Yes, he could say hello, goodbye, the flower is red, it is dark etc out etc, do not steal or as Buddhist say do not take what is not given. Do not say what is not the truth etc.
Hi Pahansiri.
You said the above in response to my statement that God could not write a human book.
I made that statement because I see no evidence that God has ever written a human book. If it could be proven to me that God has ever written a human book, then I would retract the statement. I do no wish to assign "omni" definitions to God. God is what God is. If he doesn't write perfect human books, he doesn't write perfect human books.
God has given every human a conscience/soul, and he became incarnate man and gave his life to reconcile humanity to himself. I ask for nothing more from God, I am satisfied that he has created me and thankful that he experienced human suffering to effect my salvation.
A perfect being would have the ability to know how to say something that a human could understand, that is part of being perfect, the burden would be on him if it could not be done it would be his flaw not the lesser being.
Why should a perfect being know how to write human books? Imperfect beings write human books. I define God by what I believe he has done, and what I reason his nature to me. My reason does not tell me that God is a writer of human books. God is the author of creative life, of creative creatures. If a person who makes space shuttles does not make paper airplanes that does not bother me in the least. Whether God has the ability to write human books or not does not matter to me I suppose. All I know is that God has yet to write human books, and that God as Jesus did not write human books. That leads me to believe that he is not interested in writing human books. However I believe that he is extremely interested in inspiring humans to write human books. Their flaws are not flaws if you think of them as intensely human books, as well as being divinely inspired. All books that I've ever read are intensely human. I've never read a purely divine book, so I reason that such books do not exist. It does no good to blame God, or discredit God, because divine books do not exist. He created me and I am content with that.
-quote]A father does not tell a child not to hit the don then shoot the dog. He does not say, do not kill your brother then kill his other child.[/quote]
Some fathers do though. Perhaps you should say a *good* father does not do those things. Of course I have already said that I do not believe the Bible to be the purely divine perfect book, as others believe. However I do feel aligned with these "others" since I believe it better to see complete divinity in the Bible than to see zero divinity in the Bible.
There are people who and I would say the majority % of Christians, Jews etc that would not agree with you. I have to respect their belief also.
As far as I can tell, the majority of Christians/Jews are not literalist fundamentalists who believe the Bible is the purely divine voice of God. I base this on knowledge of people, and the reading of many books. This is a testable thesis Pahansiri. Tomorrow, encounter 10 Christians/Jews, and ask them if they feel the Bible is the purely divine voice of God, as opposed to a divinely inspired book written by humans. The next day ask 10 more. And then 10 more. After 10 days, I'd be very interested to hear a percentage of response. I will go ahead and conduct this experiment myself, and report back in a couple of weeks.
1- Could not an all powerful perfect being do anything? You can not believe “he” could create humans but not write a human book.
God, I suppose, could tell the funniest knock-knock joke of all time. Has he? When I say God cannot write a human book, I mean to say that he has shown no evidence that he has done so, and when he had the chance as Jesus he passed up the chance. Jesus didn't invent electricity either. I don't worry about what Jesus/God does not do. God doesn't write human books. As for God being perfect, he is by definition perfect, and God as the definition of perfect supercedes any other definition of perfect that would separate God from perfection. "All powerful" needs to be rethought. If God does not want to do something, or does not do something, that does not limit his power. That would be a consequence of his perfection. If God does not rape 1000 earth women every day, does that mean God is not all powerful? My religion forbids me from putting the Lord to the test.
2- Again I will say A perfect being would have the ability to know how to say something that a human could understand, that is part of being perfect, the burden would be on him if it could not be done it would be his flaw not the lesser being.
Now we agree. Jesus said many things that I can understand. Jesus, as far as I know, did not write any books.
Then you believe God is not all powerful, if he wished humans to be, X or Y then it is his fault if they are not X or Y.
He wishes the best for all of us. He did not create mindless automatons with the incapacity to choose contrary to his will. Rather, God felt it important to create creative creatures with the ability to choose evil, and the ability to choose love. Who am I to blame God for that decision? I am a creative being who is glad to be a creative being. I don't want to be a robot. I am not a robot. If you want to assign "fault" to God, that is OK, as long as you also fault the creative beings that we are for choosing evil. Spreading around fault is OK as long as you accept your share. And God did submit to human evil as Jesus, so he did not merely ignore the human problem of evil and suffering and fault.
If someone (man woman whoever) wishes that you, Pahansiri, loves them, and then you love them, how would you feel? If any person on the street makes the wish that you love them, and then you automatically love them, your choice has been taken from you. Your will has been taken over. That is not how God operates, and I would not have him operate that way.
Again a baker can not become angry at a cake because it did not come out of the oven a vanilla cake when the baker used chocolate to make it.
That is why he gave the gift of salvation to humanity. After we die and our sinful souls meet God he will cleanse them for us if we are willing. If we, as a vanilla cake as you put it, are content and adamant in remaining a vanilla cake, he will let us be a vanilla cake. You see permanence in temporary human existence. I think that the temporary human existence must be justified/rectified. So you cake analogy needs to be extended. The cake must be cognizant of itself and the standards of creation, and the cake must be able to choose itself, or the standards.
I will add a “perfect all knowing mind” is incapable of thought.
Thought means consideration, contemplation, deliberation, reflection to ponder. A mind that knows all has nothing to ponder.
How can you know how a perfect all knowing mind would think? Or that it would not think?
Jesus was capable of thought. Therefore God is capable of thought. God's thoughts are translated into creative action. That is my conceptualization of how God thinks. It is on a completely different level from our thinking. Humans ponder because we are confused, are prone to confusion. So I would agree that God does not ponder, or consider, contemplate, deliberate, etc. How he thinks is different from how we think.
It is a pleasure conversing with you. I disagree with your theological sentiments about God. Since you do not believe in God (correct?) I am curious why you are so forthright about your opinions about God. Is it possible to have opinions about what you believe does not exist? If so, then that means that your opinions of God do not exist. And I would agree completely. Pahansiri, your notion of God does not in fact exist. We can, at the very least, agree on that. The God you articulate does not exist.
-Elliot