The inconsistent triad centres around the principle that, according to Christianity:
God is omnipotent
God is omniscient
God is all-loving.
And yet evil exists.
Which raises the problem, that if God is all-powerful and all-loving, he would put an end to the evil, so therefore he cannot know - but he does.
Or he cannot do it, but knows - therefore is not omnipotent.
Or he doesn't want to, and therefore is not benevolent.
But, even if a great philosopher finally reconciled the problem of evil once and for all - there remains still ONE final problem.
The problem of God.
It runs as such.
The inconsitent triad needn't have evil as an aspect to make it inconsitent.
Omniscience and Omnipotence, two qualities of God accepted and hailed by Christians the world over, cannot be applied to the Holy Deity.
Why?
Well, this verse by Karen Owens sums up neatly the problem:
Can omniscient God, who
Knows the future, find
The omnipotence to
change His future mind?
Well? Can He?
If God knows at what point he will intervene, does he have the power to change what He will do in the future without knowing what He will do -
thereby restricting his own omnipotence?
God is omnipotent
God is omniscient
God is all-loving.
And yet evil exists.
Which raises the problem, that if God is all-powerful and all-loving, he would put an end to the evil, so therefore he cannot know - but he does.
Or he cannot do it, but knows - therefore is not omnipotent.
Or he doesn't want to, and therefore is not benevolent.
But, even if a great philosopher finally reconciled the problem of evil once and for all - there remains still ONE final problem.
The problem of God.
It runs as such.
The inconsitent triad needn't have evil as an aspect to make it inconsitent.
Omniscience and Omnipotence, two qualities of God accepted and hailed by Christians the world over, cannot be applied to the Holy Deity.
Why?
Well, this verse by Karen Owens sums up neatly the problem:
Can omniscient God, who
Knows the future, find
The omnipotence to
change His future mind?
Well? Can He?
If God knows at what point he will intervene, does he have the power to change what He will do in the future without knowing what He will do -
thereby restricting his own omnipotence?