Not from a Christian perspective, the human body is designed in many ways for many things. For example, the human body was not designed to deteriorate and age. We see this in Genesis.
The Christian perspective here is incorrect. We aren't going to find any agreement here.
Have you opened the Bible lately? It doesn't need to be announced, it's general knowledge.
I don't think that knowledge is the correct word to use in this sentence. It is an assumption. It is an assumption with such limited basis in fact that you have to construct a complex "logical" game to maintain its validity, and even then the paradoxical contradictions are still explicitly stated.
You certainly can have limited power. I have the power to kill people, knowing the martial arts I do, but I don't go around doing that because I follow moral principles that guide me not to. How is that paradoxical?
You can certainly have a limited power. Can you have a limited omnipotence? Omnipotence is an unlimited power. You are arguing that God is omnipotent, not that he is potent. The paradox remains.
The only thing that doesn't add up is what you expect to see in your limited idea of God's character, and what you see in the world. You would expect a perfectly good God to do everything you consider good. Is it good to force people to follow God's will? Is it good to let some people lead other people astray? Is it good to allow people who wish to follow God to lack experience with conflict? Your assumption about God's character fails to take any of those questions and more like them into consideration when you assert the above.
I don't expect God's idea of what is good to match mine completely at all. I do, however, look around the world and see suffering that is without justification, terrible violence and persecution and I struggle to imagine how all of that could fit into anyone's conception of what is good.
This is an assumption on your part: creation is not causation. People still have free will, even if God knows what will happen.
This is just another word game bereft of logical coherence. You want to have your cake and eat it too. You want your God to be good, omnipotent and omniscient, but then need to reconcile this with a plethora of experience which contradict at least one, if not all, of these attributes. Not surprisingly, the attempts to do so fail.
That's a question for people with theological backgrounds, not those unfamiliar with it.
Only if you think that theology is the only source of morality in the world. There is very good reason to believe that is not the case.
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