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Nickkname
Guest
God is eternal. God is love. God is perfect. This we know. From these truths comes my questions:
- A certain saint once said, I think, “Where love dose not work, there is no love.” God has not worked forever, so there was a “time” when he was not working. So, if what the saint said is true, than how can God be love?
- If God cannot change, how than could God create the universe, for if by working, he would be changed? Not in the sense that he changed himself, but his immobility. Granted, you could very well say, “God is simple and unchangeable, so he did not change himself,” but the fact that he did not create, than did create, means he changed his immobility. Unless God has always been mobile, via the communal of love that is the Holy Trinity?
- God has always been, so was there ever a “time” he did not think of us?
- How is the Son and the Spirit, the very Word and Breath of God, eternall begotten of God and proceeding from God? In essense, how is God eternally begotten of and proceeding from God? Begotten and proceeding are actions, so there has to be a “time” when they were not? Yes, I know, we can only use human languages to speak of God, so our understanding of God is very imperfect, but, how can the second and third Persons of the Holy Trinity be eternally begotten and eternally proceeding? Unless “eternally” is used in reference to the eternity of God, i.e., not in the sense of always having come from God but in the sense of coming from an eternal God? (I hope this isn’t coming off as me thinking there are three Gods; I believe in only one God, the Holy Trinity).