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  2. Apr 30, 2018 · People are not self-existent; neither are cars or stars. Only God has the concept of self-existence. Some people stumble over the idea of God’s self-existence—even someone like the brilliant twentieth-century philosopher Bertrand Russell.

  3. God is described in Scripture as having the characteris­tics of personality including self-awareness (Ex. 3:14), self-determination (Job 23:13), intelli­gence (Gen. 18:19), emotion (Ex. 3:7-8), and volition or will (John 4:34).

    • SELF-EXISTENT: God has no cause; He does not depend on anything for his continued existence.
    • TRANSCENDENT: God is entirely distinct from the universe, as the carpenter is distinct from the bench; excluding pantheism (God in all) and animism (everything is a god).
    • IMMANENT: Though transcendent, God is present with and in the world; excluding deism (God is out there but not here).
    • IMMUTABLE: God is perfect in that He never changes nor can He change with respect to His being, attributes, purpose, or promises; excluding process theology, Mormon doctrine of eternal progression.
  4. Jan 14, 2024 · The Bible establishes that God has no beginning or end, but rather has always existed from eternity past to eternity future (Psalm 90:2). As the eternal, self-existing God, He relies on nothing else for life, but simply exists of His own accord.

    • Scripture and The Existence of God
    • Arguments For The Existence of God
    • Basic Belief in The Existence of God
    • Arguments Against The Existence of God

    The Bible opens not with a proof of God’s existence, but with a pronouncement of God’s works: “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” This foundational assertion of Scripture assumes that the reader not only knows already that God exists, but also has a basic grasp of who this God is. Throughout the Old Testament, belief in a crea...

    Consider again the two questions mentioned at the outset. (1) Is belief in God true? (2) Is it rationally justified? One appealing way to answer both questions affirmatively is to offer a theistic argumentthat seeks to infer God’s existence from other things we know, observe, or take for granted. A cogent theistic argument, one assumes, would not o...

    Still, are any of these arguments actually needed? Does confidence about God’s existence have to be funded by philosophical proofs? Since the Enlightenment, it has often been held that belief in God is rationally justified only if it can be supported by philosophical proofs or scientific evidences. While Romans 1:18–21 has sometimes been taken as a...

    Even granting that there is a universal natural knowledge of God, there are unquestionably people who deny God’s existence and offer arguments in their defense. Some have attempted to exposed contradictions within the concept of God (e.g., between omniscience and divine freedom) thereby likening God to a “square circle” whose existence is logically...

  5. Jan 23, 2006 · Aseity is the view that God is entirely self-sufficient and not dependent or contingent upon anything else. In other words, He is the eternal, independent, and personal cause of the universe. Some thinkers appeal to self-creation in order to account for reality while denying God’s existence.

  6. Our wisdom, in so far as it ought to be deemed true and solid Wisdom, consists almost entirely of two parts: the knowledge of God and of ourselves. But as these are connected together by many ties, it is not easy to determine which of the two precedes and gives birth to the other.

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