Quote:
Originally Posted by TorqueDog
Oh, I get your argument, but it's only proving my point.
It comes down to definition. As defined by the Bible, that God cannot exist because its very nature as defined is in direct conflict with itself. If you are saying "Well, what if God lied?" then that's no obstacle at all.
Once again, the Bible proposes a god that cannot exist because of the very qualities is suggests it has. If a god did divinely inspire the Bible, the god of which the the Bible defines is not that god.
Therein lies the problem - a book that endorses all viewpoints ultimately endorses none.
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I think that if Schrodinger's Cat can be both alive and dead at the same time, God can hold two differing opinions on what superficially seems to be the same thing. You are holding God up to a standard that may not exist.
Or perhaps it both exists and doesn't exist at the same time, and it depends on what we are looking for?