The Creed says, "and became man." The Son of God was not always a man, but became man.
Did the pre-incarnate Logos have a human nature?
Your link sends us to an ad of the bank of Canada?
Oh what the winnie the pooh, here's the right one youtu.be
That's an unusual take on the definition of time, but I don't really think it is warranted. Keep in mind what John the Baptist said in John 1:15—
Why do papists insist on their moonspeak? Neither the OT nor the NT has a single book or even verse written in Latin, but Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek respectively.
luke 23:38
You were saying?
To be fair, it just mentions the language, it doesn't actually switch to Latin script or anything.
did God always have free-will, reason, morality and every innate quality that makes man dignified and above the animals? Yes. Yes he did. And lots more too.
There are Latin words in Mark's Gospel (he worte in Rome for Romans after all) such as census, modius or sextarius.
Also
If it's good enough for Cross it's good enough for you.
The correct langue for them. Just like people insisting on KJV only
A some words = entire book written in a langue.