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كل يوم معلومة جديدة
كل يوم معلومة جديدة
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Sunday 05 July 2026 16:19:40 GMT
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God cannot do what is logically impossible.  But I thought that Gabriel said, “nothing will be impossible with God” (Luke 1:37)? Plantinga argues that omnipotence refers to the ability to do anything that is logically possible. “[N]ot even an omnipotent being can bring about logically impossible states of affairs or cause necessarily false propositions to be true” (Plantinga, God, Freedom, and Evil, 17). For example, According to Aquinas, “God cannot make the number four greater than it is; because if it were greater it would no longer be four, but another number” (Summa Theologica, I, Q. 25, a. 6).  God cannot create square circles. God cannot make a rock so big that he could not lift it. “These things are absolutely impossible, since a self-contradictory thing simply cannot exist” (Dr. Kevin Vost).  “It is better to say that such things cannot be done, than to say God cannot do them” (Aquinas).  God also cannot create free will beings and then simultaneously prevent them from choosing evil or force them to choose good (Plantinga). To God, apparently a world with free creatures, who can choose good or evil, is more valuable than a world without them (Plantinga’s Free Will Defense). For further research search the title of my dissertation, download and read: A Patristic Christological Defense: Utilizing the Patristic View of the Incarnation as a Defense Against the Problem of Suffering (at Liberty University’s Scholars Crossing). • • • #theology #christianity #pizzamaking #cooking #Recipe @Catholic Answers @Notre Dame  @Texas Pete @Ken’s Steak House Dressings
God cannot do what is logically impossible. But I thought that Gabriel said, “nothing will be impossible with God” (Luke 1:37)? Plantinga argues that omnipotence refers to the ability to do anything that is logically possible. “[N]ot even an omnipotent being can bring about logically impossible states of affairs or cause necessarily false propositions to be true” (Plantinga, God, Freedom, and Evil, 17). For example, According to Aquinas, “God cannot make the number four greater than it is; because if it were greater it would no longer be four, but another number” (Summa Theologica, I, Q. 25, a. 6). God cannot create square circles. God cannot make a rock so big that he could not lift it. “These things are absolutely impossible, since a self-contradictory thing simply cannot exist” (Dr. Kevin Vost). “It is better to say that such things cannot be done, than to say God cannot do them” (Aquinas). God also cannot create free will beings and then simultaneously prevent them from choosing evil or force them to choose good (Plantinga). To God, apparently a world with free creatures, who can choose good or evil, is more valuable than a world without them (Plantinga’s Free Will Defense). For further research search the title of my dissertation, download and read: A Patristic Christological Defense: Utilizing the Patristic View of the Incarnation as a Defense Against the Problem of Suffering (at Liberty University’s Scholars Crossing). • • • #theology #christianity #pizzamaking #cooking #Recipe @Catholic Answers @Notre Dame @Texas Pete @Ken’s Steak House Dressings

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