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Roman, I suggest you read Chapters 6 and 7 of Finding Darwin's God by Kenneth Miller. Since you are going to have to defend the idea of God creating by chemistry (abiogenesis) and evolution anyway, you are going to want to buy that book!Roman Soldier said:There is one question which many ask: "Why did God take so long creating the universe? Why spend billions of years creating the universe if He could have done it quickly?"
Besides the standard argument that God's time is different from the human conception of time, I have always felt that the appropriate refutation of this time argument is that God had other purposes with the universe other than creating humans. Those who make the argument above think that humans are the only important aspect of the universe.
The problem I have with my refuation is that it makes humans seem less important than the rest of God's creation.
Anyone understand what I'm saying? Help?
Logically, God can't be omnipotent. I've heard all the handwaving, but I'm still faced with the question: Can God create a rock He can't lift? No matter the answer, God isn't omnipotent.Captain_Jack_Sparrow said:Maybe God isn't omnipotent. Maybe he couldn't create it all instantly.
lucaspa said:Logically, God can't be omnipotent. I've heard all the handwaving, but I'm still faced with the question: Can God create a rock He can't lift? No matter the answer, God isn't omnipotent.
rmills said:Can you create space and time from the confines of space and time?
How does God create everything and expect us to understand how? If we understood how, would we then be God?
Really Lucaspa, what qualifications are required to be God? Do you have them? Or will you have them?
??
In this space-time, time matter and energy must follow the laws of physics (with the exception of miracles). But there is no way to determine wether or not this is the only space-time, so it is safe to say God is omnipotent.Captain_Jack_Sparrow said:Maybe God isn't omnipotent. Maybe he couldn't create it all instantly.
Curt said:2 Tim 3:16-17
16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:
17 That the man of God may be perfect, throughly furnished unto all good works.
2 Pet 1:20
20 Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation.
2 Sam 14:14
14 For we must needs die, and are as water spilt on the ground, which cannot be gathered up again; neither doth God respect any person: yet doth he devise means, that his banished be not expelled from him.
Job 37:24
24 Men do therefore fear him: he respecteth not any that are wise of heart.
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Exod 20:10-11
10 But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within thy gates:
11 For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it.
(KJV)
This Scripture should erase any doubt in anyones mind about how long it took God to create this earth.
I believe in The Big Bang theory, God spoke and bang it happened.
rmills said:Can you create space and time from the confines of space and time?
rmills said:How does God create everything and expect us to understand how? If we understood how, would we then be God?
rmills said:Really Lucaspa, what qualifications are required to be God? Do you have them? Or will you have them?
??
No, but String Theory says you can get spacetime (one thing, not two) from quantum fluctuations.rmills said:Can you create space and time from the confines of space and time?
1. He expects us to understand how by studying the physical universe.How does God create everything and expect us to understand how? If we understood how, would we then be God?
That gets back to a question I often pose: Just how powerful, knowing, and present does an entity have to be to qualify to be God? Does the entity have to be omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent, or can the entity be less than that?Really Lucaspa, what qualifications are required to be God? Do you have them? Or will you have them?
If you read what is written and not impose your prejudices, you won't be so puzzled. Most of your puzzlement is because you read into what I write things that are not there. For instance, if you had noticed Orange's quotes in the other thread, you would have realized she was asking about the differences between the two forums on ChristianForums that deal with evolution and creationism.
Why? Why does God have to be all-powerful? It seems to me that God only has to be powerful enough to create the universe. That's a lot of power, but not necessarily all-powerful.JohnCJ said:Omnipotence seems to be a qualification...
lucaspa said:Why? Why does God have to be all-powerful? It seems to me that God only has to be powerful enough to create the universe. That's a lot of power, but not necessarily all-powerful.
lucaspa said:Back to the question, and Iawait your handwaving: Can God create a rock He cannot lift? Either possible answer has God not being omnipotent
No data can prove nor disprove God's existance or knowledge in any universe.lucaspa said:BTW, data show that, within the universe, God is neither omiscient nor omnipresent.
Not necessarily. Instead, you simply have a megauniverse and God created the megauniverse. Why would you make the "if" statement above anyway? Why would this universe be the only thing God created?JohnCJ said:If this universe is the only thing God created, and science proves some existence out side this space time, then God would have had a creator.
That's some of the worst handwaving I've seen yet. You said the same thing twice. Either God can't create a rock He can't lift, in which case God is not omnipotent, or He can create a rock He can't lift, in which case God is not omnipotent. Either way, there is something God can't do. BTW, that second sentence can't be true. God can't be the creation.yes as he is imnipotent therfore no he could not lift the rock, but he is omnipotent therefore he could not lift the rock
God is omnipotent therefore he is the rock.
That first statement is one of faith. You can't speak for all data for all time. All you can say is: right now there is no scientific data to either "prove" or disprove the existence of God.No data can prove nor disprove God's existance or knowledge in any universe. The only proof would be one of faith.
Because you said "It seems to me that God only has to be powerful enough to create the universe," which would would set the parameter for me to refute, if is assuming 1 universe or space time.lucaspa said:Not necessarily. Instead, you simply have a megauniverse and God created the megauniverse. Why would you make the "if" statement above anyway? Why would this universe be the only thing God created?]
lucaspa said:However, some day Judeo-Christianity is going to have to face the question: where did God come from? Right now it doesn't have to, because since science has not established God exists, that question is premature. Should science establish that God exists, then that is going to be one of the next questions. Saying "God always existed" is simply begging the question. Now, God could have come into existence by "chance", in which case God doesn't have a "creator".?
No that was the worst logic trap I have ever seen, I was only humoring you.lucaspa said:That's some of the worst handwaving I've seen yet. You said the same thing twice. Either God can't create a rock He can't lift, in which case God is not omnipotent, or He can create a rock He can't lift, in which case God is not omnipotent. Either way, there is something God can't do. BTW, that second sentence can't be true. God can't be the creation.".
Well if 'data' is tied to this space-time you can say he cannot be proven, but 'data' tied to all space time would exits but I don't believe 'we' will be able to find it.lucaspa said:That first statement is one of faith. You can't speak for all data for all time. All you can say is: right now there is no scientific data to either "prove" or disprove the existence of God.
There is no way to define entity in this context unless you make it up, you have no way of knowing what God can and can't know.lucaspa said:In terms of knowledge, quantum mechanics and the Uncertainty Principle does prove that there are some things God does not and cannot know. Because those things simply cannot be known. By any entity.
Again you have no way of knowing what God can and can't know.lucaspa said:Now, God may be omniscient outside this universe, but within the universe God's knowledge is definitely limited. Why God chose to create a universe where His knowledge would be limited is a fascinating question. Again I refer you to chapters 6 and 7 in Finding Darwin's God.
Ah, I see the problem. It's a communication problem.JohnCJ said:Because you said "It seems to me that God only has to be powerful enough to create the universe," which would would set the parameter for me to refute, if is assuming 1 universe or space time.
I don't see how that matters in this context. We would still be faced with the question of the origin of God, whether that was in our conventional spacetime or not. We are still contemplating a situation where God does not exist, and then does. What you are doing with "outside of time" is still the duck of "God always existed." That's still begging the question.If God existed outside of the dimension of time thus putting or stretching his existance outside of this space-time then we would not be tied down to our concept of time.
This is the view Paul gave of God. But it doesn't imply what you say it does. Paul is simply saying that God was here before humans were around and will be here at the end of time. For Paul that meant the Second Coming. Now, God can also, as sustainer of the universe, be "which is to come" without knowing what is to come.Revelation 1:8
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty.
He is the beginning he is the end so for him to 'have his hands' in this space time he would have to know everyting always as demonstrated by the simple picture below.
We are not discussing whether God is the Creator. We are discussing whether God is omnipotent. Please try to stay on topic. The question shows that logically, God can't be omnipotent. Now, does that matter?No that was the worst logic trap I have ever seen, I was only humoring you.
God can be the creation as he is 'Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty. '
You can't even say it about this spacetime. If we can find a way around Methodological Materialism, we can test directly. Or, if we can propose a method that only God can use and then find the method, we may still be able to make the conclusion.Well if 'data' is tied to this space-time you can say he cannot be proven,
How does having more spacetimes "prove" the existence of God? Why would God be required to get those spacetimes. The current speculations on the origin of those spacetimes don't include God.but 'data' tied to all space time would exits but I don't believe 'we' will be able to find it.
You go at it from the other end. Can the exact position and momentum of an electron be known at the same time? NO! The information can't be known. In a group of 100 C14 atoms, can it be known which atom will decay next? NO! It can't be known. In a stream of photons hitting a mirror, 95% get reflected and 5% pass thru. Can it be known which photons will go thru? NO! Quantum mechanics don't match our common sense, but the data and math is very clear. The information simply can't be known.There is no way to define entity in this context unless you make it up, you have no way of knowing what God can and can't know.
This doesn't say God is omniscient, just that He was around at the beginning of the universe and will be there at the ending.Well I refer you to the Bible
Revelation 1:8
I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty.
Be careful here. You just left Christianity and became panentheistic. God is not "everything". God is separate from His Creation.God is everything and anything accocitated with anything.
lucaspa said:So, the question still remains: God has to be powerful enough to create. Why does God have to be omnipotent?
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