I have to respectfully disagree. God is among us and/or within us. What we do to and for others we do to Jesus (God).
Scripture, please.
God is not in all of us; that is, His Spirit does not dwell in everyone. God is imminent in His Creation, yes, but He is not His Creation any more than the painting an artist paints - even if it is a self-portrait - is actually the artist. God is entirely distinct from His Creation though He is omnipresent within it.
Which means God is within them, is within everyone.
Nope. God is not in every person, though we are all of us bearing His image. Only in His redeemed, born-again children does God dwell by His Spirit and in no others. All others, the Bible indicates, are the enemies of God, rebellious sinners separated from God by their sin, standing constantly under His holy wrath (
John 3:36; Ephesians 2:1-3; Titus 3:3; Colossians 1:21; Romans 3:23) and desperately in need of a Savior.
God can't be someplace away or outside of us, because then God would have physical limitations (which is what the Jews in the early parts of the Hebrew Bible thought). If the Holy Spirit resides within us, then by Christian definition God resides within us.
God is every
where, omnipresent, but He is not
in everything in the sense in which the Holy Spirit is within born-again disciples of Christ. That God chooses not to be in everything in the spiritually-regenerating way He is in His own children does not mean He has a limit imposed upon Him by some superior, external power which would mean He was not truly God, but is a state-of-affairs that
He wills to be, a constraint or limit
He puts on Himself. In the same way, God is not in a rock, or insect, or mop; He is not in a tree, or mushroom, or lava flow. He has created and sustains these things by His power but this does not require that He exist within them such that we could worship any of these things and simultaneously be worshiping God.
I've already explained the matter of the indwelling Holy Spirit and nothing you've observed above defeats or rebuts my comments, as far as I can see.
We also cannot limit God's presence to born-again believers. Jesus points out many instances where those who were not members of the "chosen people" were acting on the Spirit within them.
Scripture, please.
No, the Spirit is NOT us, but the Spirit is within us.
We are in agreement, then.
In my personal interpretation we call that our soul, which everyone has.
Well, if who or what the Spirit is comes down merely to personal, subjective interpretation, then the Spirit can be anything. But this is to make the Spirit of God merely a reflection of us, to make ourselves, really, the Maker and Shaper of God. Fortunately, we have the Bible that gives us an objective, authoritative revelation of God which describes the Holy Spirit for us very well. That description, however, rather defies your personal interpretation of who and what He is.
Quick facts:
- Called the Comforter or Helper (“Paraklete” in Greek) –
John 14:16; the Spirit of Christ –
Romans 8:9; the Spirit of Grace –
He. 10:29; Spirit of the Lord –
2 Corinthians 3:17-18.
- The third Person of the Trinity. (
Matthew 28:19; Acts 5:3-4; 1 Corinthians 2:10-11)
- He is not a force, or divine spiritual energy, but
a distinct personal entity who may grieved (
Ephesians 4:30), who teaches and reminds (
John 14:26; 1 Corinthians 2:13), who speaks (
Acts 8:29; 13:2), who makes decisions (
Acts 15:28), who can be lied to (
Acts 5:3-4), who has a mind (
Romans 8:26-27), and so on.
Most of us fail to connect with it, to activate it. It requires an action, not just a belief. One could say I believe in the light from that lamp, but it only works if we switch it on.
Yeah...no.
Yes, our "heart" can contain evil, but it is not limited to that.
Did someone say that it was so limited? I didn't.
Goodness and light is also contained within us.
Not according to the Bible. We have the potential for goodness, perhaps, we possess a Moral Law "written on our hearts" by God, our consciences, and the constraints of lawful society keep us from wholesale evil, but we are not light, but, rather, full of darkness and living in the kingdom of darkness (
Colossians 1:13; Ephesians 5:8).
To see us as only evil is an extremely dim view of humanity.
Hey, talk to God about this, not me. He's the One who, in His word, describes us in such unflattering ways.