time began with Adam being cursed, then it must be that the very first thing that ever happened was that Adam was cursed, which seems pretty harsh, to say the least.
So I'm reading the Book of Matthew, and I come across chapter 6, verses 5 and 6:
5 And when thou prayest, thou shalt not be as the hypocrites are: for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and in the corners of the streets, that they may be seen of men. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
6 But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret shall reward thee openly.
The bolded sections seem to conflict
greatly with what Paul later says in 1 Timothy 2:8:
8 I will therefore that men pray every where, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and doubting.
So what gives? Are there any official stances on public prayer?
Paul didn't write 1 Timothy - it's deuteropauline. Still, you're right that there seems to be a contradiction here. I don't know if there are any "official" stances on public prayer. I do know that the early Christians prayed regularly at set times throughout the day, but I think generally in private or with each other - hardly surprising given that they could be executed for their faith. I don't know if there's any "official" view on this or on the relation between those two passages other than what Berzerker reports, which seems to me the obvious answer if one is committed to the principle of the unity of scripture.