H
hansard
Guest
I wonder if God can change any of the properties of the universe. For example, can God alter the physical composition of elements at the atomic level, or stop the universe from expanding?
If God is the source of all potential beings, then God can certainly change the nature of a contingent being. But God can only do this as far as it doesn’t contradict Gods nature to do so. I say this because i think that dynamism or change is an intrinsic aspect of a contingent being, and thus God cannot stop a thing from expanding with out stopping that thing from ceasing to exist entirely. I might be wrong however; i just have a feeling that this is in fact the case. But perhaps God can stop something from changing without it ceasing.I wonder if God can change any of the properties of the universe. For example, can God alter the physical composition of elements at the atomic level, or stop the universe from expanding?
Would it contradict God’s nature to make Hell cease to exist? I suppose He’d have to end existence of the souls of the damned and demons in order to do this,If God is the source of all potential beings, then God can certainly change the nature of a contingent being. But God can only do this as far as it doesn’t contradict Gods nature to do so. I say this because i think that dynamism or change is an intrinsic aspect of a contingent being, and thus God cannot stop a thing from expanding with out stopping that thing from ceasing to exist entirely. I might be wrong however; i just have a feeling that this is in fact the case. But perhaps God can stop something from changing without it ceasing.
Not without getting rid of freewill. And if God gets rid of freewill, then he gets rid of the very thing that allows a loving God to create “people” as we understand it. Of course, the correct ontological understanding of hell, in light of Gods nature and his relationship with people, is very important if one is to sufficiently answer you question without error.Would it contradict God’s nature to make Hell cease to exist? I suppose He’d have to end existence of the souls of the damned and demons in order to do this,
God is not an extension in space. Your understanding of God is false.Here’s the ultimate extension (as far as I can see it):
Can God cause himself to cease to exist?
Please accept my apology.Can God will himself out of existence?
Your last sentence has piqued my curiosity. Specifically, what do you mean by “in light of Gods nature and his relationship with people”? How does that have any effect on the “ontological understanding of hell”, or as I demur in my own words, “the nature of hell”?Not without getting rid of freewill. And if God gets rid of freewill, then he gets rid of the very thing that allows a loving God to create “people” as we understand it. Of course, the correct ontological understanding of hell, in light of Gods nature and his relationship with people, is very important if one is to sufficiently answer you question without error.
Demons! Unleash me onto them! I’ll batter 'em!Sounds like a good book, but a bit more serious look at demons than the one I’m rereading: C.S. Lewis’ The Skrewtape Letters.
![]()
We exist in the act of Gods being. To say that we are born into existence is really no different to saying that we are born into God. Outside of Gods being there is nothing. God is perfectly good. Thus the act of existence is perfectly good. We merely participate in that existence. God, by himself, does not justify the presence of hell, since hell is not the natural ontological state of existence; hell is not the natural intrinsic act of Gods nature, and thus hell is not an immutable place located in God somewhere. Hell exists as a consequence of evil. The existence of hell is contingent on the mind and will of people, since it is the souls of people that suffer in hell, not things or objects. That is why it doesn’t seem consistent to me to envisage the suffering of hell as being caused by somebodies location in a particular place. Hell is personal and thus spiritual, and its actuality is caused by an ultimate rejection of Gods will from the heart of humanity.Isn’t hell one of those immutables? Maybe this question does not belong here. I often meander.
One might say that God has set up His own limitations and those are whatever is incompatible with both divine and natural law, if I’m understanding correctly.
We exist in the act of Gods being. To say that we are born into existence is really no different to saying that we are born into God. Outside of Gods being there is nothing.
This seems clear other than saying “act of Gods being” rather than just God’s being. Somehow God is still transcendent–“You have set your glory above the heavens” (Ps. 8:2)–although “In Him we live and move and have our being.” (Acts 17:28)
I’ve tossed it back and forth whether Hell is an actual place or state of mind or both. You said its existence “is contingent on the mind and will of people . . . ,” and that it is their souls that suffer. (Not only are the souls of the damned suffering torments, but also the demons). But consider that in the course of time or beyond time at the general judgment, these same souls will have their bodies back along with the just who will reside in Heaven, as Jesus said He is preparing a place in Heaven for those who love Him. So Heaven must be more than something “personal and thus spiritual”. It must be a place.God is perfectly good. Thus the act of existence is perfectly good. We merely participate in that existence. God, by himself, does not justify the presence of hell, since hell is not the natural ontological state of existence; hell is not the natural intrinsic act of Gods nature, and thus hell is not an immutable place located in God somewhere. Hell exists as a consequence of evil. The existence of hell is contingent on the mind and will of people, since it is the souls of people that suffer in hell, not things or objects. That is why it doesn’t seem consistent to me to envisage the suffering of hell as being caused by somebodies location in a particular place. Hell is personal and thus spiritual, and its actuality is caused by an ultimate rejection of Gods will from the heart of humanity.
Indeed, why would Our Lady of Fatima show the 3 children Hell as it were located within the earth? I think it was more than just a demonstration of evil. Didn’t Jesus say there will be “weeping and gnashing of teeth?” Metaphor?
I do not deny that God is transcendent of particular forms; it is necessarily the case. I do not intend to suggest that we are God. This is impossible. But we do participate in the reality of God since we have no reality of our own. Reality is not intrinsic to our being. One could perhaps say that we are God by participation, but only if you mean that we exist through God in so far as we are actualised by Gods reality. It would be a mistake to identify the infinite nature of God with a particular finite or contingent form, since the two are not synonmous. Thus it is correct to say that Gods nature transcends us and yet somehow we exist in God at the same time while also possessing something distinct from Gods infinite nature (our particular form).This seems clear other than saying “act of Gods being” rather than just God’s being. Somehow God is still transcendent–“You have set your glory above the heavens” (Ps. 8:2)–although “In Him we live and move and have our being.” (Acts 17:28)
I do not see the necessary link. We are physical beings, but our qualitative moral experience is spiritual not physical. Jesus often speaks in figurative language; the bible is full of it. When Jesus says he is preparing a place in heaven, he is not speaking about this in the context of an actual 3 dimensional realm called heaven. The experience of Heaven cannot possibly be caused by the experience of a contingent being, since a created being has nothing that hasn’t been given to it by God. The experience of heaven is dependent on our experience of God; the beatific vision. That’s got nothing to do with being in a particular place at a particular time. We will no doubt be in a place where we will have these spiritual experiences. But to identify heaven or hell with a place is to miss the point. Heaven and hell is expressed through our relationship with God.I’ve tossed it back and forth whether Hell is an actual place or state of mind or both. You said its existence “is contingent on the mind and will of people . . . ,” and that it is their souls that suffer. (Not only are the souls of the damned suffering torments, but also the demons). But consider that in the course of time or beyond time at the general judgement, these same souls will have their bodies back along with the just who will reside in Heaven, as Jesus said He is preparing a place in Heaven for those who love Him. So Heaven must be more than something “personal and thus spiritual”. It must be a place.
The only thing God cannot do is contradict His own nature. So, would God do or create something that would go against His nature…no because God is omniscient and omnipotent. All of creation would be in a heap of caos if God were to contradict His nature -essence/existence.We are taught that God is Omnipotent and can therefore do anything. However the following question has left me somewhat confused.
“Could God create a rock so huge that He could not move it?”
I have been trying to answer this question but have only managed to come up with other examples, such as “could God ever become lost?”
I would be very grateful for any thoughts you might have in how I can answer the above points.
I don’t think an atheist would get very far trying to disprove the existence of God by attempting to show that His attributes are “logically impossible/inconsistent.” S/he should come to the opposite conclusion, just by the empirical examination of the world and the self. Of course, St. Thomas Aquinas is the master to go to for the “proofs” of the existence of God. These are not proofs in the sense of the natural sciences, but “converging and convincing arguments,” which brings our minds to certainty about the truth.The only real recourse that a positive atheist has to disprove the existence of God is to show His characteristics and qualities to be logically impossible/inconsistent. This is why this thread is actually important.
Is anyone familiar with all of the arguments involving God’s omniscience, omnipotence, and all-loving nature? Or any of them compelling or true?
Welcome Clipperride:We are taught that God is Omnipotent and can therefore do anything. However the following question has left me somewhat confused.
“Could God create a rock so huge that He could not move it?”
I have been trying to answer this question but have only managed to come up with other examples, such as “could God ever become lost?”
I would be very grateful for any thoughts you might have in how I can answer the above points.
I can’t believe it…hes back.The contingency of the Universe leads us to only one conclusion: only Omnipotence could have created it. Finite being cannot create; its causal activities presuppose already existing material upon which to operate.
God bless,
jd