SeCKSiiMiNh
i'm a fireball in bed
does it say in the bible that god is omnipotent?
Revelation 19:6 says that God is "omnipotent". Matthew 28:18 says that God gave "all power" unto Christ, His Son.does it say in the bible that god is omnipotent?
YEAH MATE. COOL. Even though the 'old 'heavy' stone arguement' actually is a 'Omnipotence Paradox' and is the most important aspect to consider when considering the validity of the Christian God. Simply because, he is regarded as Omnipotent. So, if you take away his Omnipotence, you then take away the fundamental teachings of the bible, which in turn puts pressure on the bible's accuracy as the 'word of god'.Revelation 19:6 says that God is "omnipotent". Matthew 28:18 says that God gave "all power" unto Christ, His Son.
Matthew 19:26 says "with God all things are possible"
God is all knowing. Read 1 Samuel 2:3, Matthew 6:8, Psalm 139:1-4, and Hebrews 4:13
Copied from some random Christian website from some hardcore bible poster, so I'll assume it's correct.
P.S I can't believe people are resorting to the old 'heavy' stone arguement. Good job guys, really fucking relevant argument.
This makes several assumptions in order to rule God out as a whole.Poses a good question. And, relates to;
'Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able?
Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing?
Then he is malevolent.
Is he both able, and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Is he neither able nor willing?
Then why call him God. - Epicurus
if it is so obvious then why do people believe in god??this whole argument is pointless and all it's done is reaffirm my disbelief in a god
so, i propose that we put this whole "does god exist" thing to rest alright?
i mean, its so obvious that he doesn't exist
A HA! 'By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes.' Your a dumbass. Your jumping into the quote, assuming its evil is OUR fault. Take a step back mate. Your assuming god is all good. But you cant seem to comprehend that it is possible that god is not only good, but evil, if he is the creator of all things, there is a possibility that he is also the creator of all evil.This makes several assumptions in order to rule God out as a whole.
Even though it is Socratically argued, the first two lines are complete nonsense.
It assumes God can't be both able and willing. By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes. Similarly, if he gave his creations free will, and they sin, then that is their undoing alone. Since evil is the absence of God much like dark is to light, then sinning is the absence of God by choice of those who sin. He is able, but chooses not to act because that would intervene with free will.
Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able?
Yes willing, and yes able.
Is he able, but not willing?
Yes able, and yes willing assuming we approach him and follow him.
Is he both able, and willing?
Then whence cometh evil?
Both able and willing, it is people who create evil and not him. He creates people with choice to be evil (or good). We wouldn't be a very clever creation if we didn't have a choice, and he wouldn't be much of a God if he didn't give it to us.
Is he neither able nor willing?
No.
because...if it is so obvious then why do people believe in god??
"A fool shows his annoyance at once, but a wise man overlooks an insult."A HA! 'By what means? Since when? Given that evil is our fault, it is not his duty to clean up our messes.' Your a dumbass. Your jumping into the quote, assuming its evil is OUR fault. Take a step back mate. Your assuming god is all good. But you cant seem to comprehend that it is possible that god is not only good, but evil, if he is the creator of all things, there is a possibility that he is also the creator of all evil.
Just because you bought a $2 bible, doesnt mean you can comment on the PERSONALITY and INTENTIONS of what you cant even prove exists.
Thanks, Have some cheese.
god gave us the capacity to do evil. i mean, we humans could produce a robot and not give it the function to kill - not counting skynet ofcFirstly, it's spelled "you're". Secondly, evil IS our fault. It's not a blame game. It's nobody's fault but our own for sinning.
only a fool could believe in the story of adam and eve - for obvious reasons.Do you know the story of Adam and Eve? They lived in harmony with nature until they were deceived by the serpent and ate the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge. That is the essential origin of sin, and the passage shows us it was the creations' choice to sin as a result of deception and temptation. Did God create that event intentionally? Probably.
lol i'm not gunna botherSince when does the price of a Bible affect its quality of meaning? What if a homeless man wants to buy a Bible with what little money he has, is it still unacceptable in your eyes? Do they have to be expensive to mean more?
prove that santa clause doesn't exist. the flying spaghetti monster. allah. jehova. gremlins. unicorns. harry potter-esque magic. the greek gods. egyptian gods. the dream time. ghosts. the tooth fairy. the male g spot.Lastly, can you prove he doesn't exist?
oh thank the lordFor my own sake I'm just going to stop posting here. I could not be bothered to argue.
Praise the LORD! HAHA! Until next time...For my own sake I'm just going to stop posting in this thread. I could not be bothered to argue.
I'm not religiously inclined though you have to admit that hypothetically if a god existed it would be pretty futile to use our reasoning/logic to prove/disprove the existence of something infinitely more powerful in its logic/intelligence then us.YEAH MATE. COOL. Even though the 'old 'heavy' stone arguement' actually is a 'Omnipotence Paradox' and is the most important aspect to consider when considering the validity of the Christian God. Simply because, he is regarded as Omnipotent. So, if you take away his Omnipotence, you then take away the fundamental teachings of the bible, which in turn puts pressure on the bible's accuracy as the 'word of god'.
But Immanuel Kant also wrote in a time where science had not yet begun to understand the way that such moral statements we consider objective and that are more universal through societies all over the world are simply statements mirroring the biological and sociological realities of our species and the world we inhabit.Immanuel Kant rejected not only the ontological argument but the teleological and cosmological arguments as well, based on his theory that reason is too limited to know anything beyond human experience. However, he did argue that religion could be established as presupposed by the workings of morality in the human mind ("practical reason"). God's existence is a necessary presupposition of there being any moral judgments that are objective, that go beyond mere relativistic moral preferences; such judgments require standards external to any human mind-that is, they presume God's mind.
Perhaps, however you seem to have missed the central point of his argument. The materialism of science and logic, and their universal truth, seem to be taken axiomatically as irrefutable and fact.But Immanuel Kant also wrote in a time where science had not yet begun to understand the way that such moral statements we consider objective and that are more universal through societies all over the world are simply statements mirroring the biological and sociological realities of our species and the world we inhabit.
Those timeless and universal ideas, such as an aversion to murder and theft, are the ones that are biologically ingrained into us, upon which we have invented morality. The ones that break down, such as aversion to homosexuality, are the ones that are not based on biological realities but instead were established thousands of years into the history of human culture based on societal discourse and imposition. As we learn about the world around us and discover more and more, these barriers and impositions are broken down.