ChrisVer said:
The Schwarzschild geometry is the solution of static spherically symmetric EFE
Careful. The "static" is often included, even by highly reputable sources, but it's not actually entirely correct. The only source I'm aware of that gets this exactly right is MTW. Even good textbooks like Wald, or good online lecture notes like Sean Carroll's, use the word "static" too broadly in this connection.
Here's the entirely correct statement: the Schwarzschild geometry is the unique solution of the spherically symmetric
vacuum Einstein Field Equation. (Note the "vacuum", and that "static" is not there.) This statement is a theorem, known as "Birkhoff's Theorem".
It turns out that this unique solution is static
outside the horizon. And since the region outside the horizon is often the only region that needs to be discussed, you very often see sources saying that the Schwarzschild geometry is "static", without bothering to mention that that's only true outside the horizon. Many sources even say that Birkhoff's Theorem says that the Schwarzschild geometry is static (which is not what the theorem says, though the fact that the Schwarzschild geometry is static outside the horizon is indeed an immediate consequence of the theorem--consequence, not premise).
Inside the horizon, the Schwarzschild geometry is not static. (If you want the gory technical details, I can provide them, but I don't want to make this post too long.) But it is still the unique solution of the spherically symmetric vacuum EFE. So the fact that this solution is not static inside the horizon shows that, as I said in post #7, there are no timelike paths inside the horizon along which the metric coefficient ##g_{00}## (or indeed any metric coefficient) is constant. So inside the horizon, the metric does "depend on time".