bear2be2 said:
Forest Bueller said:
Waco1947 said:
Coke Bear said:
Waco1947 said:
Coke Bear said:
Waco1947 said:
. As to the Big Bang I applaud the search for the big bang but it be begs the question what before the big bang. That will remain forever a mystery IMHO.
Ex nihilo.
Your statement is one of the issues with many in the Process Theology vein. Many reject God's creation of the universe from nothing.
Ex nihilo is a not scientific nor logical. You simply know the beginning of the universe. We weren't present and of course thee is the nagging question "What was before this universe?"
Actually, it is both.
Scientifically, the laws of entropy are such that the universe would have burned out long ago if it had an infinite past.
Logically / philosophically, the argument for the first motion. Something has to pull the train cars.
You are "special pleading" your case by claiming God is a different sort not subject to the laws of physics. Your premise "God is the first cause" begs the question - is that idea true? You cannot prove it. You have no evidence.
Of course GOD would not be subject to physical laws, he created them. He does as he pleases.
Your problem is faith. Faith is the evidence of things not seen. You have created a god, placed within the bounds of what you wish to limit him to, but rejected the GOD of the Bible who is almighty, all knowing, all powerful. The God who made everything, and without whom nothing was made.
Does it take faith to believe in this GOD. Of course it does. Blessed are they that have not seen and yet have believed.
Just because we can see it face to face, doesn't mean it isn't.
I agree with you that the creator of the universe would be above the laws of physics. But I think you'd be hard-pressed to make a case that God chooses to act outside of those laws on earth.
Such a view would bring up some serious moral and ethical dilemmas that would be impossible to reconcile with an all-loving God.
To heal a blind man would be above physical laws. To heal a person who was crippled from birth would be above physical laws, to raise a man from the dead would too. I see no ethical dilemmas in these actions.
To redirect a hurricane from Houston to Corpus otoh I hear you there.
But, God is sovereign. All loving and all righteous. His righteousness includes righteous judgment, which was poured out on His Son, so we could be saved through Him.
God has intervened directly in the natural world before, aka the flood, Sodom and Gomorrah, parting of the sea, the tower of Babel, the birth of His Son, His miracles while on earth, His being raised from the dead. His ascension into Heaven.
I believe he will again. When I have no idea.