Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Nedloh_Deraj wrote:What is the supposed point of this thread? I saw a valid question at the start looking at whether God is subject to the laws of nature or if he is able to overrule them as and when he likes. If you want an answer to that question, then I'll give you one, but what I don't get is why you are asking Mormons about their beliefs in God's omnipotence and yet refuse to accept the definition commonly used by Mormons for the term.
Well, that's what I'm trying to understand. Is God omnipotent, OR is He constrained by the laws of the universe. That's it. Simple as that. I'm not interested in knowing whether or not He chooses to play by the rules He presumably put into place. If He chooses that, then that's fine.
What I want to know, according to LDS doctrine, is God omnipotent or not. I want to understand this not by redefining the word to fit a doctrine, but rather using the commonly accepted "all-powerful" when defining the word omnipotent, which, when commonly defined means "all powerful".
Simply put, He is omnipotent according to your definition and not constrained by the laws of the universe, in that He is all-powerful and is free to do as He wills. He is also omnipotent according to the definition provided by Sub-Genius, as the definitions do not actually contradict, the only difference being an additional clarification to the second definition. There is a difference between being all-powerful and being able to do anything i.e. both good and evil concurrently.
I will clarify for you further on in this reply how He is not constrained by the laws of the universe and yet how He is omnipotent according to the definition provided by Sub-Genius.
Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:Additionally, when Sub-Genius stated in the highlighted portion:
subgenius wrote:For He is called omnipotent on account of His doing what He wills, not on account of His suffering what He wills not; for if that should befall Him, He would by no means be omnipotent. Wherefore, He cannot do some things for the very reason that He is omnipotenthttp://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf102.iv.V.10.html
I wanted him to clarify his position which he declined to do outside of simply redefining the "all powerful" to fit the doctrinal notion he presented, which is his god is not all powerful.
V/R
Dr. Cam
The highlighted portion reads;
"He cannot do some things for the very reason that He is omnipotent"
The quote is from St. Augustine. He puts it that although God "can neither die nor fall into error" He is omnipotent. I agree with the concept that St. Augustine is putting across here, but to play devil's advocate I will be pedantic and pick at the point that St. Augustine claims God cannot die or fall into error. Yes, He can die and He can fall into error. He can die, if He chooses to change the order of things as they are, which He may if He so wills it. He can die by breaking the laws as they currently are. He has the knowledge and capability to do so, bu why would He? seeing He would die in that particular example? I would imagine a perfect being not "falling" immediately, as if by accident, but consciously choosing to err, but then by doing so He would no longer be perfect (and no longer God), so He would then be well able to fall into error from that point onwards, should He still exist. I agree with the concept that St. Augustine is trying to put across, that God is limited by His nature, in so much that He will not choose evil or chaos.
Edit: Omnipotence can only be achieved (achieved is probably not the right word?) with consistency. You cannot be perfect in any one sense (such as power) without being perfect at one end of the spectrum or another in terms of morals. Therefore, God, all-powerful, cannot be both good and evil concurrently, but being all-powerful, He can now for the future choose to do evil, contrary to His prior goodness up to this point, if He so chooses at the risk of changing everything.
God chooses to live according to law and order, but this does not mean He is therefore unable to choose anything other than this if he wills it. The consequences of this however, would be a change in the order of absolutely everything to say the least. According to the Testaments, and my personal testimony of their divine source and my experiences in dealing with God, I can tell you with certainty that He never wills to break a law and it is not in His nature, so although there is no outside force and nothing within Him lacking that restricts Him in doing anything, He
just would not, or else He would cease to be God.
I hope I have not misrepresented what Sub-Genius' position on this is, but I believe he shares the same position as I.
“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.”
― Mahatma Gandhi