That question is unanswerable, because if time had a beginning (and I believe it did), then it is meaningless to speak of "prior to time starting".are you suggesting that these three texts cannot mean that God existed prior to time starting?
If there was any time "prior" then there must have been time prior to time starting! Surely this is altogether meaningless.
the end of what from the beginning?Scripture says He knows the end from the beginning
If you read the statement in context, you will discover that the subject is God's plan. Of course God knows every aspect of His plans. This knowledge in no way implies that He knows every aspect of every choice that a person makes before that choice is made.
I gave a reason ---- a logical reason. But it seems you are unwilling consider it.I have no reason, that I know of, to doubt that God knows every detail of the future.
The fact that He is God does not make it at all likely that He performs actions which are inherently contradictory. Can He create a being that is both totally human and totally non-human? Can He make 2+2=4 and also make 2+2=5? Can He cause a flower to be totally yellow and totally blue simultaneously? Can He create a stone so large that He cannot lift it?The fact that He is God, by definition, seems to make this likely.
etc., etc., etc.
If you can believe in contradictions, it is your privilege. I can't.
The prime reason is a logical one, not theological. Yet there is plenty of scriptural evidence (which I have not yet brought forth).And I can not think of any theological reason why that makes this limitation necessary.