Pote said:
If I can weight in... I agree with Didaskalos's sentiments. God is revealed in Jesus Christ. We don't need deceptive philosophies - he as the revealer of the Father is enough.
I believe that saying that God is omniscient, omnipresent and omnipotent is thoroughly UNbiblical, and actually denies the God of the Bible. It is attempting to take a philosophical view of the living God, and rejects the way he has revealed himself.
Here's why:
God is not omnipresent. To say he is denies the incarnation. Is Jesus spacially everywhere? Of course not - he's a man. His rule and influence is absolute, and we know him by the Spirit, but he is not thinly spread throughout the universe. He is at the (spatially located) right hand of the Father in (spatially located) heaven. Maybe the Spirit is closest to omnipresent, but we're still then stuck with passages like John 1:32.
God is not omnipotent. Can he do everything? Well, he can't make a stone so heavy he can't lift it. Ok, so can he do everything that's logically possible? Well, he can't sin. So maybe he can do anything logically possible that is within his nature? Yes. But so can a stapler. Is God like a stapler? No. Why don't we just say what the Bible says - that God can do what he wants? Why must we go further than that?
God is not omniscient? Jesus does not know the date of his return - Matthew 24:36. He is willing to submit to the Father's perfect knowledge about the right time to send him back - just as he was and is willing to submit to his Father in all things. Are we willing to write off Genesis 18:20-21, Psalm 14:2, and so on?
When using the omni's are we talking about the Father, the Son, or the Holy Spirit, or all three? But the three have different knowledge. They are in different places. They do different things - the Son can't suddenly start taking on the Father's role. Yet they are united as one in purpose and action.
Thanks for listening,
Pete.
Pete, thanks for the input--you have obviously thought this out with great insight (you remind me of my theology professor)
However, could it be that: When Jesus, the 2nd person of the Trinity was here, the 1st person of the Trinity was in Heaven, and his Spirit, the third person was pervasive in all the creation? In considering God as omnipresent, aren't we, by necessity talking of all three, since the three are
one?
As to Omnipotent, you again make a good argument, but I would say God can do anything, it simply is not sin if He does it. CAn he make a rock...Yes, He could, then he would change to be able to lift it, then the circle would start over--
if he wanted.
And Omniscient, Jesus did not know the date of the return, but Jesus said the Father did--again, since in asking if God can do anything and the three are
one, God knew then, and he knows know when the return will be.
I like your thinking--very critical and logical, but What if God doesn't follow our logic?
Just food for thought, no need to even answer if you choose not to.
Good answers!
Tommy