I have as much business talking about theology as someone who writes ambiguous nonsense like "God is being" as if that means anything.
You have as much business talking authoritatively about theology as Genghis Khan had talking authoritatively about quantum physics.
you're not a theological authority
I am, actually.
You don't get to define the true understanding of theology.
There is no "true understanding of theology." That's what you don't get. You believe it's some kind of scientific discipline with measurable data, and absolute mathematical constants, and some kind of quantifiable cosmology. And then you ridicule it because it fails to stand up to your "rigorous" and ridiculous standards. My "authority" on the subject comes because I've spent years in the academic discipline and professionally involved in the formulation and application of theology; I know what's reasonable in the discipline, I know what "works" and what doesn't, and I have a good grasp of the theological milieu. I've also read here how your "arguments" have no support, because you can't even talk rationally about God's nature.
And yeah I don't understand and am confused byyour interpretation because its ambiguous, meaningless and full of nonsense like "God is being" which you left as general and as vague as possible.
A lot of God-descriptions
are, necessarily, "vague," because God can't be pinned down to a definition.
On the one hand you're complaining to me about not being more specific when you've been even less specific and more vague than I have.
It depends on what's being put out there as some sort of standard. You're simply not sticking with a single line of thought, or one specific description of God; you're all over the place. you have to argue from a specific construction. That's why I said you can't measure EMF across a circuit in pounds. I'm arguing from a specific construction, and you just don't get it, because you've never "heard of it before."
You've failed to define any of your terms whereas I have defined words like omnipotent and omnipresent and omnibenevolent etc on numerous occasions.
But not using the
theological definitions of the terms. Let me try to assuage your confusion. You see, "omnipotence" isn't some objective, absolute definition that stands outside God, that can be used to "measure" God, as you're trying to do here. "Omnipotence" is a specific
concept for God -- one particular (among many)
construction for talking about God, and it means something completely different than a dictionary definition. It can also take on multiple meanings, depending on the specific circumstances to which it may be applied. That's why I've said that the whole riddle is a non-argument, because it takes that one, specific construction, tortures it to mean something it was never intended to mean, and then trying to pound it into a completely different cosmological model. Sort of like trying to force an SD90MAC engine into a Prius. God isn't either "omnipotent" or not, based on some arbitrary "standard" of "omnipotentness." "Omnipotence" is a term that is somewhat loosely applied to describe the absolute power of God over and especially
within God's creation.
You have to understand that God doesn't stand outside God's creation -- at least within the bounds of orthodox Christian theological understanding. Jesus is the lynchpin here. Jesus places God firmly
within the created order. IOW, God works from
within the created order, it's limits and boundaries, and those limits and boundaries are reflections of God's nature. So the whole theodicy argument is a non-argument (and that's really what the Riddle is -- a theodicy argument), because theodicy has God standing completely
outside the bounds of the created order, completely dismissing the whole concept of God's
imminence, which is a very important piece of the "God puzzle."
So, on a practical note, what you're doing is taking the "omnipotence" construction, which places an emphasis on God's imminence, and takes away that imminence, insisting that God work
outside the boundaries and limits of the created order. Then you insist that "God isn't really omnipotent." As I said, it's like putting a set of scales under an electrical circuit, finding no weight there, and insisting that the circuit has no EMF across it.
It would surely be stupid and crazy time consuming to go through and cover each individual theological perspective in precise detail.
That's why I haven't really bothered to provide what you've asked. You haven't asked for anything specific to any one construction. You want me to explain the whole universe -- in minute and specific detail -- in one concise paragraph. Ain't gonna happen.
i mean surely you recognize this for the sake of being able to move this thread along that I will only be able to cover things which people commonly believe.
I don't think you have any idea, though, what "people commonly believe." You certainly haven't demonstrated such knowledge in your blather about "omnipotence." Theology is a complicated business; most folks can't explain why they believe what they believe, and can't come up with reasonable and concise models for their beliefs. Theologians do that work
for them. Most folks, for example, believe that "God is omnipotent." But they can't explain, exactly, what that
means. They believe it, because they intuit that God's power is Absolute. But then they go running away with the logic and begin to think that God does magical acts, or that God "could have created the world any way God chose." But the
real issue -- if you want to get down to the brass tacks -- is that God
DIDN'T created the world in any other manner than God created it, and it's, therefore,
POINTLESS to speculate anything different. We work with what we have. And what we have is the created order. And we say that,
within that framework, God is omnipotent -- that is, God had the ultimate power to create the universe as it
is -- not as we wish it to be.
The complication arises when we begin to define "evil" on our terms and throw that monkey wrench into the works. Again, you, like most folks, poison the water by trying to force concepts like "good" and "evil" into definitions that are too arbitrary. The theologian seeks to define the world on
God's terms. The layperson seeks to define God on
our terms. And that's what the Riddle does -- it seeks to define God on
our terms, not taking under consideration that one of the most basic tenets of the Abrahamic faiths is that we are part of and subject to
God's world, and not the other way 'round. Therefore, the riddle cannot, by definition, be a theological argument, because it seeks to define God on the world's terms. Less confused now?
But then its hilarious because you talk as if you're the one who determines the true theology! Such arrogance.
It's an arrogance from your perspective. An experienced engineer talking about the aerodynamics of the space shuttle seems "arrogance" from the position of a hotel maid.
It addresses a fairly common interpretation of the Abrahamic God as an all good, all powerful, all knowing God who puts us on this earth to test us and also defines morality for us.
I don't think, in the first place, that it's a fair representation of a "common interpretation." In the second place, I don't think it's a very "common" interpretation that "God placed us here to test us." At least not within the circles of polite academia, where theology is concerned. It creates a straw man that is incongruent -- at least where Xy is concerned. And that's the only realm in which my expertise extends.
I also address the importance of belief without evidence as the means of salvation.
...Which also isn't real theology. "Belief without evidence" isn't, theologically "the means of salvation." At least, again, where Xy is concerned.
I mean all of these are specific facets of the Abrahamic faiths which are commonly subscribed to.
No, they're not. You think they are -- but they're not. Xy, Judaism, and Islam are WIDELY diverse in their theological constructions. You can't simply lump them all together as you have and maintain the integrity of any one of them.
If you seriously haven't been able to grasp this by now i doubt you'll ever be able to. Its not like anyone else is having these issues with my specificity.
There aren't very many other theologians here to take issue with your "specificity."