a dualism...eh? Didn't touch too much on this in philosophy...a little with plato and descartes and some other rationalists.
To be perfectly frank with you, I can't really say. Most of the details of my faith are pretty cloudy, and I'm still trying to figure out exactly what I believe. I mean, I know what I believe, but at the same time its kind of a foundation and I haven't developed all of my opinions around it.
I think I would lean to the side of no at this time. Even if the intervention God provides is spiritual or non-physical, I don't think that means God isn't physical. To assume he is non-physical would be to assume that so much of the Bible interpreted as literal is now parabolic.
The trinity would also disagree that God is non-physical. God comes in 3 forms - Father, Son, and Holy Ghost(spirit). Therefore, by that belief, he is definitely physical in some ways.
I know its a really sketchy issue...but when you take the two premises that a)we have free will and b)God intervenes in our lives it gets confusing. Physical intervention would kind of be interfering in our lives...since then he's pretty much governing it, at our command. And I think God wants us to live and find him and make our own decisions about everything on our own. He is just here to guide us and be with us as always.
I'm sorry if I come off as arrogant when I say "He is" and not "He is, according to me,". Feel free to put that tag whenever I talk like that if it seems more fitting to you. I don't know if this helps, or clears anything up...its pretty hard to have an entire, objective, and truthful opinion on something so difficult to grasp.
To be perfectly frank with you, I can't really say. Most of the details of my faith are pretty cloudy, and I'm still trying to figure out exactly what I believe. I mean, I know what I believe, but at the same time its kind of a foundation and I haven't developed all of my opinions around it.
I think I would lean to the side of no at this time. Even if the intervention God provides is spiritual or non-physical, I don't think that means God isn't physical. To assume he is non-physical would be to assume that so much of the Bible interpreted as literal is now parabolic.
The trinity would also disagree that God is non-physical. God comes in 3 forms - Father, Son, and Holy Ghost(spirit). Therefore, by that belief, he is definitely physical in some ways.
I know its a really sketchy issue...but when you take the two premises that a)we have free will and b)God intervenes in our lives it gets confusing. Physical intervention would kind of be interfering in our lives...since then he's pretty much governing it, at our command. And I think God wants us to live and find him and make our own decisions about everything on our own. He is just here to guide us and be with us as always.
I'm sorry if I come off as arrogant when I say "He is" and not "He is, according to me,". Feel free to put that tag whenever I talk like that if it seems more fitting to you. I don't know if this helps, or clears anything up...its pretty hard to have an entire, objective, and truthful opinion on something so difficult to grasp.