Let's discuss God's attributes. Can you name some of them (limiting to one per post) and describe them individually in relation to God?
Lord Bless,
LT
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I can only know God as God makes Himself known to me.
Absolutely true, especially when we are talking about knowing God and not just knowing about Him.
Others will say, well, OK, but God has made Himself known to you through creation, scriptures, and Jesus.
These are true, yet are only snap shots of the true and whole nature of God. The true and whole nature of God are beyond our ability to comprehend. We can only describe using terms we know and things we understand. Thus, to describe God, to truly describe Him, is beyond our ability. Our best attempts are pitiful at best, even when well meaning.
I need enlightenment about all of it,
We all do, and will as long as this life exists. What we will fully be and fully now is yet still a mystery to us, though we again have some snap shot examples, but the whole of our eternal existence is beyond our ability to comprehend.
Lord Bless,
LT
Taken from:
The Knowledge of the Holy - By A.W. Tozer
First part of Chapter 15, The Faithfulness of God
As emphasized earlier, God’s attributes are not isolated traits of His character but facets of His unitary being. They are not things-in-themselves; they are, rather, thoughts by which we think of God aspects of a perfect whole, names given to whatever we know to be true of the Godhead.
To have a correct understanding of the attributes it is necessary that we see them all as one. We can think of them separately but they cannot be separated. "All attributes assigned to God cannot differ in reality, by reason of the perfect simplicity of God, although we in divers ways use of God divers words," says Nicholas of Cusa. "Whence, although we attribute to God sight, hearing, taste, smell, touch, sense, reason and intellect, and so forth, according to the divers significations of each word, yet in Him sight is not other than hearing, or tasting, or smelling, or touching, or feeling, or understanding. And so all theology is said to be stablished in a circle, because any one of His attributes is affirmed of another."
In studying any attribute, the essential oneness of all the attributes soon becomes apparent. We see, for instance, that if God is self-existent He must be also self-sufficient; and if He has power He, being infinite, must have all power. If He possesses knowledge, His infinitude assures us that He possesses all knowledge. Similarly, His immutability presuppose His faithfulness. If He is unchanging, it follows that He could not be unfaithful, since that would require Him to change.
Any failure within the divine character would argue imperfection and, since God is perfect, it could not occur. Thus the attributes explain each other and prove that they are but glimpes the mind enjoys of the absolutely perfect Godhead.
All of God’s acts are consistent with all of His attributes. No attribute contradicts the other, but all harmonize and blend into each other in the infinite abyss of the Godhead. All that God does agrees with all that God is and being and doing are one in Him.
The familiar picture of God as often torn between His justice and His mercy is altogether false to the facts. To think of God as inclining first toward one and then toward another of His attributes is to imagine a God who is unsure of Himself, frustrated and emotionally unstable, which of course is to say that the one of whom we are thinking is not the true God at all but a weak, mental reflection of Him badly out of focus.
God being who He is, cannot cease to be what He is, and being what He is, He cannot act out of character with Himself. He is at once faithful and immutable, so all His words and acts must be and remain faithful. Men become unfaithful out of desire, fear, weakness, loss of interest, or because of some strong influence from without. Obviously none of these forces can affect God in any way. He is His own reason for all He is and does. He cannot be compelled from without, but ever speaks and acts from within Himself by His own sovereign will as it pleases Him.
I think it might be demonstrated that almost every heresy that has afflicted the church through the years has arisen from believing about God things that are not true, or from overemphasizing certain true things so as to obscure other things equally true. To magnify any attribute to the exclusion of another is to head straight for one of the dismal swamps of theology; and yet we are all constantly tempted to do just that.
I think it is as well said, or better stated, that even if God wanted us to know Him fully that the finite cannot and will not every fully know or understand the infinite one. He is beyond our comprehension, especially now as we live on the earth and in this flesh.
1Co_13:12 For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.
There must be a hunger to know God to the fullest (within our limited ability in the flesh). Though we will never fully know Him as in knowing all there is to know about Him we must still aspire to know more as He enables and enlightens us. It is a journey and we will be given more light, again as He deems appropriate for each of us.
Regarding the "go to verse." The most common error is in the simple reading of the verse. It states that "with God all things are possible." The word "with" here is not to be understood that if we are with God then all things are possible (though an argument could be made in that direction for another reason and not based on this verse) to us and all we have to do is believe and it will happen for us. The word "with" intimates that all things are possible for God. As you stated the verse is directed at salvation and in context according to the earlier verse that it is impossible for man to be saved, if not but for God. Man will always be limited and constrained for we are the created. We have liberty, but our liberty goes but only so far.
You can know Him, but will not know Him completely. The created thing cannot fully know the depth and breadth of the Creator.
He does reveal truth and reveals Himself, just we cannot comprehend all of the truth or all of Him even if He revealed it all.
What you see as withholding is not Him withholding, but Him giving us what we need and can handle.
I have stated that we are to aspire to know Him to the max in our current situation (earthly life), recognizing that our max is not a complete knowledge of God. Whether we will know all there is to know about God when we translate from here to there I do not know, but doubt that we will ever fully perceive God.
The question that would have to be answered, that I am not capable of answering, is what is meant by fully. Is it to know Him fully in the context of relationship unhindered by the tainted flesh or is it a knowledge of God that exposes to us all that He is. I doubt that it can be the second because the depth and breadth of God cannot be measured, but that is an opinion.
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