Does this not make the universe literally the "BODY" of GOD.
2006-09-24
02:30:26
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12 answers
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asked by
Weldon
5
in
Society & Culture
➔ Religion & Spirituality
dezmodar,it means water is water,be it manifest as ocean, river, wave, tide or raindrop.
2006-09-25
01:18:35 ·
update #1
AT, i would agree,that GOD already existed therefore he "organized" or "rearranged" to manifest the universe
2006-09-25
01:23:31 ·
update #2
don h,maybe we should drop all human concepts and emotions,just become the witness. SEEING GOD IN ALL THINGS
2006-09-25
01:26:43 ·
update #3
jesus M,it appears everything in the universe is GOD expressing his vision of himself.
2006-09-25
01:30:27 ·
update #4
tonerLOW6,YADDA
2006-09-25
01:35:30 ·
update #5
The body of God is exactly what the universe is. Nothing in the universe exists that has not come from the divine source except for human negativity and wickedness that are constructed by human free will and the illusion of seperateness from God.
2006-09-24 02:44:16
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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You'll get a bunch of positive answers from the religious that follow that logical fallacy.
A) If god existed
then he must have
B) created everything else out of his own energy
So, first off, you are not offering any kind of support for why A is true, and anything more than a wild theory. Secondly, you are drawing a line from A to B, when in fact there are many other unconsidered possibilities for how B came to pass.
For example:
A)I believe in god (I actually don''t, obviously)
and
B) human life is a perfect example of the intricate planning and god's power
When in fact, we KNOW that the sperm fertilizes the egg, yadda yadda yadda to produce a human being. Part B really has no bearing with part A.
2006-09-24 02:36:59
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answer #2
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answered by TonerLow69 3
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an straight forward argument from atheists and skeptics is that if all issues choose a reason, then God additionally must choose a reason. the tip is that if God needed a reason, then God isn't God (and if God isn't God, then of course there is not any God). this could be a somewhat greater state-of-the-paintings form of the easy question “Who made God?” all of us is conscious that some thing does not come from no longer something. So, if God is a “some thing,” then He could have a reason, precise? The question is perplexing because of the fact it sneaks in the fake assumption that God got here from someplace and then asks the place that could be. the respond is that the question does not even make experience. it is like asking, “What does blue scent like?” Blue isn't in the class of issues that have a scent, so the question itself is fallacious. in the comparable way, God isn't in the class of issues that are created or brought about. God is uncaused and uncreated—He merely exists. How do all of us know this? all of us know that from no longer something, no longer something comes. So, if there have been ever a time whilst there replaced into rather no longer something in life, then no longer something could have ever come into life. yet issues do exist. subsequently, because there could never have been rather no longer something, some thing had to have continuously been in life. That ever-present day concern is what we call God. God is the uncaused Being that brought about each little thing else to come lower back into life. God is the uncreated writer who created the universe and each little thing in it.
2016-12-12 14:03:02
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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The belief that God created things ex nihilo is something that resulted from a conference. It is not Biblical. The Bible says in Genesis (in Hebrew) that God "organized" the world. I would agree that He poured His energy into it and thus, the universe is the "Body" of God.
2006-09-24 02:34:20
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answer #4
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answered by AT 5
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In a sense, yes, the universe could be called the Body of God, but physicality is a projection of mind...that is, our use of mind. God is Mind, we are created of God, so we can project images using the power of Mind, but images are just images, like fictional characters in a novel. But creation is eternal, and we create as part of God; but in our physicality, we forgot the difference between creating, and image-making.
God did (in our terms of time) create us from "Himself". This is the only way He can create. Through His own Nature.
2006-09-24 03:21:01
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answer #5
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answered by Sky in the Grass 5
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Sure could very well be. I know that we Christians are the body of Christ. Also the idea of being the Bride of Christ is along these same lines.
So I would have to say Yup yup yup
GOD bless ya.
2006-09-24 02:35:30
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yep and that means that each and every one of us is a part of God.
So we better be careful what we think we hate because that means that we are seeing some part of God as unacceptable.
How silly is that?
Love and blessings
don
2006-09-24 02:34:40
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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of course how we can say even if god never existed we wouldn't even xpierence because we wouldn't be able to breathe or being alive probably there will be void in the universe it's is sweaty question it is even impossibly to answer what we can call mistery
2006-09-24 02:36:58
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answer #8
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answered by george p 7
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GOD created everything including man and woman, heaven and earth out of His love to us . it is His happiness and glory that the earth should be filledl ;with creatures without expecting to anybody to commit sin against him
2006-09-24 02:36:42
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answer #9
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answered by Jesus M 7
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If He is a creator, can he not create energy?
Besides, what does that mean in real, everyday terms:
"created out of his own energy?"
2006-09-24 02:33:23
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answer #10
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answered by Uncle Thesis 7
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