Tarquin" God once had a power and a freedom that he no longer has. A God with lost powers. An admittedly deficient God.
God obviously did not lose power or freedom. I said “cannot” but perhaps it is better to say “will not”. Let me give an example. Let’s suppose I find a rotten apple. I’m hungry so I eat it. The next day I am retching and miserable. I decide then and there that I will never eat another rotten apple. Does that mean I cannot eat it? No. Does that mean my “freedom” is limited? No, I can eat the apple, if I so desire, but I know the consequences so will not do it again. God has learned the consequences of sin and will not sin.
Obviously to the contrary, God most certainly
did lose power and freedom. But now you say it is not that he “cannot” but that he “will not”.
What force
constrains an individual who
can choose between two things from
refraining to choose one or the other? Every day you will be able to eat a rotten apple, no matter the effects. If someone were to offer you a million dollars, you would eat it. If someone were to offer God a million things that he likes (“kingdoms”?), if he would do this one little thing that is wicked (maybe give an innocent child a toothache), who knows, maybe he would accept it. Because he
can be tempted, and he
can sin.
What force constrains an individual who can choose between two things from refraining to choose one or the other? It cannot be his own will. If it is ‘his own will,’ then he
can sin. He would not sin unless he was tempted; therefore he can also be tempted to do evil! This is contrary to reason. If God can be tempted, and has free will, you have
no guarantee he will choose good when a future temptation arises, one even He does not know about, more appealing than all other temptations he has experienced combined! No, the only way you can say God “cannot” sin is if there is a powerful force – more powerful than God! – that takes the power of free choice from him, constrains him, keeps him on track, and prevents him from sinning when he is faced with the irresistible sin.
The idea of a god who can be tempted and who can sin is also contrary to a God of perfect goodness (not merely conditioned goodness). You claim God is
conditionally good – He is good on the condition that He does not yield to temptation. But he might decide otherwise.
You have limited my words to communication only.
I think not. You did that. You yourself admitted first that God (Father) and Jesus (Son) can be in only one place at a time. To “only be in one place at one time” is being
restricted in space,
localized, present in one location, in other words not omnipresent:
The Holy Ghost ….can only be in one place at one time. The Father and the Son can likewise only be in one place at one time.
Attempting to explain how a being that can “only be in one place at one time” is omnipresent, you continue by adding “Spirit”, which, like “intelligences” is undefined, other than to say it is “a power”. And you say that to communicate is to be omnipresent:
The Spirit Elder McConkie speaks of is not a person but a power that pervades the universe. When a being taps into this power he can communicate across the universe and can be present at all times and in all places. Thus the Godhead accesses this power and through it is omnipresent.
This “power”/“Spirit” enables communication. What enables communication in the world of matter? (Everything is matter in Mormon cosmology.) Language takes sound waves. Signs, books, computers take light waves. What can travel speedily from one point in the universe to another? Light waves. Maybe tachyons, but I doubt their reliability. They are fastest when they aren’t going anywhere. Just when they need to slow down, they speed up.
No, let’s not look for sounds or lights. Let’s say instead, as McConkie did, the device or instrument through which God communicates is “a power that pervades the universe.” Through it God “can communicate across the universe”. When he says God “can be present at all times and in all places” he must mean in the same sense the President of the United States can “be in all your living rooms” when he speaks to the nation by radio as FDR did, or on television as Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan did. He is “present” in the sense that his voice can be heard and his image seen. Actually, it is not even really
his voice nor
his image. Those remained in Washington. What people heard and saw was sound and an image, the product of the
conversion of electrical pulses into sound and light. None of those Presidents was ever really anywhere outside a studio or office. Presidents are not really omnipresent. Nor is the Mormon God.
I do not see how any embodied creature, including the man-God of Mormonism, can be “in all our living rooms” at the same time, any other way than that. That is
not being omnipresent.
“A power that pervades the universe”? Is power matter? (“all things are made of matter; some are more refined than others”). Without it, God is stuck in a single place, unable to communicate without going in person to the person he wants to communicate with. God exists locally. This power exists throughout the universe (“pervades the universe”). This “power” not only has an ability that God lacks, but has an ability greater than God’s correlate ability: God can be in only one place at a time. This power was already everywhere at once before God became fully God. God is a dependent being. He depends on an outside force in order to communicate with his own family.
One wonders where this supra-deific power came from, and what exactly is it?