R
Roscoe_Turner
Guest
Isn’t that your whole notion of morality? That it is obligatory. If god is omni benevolent, he has to act in a benevolent way or he’s not omni benevolent. What is that limiting factor? You call it his nature. I am saying that it is a limiting factor because he is subject to it, whether it was created by him or not. His power is checked by his own benevolence.Sure it is.
It is based upon an incoherent view of omnipotence as necessarily including absolute impotence as a “power.” Why would omnipotent Being be, in any meaningful sense, “limited” without the “power” to be absolutely impotent?
Why would the absolute power to create and sustain (which is what love means relative to God) be “limited” if God chooses (directly from his power to create and sustain) not to destroy what he has made. That he is “capable” of destroying everything he has made is clear from the fact that he created in the first place, so he can’t be “limited” in the sense of being incapable. You are insisting that if he chooses not to destroy, then he is “limited” in a meaningful way still. What possible sense does that make?
He is limited simply because he “chooses” (self-determines) not to act on a “possible” option that he fully has the power to carry out but doesn’t by choice?
It’s a bizarre notion of omnipotence because it proposes some strange mechanistic view of omnipotence as if God has less, not more, free will than human beings. That every choice he makes, he “had” to make and was, therefore, limited to it and by it.