Re: Free Will
Posted: Thu Aug 29, 2024 2:12 pm
It’s not that I “think” it: it’s that it’s necessarily the case. The term “God,” in monotheism, denotes the First Cause, not a caused sub-god. And it has nothing to do with “worthiness”; it has to do with a god having been created by some other, prior “thing.” Anything that has a prior creator is, by definition, dependent for its existence on that thing, and as such, is no longer being said to be the Supreme Being, but is a contingent, secondary being.attofishpi wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2024 10:20 amThe thing is, you seem to think that if God formed its intelligence from chaos then it is not worthy of being considered "God" - just god at best eh? - certainly, "He" will note that.
So it’s really your own description of things that is making your “God” into merely a “god.” And if there’s any insult in that, it’s actually coming from the failure of the description you’re offering.
So, sorry — the problem’s inherent to your own account of who you think “god” is.
“Rejecting” only applies to your definition. You don’t know the difference between “a god” and “the God,” apparently. So you are mistaking a Demi-god or daemon or familiar spirit for the Supreme Being…even while declaring that this “god” is not supreme, and is not the First Cause. I can’t make sense of that. Nor can anyone, I think.Again, you appear to reject God if it is not eternal
I’m suggesting that God exists as transcendent and immanent, not as some piece of mere furniture “within” the “container” of the physical world. It’s this world that derives its being from being less-than God, being “within” the power of His activity…not the other way around. That’s what “transcendent” implies.IC: "“The universe” does not refer to “a container.” It refers to everything (“uni”) in physical existence, considered in total, as one."
Are you suggesting God does not have any physical existence?