"pro_universal:
In short, there is no contradiction above in what I posted or in your questions. It is certainly possible to say things about God without falling into contradiction.
Hold on a moment there. Let’s back up a little bit.
I can’t define God, but I can say things about him that are not contradictory.
Actually, you
are defining God when you say things about him.
And, for the record, the things you say about him do not say much yet.
Now let’s go through your list below…
pro_universal:
For example: God is all powerful and all Knowing.
Define
‘all powerful’.
For example, does ‘all powerful’ mean that God can do anything? Or can God only do anything he wants to do? Can God only do things which are good? Can God, as the old proverbial question asks, create a stone so heavy that even he cannot pick it up?
Define
‘all knowing’.
For example, does ‘all knowing’ mean that God simultaniously know all things that ever happened, happen, and will happen from all different perspectives in time? Does God know his own past, present and future? Can God go back and change something that he has already done? Can God actually change his mind if he already knows his own future? Can God actually make a choice?
pro_universal:
Define
‘immaterial’.
For example, does this mean that God does not have any substance? Does this mean that God is purely spirit? If so, what is spirit? And if there is no adequate definition of spirit available (or God does not actually exist in spirit), does this mean that God does not actually exist? If not, then how does God exist?
pro_universal:
Define
‘merciful’.
For example, does this mean God is just and will bring judgment fairly? Does this mean that God will forgive all people with superabundant mercy regardless of what they do? How does God manifest his mercy? Could God reasonably decide to forgive someone who doesn’t deserves forgiveness just because he is merciful? Is God accountable to anyone when distributing his mercy?
pro_universal:
Define
‘good’.
For example, if God is good, can God think about evil? Would God thinking about evil make a part of God’s mind evil? Likewise, how can God know if something were evil since he is good? Does God know that evil exists? If so, how does God know evil exists since he is good?
pro_universal:
None of the five things listed above constitute a contradiction with any other in the list.
Yes. They most certainly do-- all of them I might add.
For example, if God is
all powerful, then this means he can do anything.
But since God is
all knowing, this means he can’t be
all powerful. Because if God was
all powerful, then he would also be able to
not know something.
Consequently, God apparently doesn’t know all things anyway. Because if God did know all things, then he would also know of a way to be
material as well as
immaterial. Consequently, since God apparently can’t become material, he’s apparently again not
all powerful either.
Nonetheless, this brings us to
mercy. Now since God is
immaterial, does this mean his mercy is** immaterial** as well? And if his mercy is not
immaterial, then how does God actually manifest his
mercy within his creation? If God is
all powerful, can he arbitrarilly withhold his
mercy and not be held accountable to anyone?
Since God is
good, it is clear that he will manifest his
mercy somehow. But if God is also
immaterial, how does he actually manifest his
good in his creation? Likewise, if it is being claimed that God is
good, then he apparently can’t do evil-- which is yet another limitation which again proves he’s not
all powerful. If God became material would this be considered
evil?