Genesis 1:1 - In the
beginning God created the
heavens and earth....
The Bible actually has two creation stories -
the seven-day creation story, and that of the
Garden of Eden
Probably adapted
from different
tribal stories
Seven day
God is transcendent
God creates light first
God seems more benevolent
God is separate from humanity
Garden of Eden
God is immanent
God creates people and
the Garden of Eden first
God seems more vengeful
God is anthropomorthised (he
walks in the garden)
Could be taken literally or as
stories with values and morals
Creatio ex nihilo
'Creation out of nothing'
No pre-existing 'building blocks' as
with Plato's demiurge
Creation happened via verbal comand
Never explicitly stated by the Bible to be
the case with God and the universe, but
implied
The official position of the Church
There are some references to pre-existing matter
Genesis 1:2 - 'God hovered over the chaos of
the waters.'
Adam formed from dust
Beliefs about creation
Thomas Aquinas
'Whether the world had a beginning is unimportant.'
Scientific explanation: a 4.5 billion
year old world that developed slowly
The Bible is uninterested with when the world began
Though Bishop Ussher calculated the date when he believed
the world began by adding up the ages of people in the Bible
- Monday 10th November 4004 BC was when men left Eden
Ideas may be gleaned from different cultures and writings
God created a
beautiful world
Psalm 8: God is a craftsman
'The stars you have set in place.'
The 'omni' qualities
Omnipotence - all-powerful
Can be interpreted in different ways
Can do everything logically impossible (Descartes' theory)
So he cannot make a square circle
Can do anything, logical or not (Aquinas's theory)
Can God create a stone too heavy for him to lift?
The 'Omnipotence paradox' addressed by Averroes and Aquinas
Richard Swinburne: God can do anything that's possible according to his nature
Can God sin?
God's inability to sin is a consequence of his nature, not a limitation
Nelson Pike: He could but chooses not to
God has power over everything,, but not a power to do all
Omniscience - all-knowing
Hebrews 4 verse 13:
'Nothing is hidden from God'
God is non-physical - his
knowledge does not come
through senses
issues
If God is unchanging, can he
learn new things?
If he knows our future, do we have free will?
How can he know the future
before it happens?
If he knows all our
problems, why should
we pray?
Omnipresence - all-present
Exists
in all
time and
space
Proverbs 15:3 - The
eyes of the Lord are in
every place.'
Biblical writers saw
no reason to
justify/explain them
The role of humans
Made in the image
of God (Genesis
1:26)
Privaleged positoin
God is concerned with us
Issues with the theory
Is God
responsible for
everything?
Natural disasters?
If he created the world,
did he do a bad job>
Counter-arguments
God cannot be
compared to
humans
God made a changing world so
people can learn
We have free
will - we could
just stay away
from natural
disaster zones
If God stopped us from using
free will, we wouldn't have it.