Mr. Scratch, on 22 February 2012 - 09:39 PM, said:
You're trying to argue an Axiom, and that's not going to work. God, by definition, is all powerful. Therefore, if it isn't all powerful, then it isn't God. It's something else. It's like asking what if water wasn't a liquid? By definition, water is the liquid form of H2O, so to try and go anywhere with that idea is kind of pointless.
There's a difference between the way we understand the term "god" today and what the beings described in ancient documents actually were. It could be one and the same, but that does not seem to be the case.
The only way we know that the "gods" were all powerful is because the documents that talk about the gods being all powerful. It cancels itself out because both the concept of "god" and of "all powerful" essentially come from the same place. We can't know if those documents were accurate, influenced, or as in the case of the old testament, the people writing the document were told by Jehovah that the reason he made things so difficult for them was so that he could do greater wonders and
convince them of his greatness. (Exodus 10:1-2)
It's how "history" was written but it doesn't mean it was true... and since those cultures ultimately begat our cultures, our concepts of the terms come from them... and thousands of years of interperetations and building upon the concepts.
We can't know what they meant or even if they understood what they were seeing...
if the stories have any truth at all.
So I guess for me, I don't think the god of the bible was all powerful... I think that he was a mortal being of some type and wanted the Israelites to think he was all powerful and revere him above all. He didn't seem to have interest in having the world revere him... just the Israelites. But I also don't think that he is the "father" of whom Jesus spoke.