How do you make this logical connection:But if you agree with me that we are time bound, then so are all creation and events time bound.
1. Humans are time bound.
2. If humans are time bound, all of creation and events must be too.
Why do you think step 1 logically leads to the conclusion in step 2? I can't see any reasonable inference and you gave no arguments at all.
I'm not either. It's simple logic, that if God is at all times and places he doesn't need to travel anywhere.'I' am not the person suggesting time travel. And 'I' am 'not' the one suggesting different points on a time line as a reality. I am saying it is absurd.
Can you explain to me, in any way whatsoever, how the logic of what I said, leads you to deduce that God time travels? Does he need to time travel to a time he already exists in? I agree what you're saying is absurd, I just have no idea how you can compare it to what I said.
But this is from a human perspective. How can you insist God must have a human perspective? Humans are this way, so God has to be too?2. Or as your illustration suggests He knows it because it has happened: As your illustration suggests, just as God sees the already happened past, God sees the ________ future.
There is no alternative: something is either predicted to happen / or it has happened


God does not have a central nervous system conveying electronic impulses from various parts of a body. When I say God sees the future, I mean as a disembodied spirit he knows all things that ever were or ever will be. He is distinct from creation entirely (time is a creation) and his attributes cannot be limited by what limits our perceptions. He is no more subservient to a temporal location as humans are than a physical location, as humans are.There is nothing in the future for God to see, or hear, or touch.