You're still just making declarations, you've not explained or demonstrated how these things could be beyond logic or science.
It'd be like me being stopped by the police for speeding and simply stating that the law doesn't apply to me. I think the officer would expect a little more than me simply declaring it to be true.
I explained it to the best of my ability. If you think they
are not beyond science and logic please explain why you think they
are not beyond science and logic, as you define science and logic.
Trailblazer said: I know you do not find it acceptable but I know it from scripture that the Essence of God is unknowable.
I've highlighted the obvious logical contradiction in that statement. Yet again, you don't know, you just believe, which in the context of this thread, is irrelevant.
There is no contradiction at all. I know the only way I can know anything about God (from scriptures) that the Essence of God is unknowable. You can say I cannot
know, I only
believe, since there is no verifiable evidence (proof) for what I believe is true.
Why is what I believe irrelevant in the context of this thread? Everything about God has to be believed, it cannot be known, so that makes any discussion about God impossible, if your requirement is that it must be
known. That means you cannot talk about a God that is omnipotent or omniscient either, because you cannot
know that about God.
Neither, the concept of omnipotent and omniscient deities comes before and beyond the Bible. It's just part of the common definition of monotheistic deities, as reflected in several religions and beliefs.
Yet again though, you're the one defining your God, not me. If you're not referring to an omnipotent and omniscient god, you just need to say so and we can discuss that God. If you are referring to an omnipotent and omniscient god, it doesn't really matter where you're getting that belief from.
Yes, that is what I am referring to, an omnipotent and omniscient God.
We're talking about a God who created everything with full understanding of all of the consequences of his creations. How could he not be responsible for those consequences?
The question is, why would God be responsible for all of the consequences just because God knows what those consequences will be? How does knowledge of everything make God
responsible for everything? The mathematician knows by astronomical calculations that at a certain time an eclipse of the moon or the sun will occur. Does that knowledge make the mathematician
responsible for the eclipse occurring?
Unless God is
determining what humans will do, I cannot understand how God would be
responsible for what humans do.
An omnipotent creator god causes everything by definition and an omniscient god has full knowledge of everything (including those consequences) by definition.
An omniscient God has full knowledge of everything (including those consequences) but an omnipotent creator God does not
cause everything.
An omnipotent God has all power to do anything, but an omnipotent God only does what He chooses to do, not everything He can do. Who has the power to make an omnipotent God do what He does not choose to do? Nobody. That is why the omnipotent God can do whatever He pleases and does nothing else.
God chose to give humans free will because God does not want to control what humans do. God is not responsible for the free will choices we make because we have free will to choose. God is however responsible for everything that is not within our control, that which is predestined, our fate. So, if a rapist rapes someone they are not responsible for what happened to them since they did not cause the rape to take place, that was their fate, but the rapist is responsible since he caused the rape by a free will choice that he made.
1) If anything can exist with omniscience, everything must be predetermined. That is a general point regardless of the existence of any specific God.
I'm not sure I can explain it any clearer but there will be other source which can explain the concept in detail much better than I can;
Argument from free will - Wikipedia
Let’s look at a little piece of this:
Moses Maimonides formulated an argument regarding a person's free will, in traditional terms of good and evil actions, as follows:
… "Does God know or does He not know that a certain individual will be good or bad? If thou sayest 'He knows', then it necessarily follows that the man is compelled to act as God knew beforehand how he would act, otherwise, God's knowledge would be imperfect.…"
[3]
This is an invalid argument. The man does not act good because God knows he will act good, the man acts good because the man chooses to act good. God is omniscient do God knows that the man will act good but God does not cause the man to act good.
Hey! You brought up the concept of God doing good and bad. Don't pretend I'm doing anything wrong when I respond to it! So, does God do objectively bad things (as I clearly agreed with previously) or is everything God do ultimately for the good of humans (regardless of how horrific it may appear to us in the moment)?
Do you mean does God do things that most people consider bad, like rape and murder? I do not believe that God actually
does anything except rule and maintain the universe and send Messengers every 500-1000 years or so.
God wills things to happen and those are the things that are preordained/predestined to occur, and I believe that is ultimately for the good of humans regardless of how horrific it may appear to us in the moment. Once we start judging what is God’s will for us, as if we could
ever know more about what is best for us than God would know, we are being illogical. Part of being a believer, probably the most difficult part, is accepting God’s will, both the good and the bad things that happen to us.
There is no limit to science as a concept in the same way there is no limit to "length" or "age". There are loads of existent things that have never been measured (at least, not by humans) and a literally infinite number of non-existent things which obviously haven't been measured either. We have no way of knowing which of those two categories your God sits it.
Fair enough, we have no way of knowing which of those two categories God sits in if you are looking at it from a non-scriptural, purely logical perspective. But from a scriptural perspective we can never discover, observe or measure God.