HarryStotle:
So, far from being a descriptive word for God, the term immovable is being used as a depiction (analogy really) of God’s eternality vis a vis temporality to visually show that the centre of a circle (eternity) is to the circumference of the circle (temporality) as the unmoved centre is to the series of points ostensibly moving along the circumference.
Here’s another quote:
God is
immovable , moving all things by His nod.
Look, I don’t need to look at your source nor need we quibble over a definition of immovable.
Your statement that prompted the entire sequence of posts is clearly incorrect, so let’s just cut to the chase.
You claimed…
The philosophers teach that God is immovable, so there is a question as to how God could be walking around in a garden. Unless of course, the philosophers and theologians are wrong if they say that God is immovable.
So the upshot of your objection here makes God to be
immobile because, you say, he couldn’t be “walking around in the garden.” Besides the fact that
immobile may or may not mean the same as
immovable, what philosophers and theologians teach
IS NOT that God is impotent and CANNOT move, do, or accomplish anything. What they teach is God is omnipotent and can do anything without constraint.
So both immobile and immovable are not proper descriptions of God, because even in the latter word’s meaning of
unchangeable, God is unique in that while other forces cannot change God, God can and does have full rein in changing other things.
Aristotle defined God as the Unmoved Mover, not as the Unmoved Immovable. Note that does not imply God cannot in some analogical sense move himself, just that he cannot be moved by some other force – he is unmoved. Perhaps there is a distinction to be made between unmovable and immovable.
It doesn’t pay to be overly literalistic here.
The classic theistic descriptions of God from Scholasticism are much more precise. God is the Pure Act of To Be Itself (Actus Purus), the Actuality of All Actualities, the Fullness of Being Itself, and such-like. None of those imply impotency nor an inability to “walk around the garden,” quite the contrary. There are no limitations with regard to God being in, around, or in any other relationship to the garden that he wills.
I think you have completely misunderstood this depiction of God from philosophers and theologians.