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05-15-2003, 11:25 AM | #11 | ||
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05-15-2003, 05:43 PM | #12 |
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Thanks for the welcome, guys...or girls!
"God can do anything that doesn't conflict with his divine nature. As Webster puts it, virtually all powerful - not - can do absolutely anything imaginable including that which is logically impossible. Now, as you said - yes God is all good. Because he is all good, its impossible, by the laws of his own being and nature that have existed for eternity, for Him to do wrong." If God cannot do anything that doesn't conflict with his divine nature, that is a limitation, and by our definition of the word, cannot be omnipotent. Therefore, if God is not all-powerful, then what is he? |
05-15-2003, 07:05 PM | #13 | |
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Re: Questions on God
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There are several different quasi-definitions of God used on the various forums. The classic type is the anthropomorphic god. This God usually has a human personality with human emotions, human virtues, and human vices. These are manifested by jealousy, anger, rage, love, mercy, capriciousness, justice and injustice, insecurity (need for adoration as assurance of his supremacy), and forgiveness. He is omnipotent, omniscient, and the creator of all reality. This anthropomorphic god can range from the minimal anthropomorphism of Monotheistic Allah, to the marked human raging Monotheistic JHWH, to the every human Jesus Christ who is a God-human hybrid in a trinity that believers pretend to be Monotheism. There are relatively undefined or poorly defined gods such as the one recognised by Deists, Unitarians, and Bahai’s. This god is conscious but clearly not human. He or She may or may not have emotions. That is not defined. He/She has but one function. That is to create the universe and the rules by which it runs. Then there is the totally undefined God, not of a particular religious school of thought. People say they believe in a god-creator but say that nothing can be known about this god. Another kind of god, believed by rare European and many American scientists, possibly to avert the charge of Atheism is the Inanimate God. This god is defined, as perhaps Steven Hawking would say, as the elementary forces of nature and the unified field theory of reality. This god is not a conscious being. It has no personality. It is incapable of thinking (cognition). It knows nothing. But its action results in the formation of universes, beginning with a big bang from a tiny singularity, and accounts for all of the properties of energy and matter. Those innate properties account for the evolution of matter from energy and nanoparticles, and the evolution of life from atoms combining into a series of increasingly complex molecules. Life (animal) evolves through stages of mobility, which requires some self-awareness and reactivity to cognition and intelligence. Intelligence is merely an animal behaviour evolved in stages for adaptation. This adaptation includes finding food, finding reproductive mates, and avoiding predators. As such thinking and intelligence is not necessary for a creator god who needs no food, needs no reproductive mates, and need fear no predators. Such a creator-god needs intelligence no more than a rock needs a computer keyboard. This then gets us to the question facing Atheists. In countries like the USA where Atheists are widely hated, would they be better off claiming to be theists. When asked to elaborate on God, they could reply with a Hawking style definition. They would be eligible to join the Boy Scouts of America, and previously Atheistic war veterans (10%) could join the Veterans of Foreign Wars now denied to them. Conchobar |
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05-15-2003, 09:20 PM | #14 | ||
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05-16-2003, 11:05 AM | #15 | |
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Re: Re: Re: Questions on God
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05-16-2003, 11:09 AM | #16 | |
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And again, what do you have to compare omnipotence too? How can you say God is not all powerful when we have no all powerful standard to set it to? Omnipotence is held only by God, therefore his divine nature is what defines omnipotence - not humans. If God can't do it, its below the standards of what God can do or logically impossible even for an omnipotent being. Omnipotence does not mean you can exist within a pardox and defy that which is logically impossible. |
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05-16-2003, 02:43 PM | #17 |
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And again, what do you have to compare omnipotence too? How can you say God is all powerful when we have no all powerful standard to set it to?
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05-16-2003, 03:02 PM | #18 | |
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05-16-2003, 03:08 PM | #19 |
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If god is perfect, omnipotent, and incapable of doing wrong, why did he repent for making man shortly before drowning the world in Noah's flood? And who the hell did he repent to?
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05-16-2003, 04:04 PM | #20 | |
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"And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart." Now the statements that "Lord was sorry" and it grieved him at his heart are intertwined. If you trust the gospel of Mark it explains it all. For instance, Mark 3:5 reads: "And when he had looked round about on them with anger, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, he saith unto the man, stretch forth thine hand." So one sees that the Lord was sorry that the humans during Noahs day's did not believe in him, and their ways had stirred up his just anger. |
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