Dear George, you tell me:
"I would imagine that given these assumptions anyone would likely agree that if a god exists then that God was a god before they created anything. This would illustrate how "creator" is unnecessary for the definition."
I agree with you.
On the other hand, you see I put words which to you seem superfluous, in order to forestall readers from asking me whether I also include God explicitly as creator.
So, my regularly repeated concept of the God, namely:
"In concept God is first and foremost the creator and operator of the universe and man and everything with a beginning," can be concisely and precisely shortened into this brief sentence:
God is creator of everything with a beginning.
Now, we talked about in another thread how it follows from my submission that the default status of things in the totality of reality is existence, how it follows that God exists in concept as:
God is first and foremost the creator and operator of the universe and man and everything with a beginning.
You maintain that it is a non-sequitur.
I tell you, No, because
1. Existence is ultimately of two kinds.
2. Permanent existence or transient existence.
Wherefore, it follows that transient existence depends upon the permanent existence i.e. God to impart to it existence.
I like to read again how you denied my sequitur, in effect still insisting that it is a non-sequitur.
Thanks, everyone for your contributions, let's focus on how the concept of God when it is validly enunciated as in very brief language, the creator of everything with a beginning, it follows that everything we see in existence is evidence of God in concept as creator of everything with a beginning.
Starting with the nose in our face, of course we can start with anything at all that is in the objectival realm of reality, like the nose in our face.
I will be back later in the afternoon, so please don't go away, and no one please don't resort to telling others that they can't read when he is requested to explain his words.
If I am not mistaken you have responded to my question by asking what I think an acceptable answer would be.
I would imagine that given these assumptions anyone would likely agree that if a god exists then that God was a god before they created anything. This would illustrate how "creator" is unnecessary for the definition.