ANSWERS: 7
  • How do you know he/she doesn't?
  • Who can prove that he doesn't.
  • Because God is a made up being to give people a hope and a belief in something
  • He did, though there are quite a few ways to look at this. I believe God the Father was the One who walked with Adam back in the Garden of Eden with Adam, before the fall, for it was God Himself who wondered where Adam and Eve went once they took of and ate the fruit. Back in the old testament, "the angel of the Lord" is thought to be a theophany, which is a form God the Father took in special cases to perfom some work or some message. Christ was God, and He did walk the earth for about 33 years, and proved He was God with His miracles, His authority with His preaching, and His prophesy of His own death and His own resurrection on the third day. Also, the same Holy Spirit was the One who empowered Christ to perform miracles, and He is the same One within all true Christians, and with Him within the Christians, they are to walk as Christ walked, with the same spirit. The Holy spirit heals as He did with Christ, yet through our prayers, and not miraculously with Christ Himself as He did in His 1st advent.
  • Omnipresence?
  • He/she may walk the earth whenever she/he likes. But if you were all powerful in the Universe would you spend a lot of time here? Not to say he doesn't spend lots of time here, but maybe he doesn't.
  • He/She does. Consider this, most religions view God, by whatever name, as being all-powerful and all-present. If that is the case, then God is everywhere. If by "walk" you mean on two legs, it's certainly possible for an all-powerful entity. Or on four legs, or 100 legs. The trouble with thinking like this is it gets under the skin of the fundamentalists who seem to believe that God can only be defined by "divinely-inspired" literature. A more basic view would have God simply exist and the universe simply exist and do it's thing.

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