The First Commandment, page-863

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    What do you think applies to the terms and references of 'declaring the end from the beginning,'

    I don't know what the end is that the declaration refers to. There is no end to forever and ever. I'd say there is a misunderstanding on the translation on what the ancients were projecting.

    and of course, all that happens in between?

    In between forever and ever, or do you have a specific time frame within forever and ever?

    What do you think is the nature of such a world?

    Are you sure the declaration is about such a world?
    That could be a mortal perspective. There are an excessive amounts of representations of forever and ever and eternity in the biblical narrative.
    This is predominately what it is about.
    Do you believe the declaration is of such a world?
    If so, cite some evidence.

    Also you have avoided answering the question.

    How do they relate to the 2 only options regarding free will in the biblical narrative?

 
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