Chewi said:
I always rather enjoyed the story of how we were created in God's image. My question: In what way are we in His image? Taken at face value we should all look the same. Yet we're different. So we either assume that there are endless faces of God or interpret what is meant by "image".
Our imaginations are limited. They are limited to the filters of our own perceptions. This is why so many envision God as a white bearded grandpa-type on a throne of clouds and the devil is a man with horns and a tail. Mankind needs to feel associated to God and creates an image to fit the mold altered by that which is the only thing they currently comprehend.
I believe the question was, is God limited or infinate? That will depend on your definition of God. I beleive that God is infinate because anything that exsists is a part of God or a chacteristic of God. It's an intellectually lazy way out, but it seems right for me. To me, there can be nothing greater than God. So if it "is" it must be a part of that greatness. Remember when you were a kid and arguing with a sibling or friend, "No! I was first" "No. I was." "I was....to infinity." "No, I was to infinity plus one." Infinity plus one always lead to infinity plus infinity.
If God is infinate and I am outside of God, then that makes me the "plus one". And just like when we were kids, in hind sight, that just seems silly.
Chewi
Good day Chewi,
The Bible says we were made in God's "Image and Likeness", yet we are under the impression that God is both omnicient and omnipotent...well that kind of knocks out the theory that He has a physical body like ours. Second, He creates a race of beings we call "Angels", and we are told often enough that in their natural state, they are non-corporial beings, but that they can appear in a physical form as required for our understanding.
And as a wise person pointed out to me here, that though we are considered Biblically a "little lower" than the Angels whilst we are here, the fact is there are at least eleven levels of Angels, before there is man.
Our bodies are but dust (again Biblical), and if one strips the water from the human body, it in fact become dust very quickly. That makes us very mortal. However, there is a part of us that seems to be immortal. This part is what the Bible keeps trying to reach in us.
I believe that immortal part of us is what is made in God's image and likeness.
I liken death to sleep. In sleep, when my body is at rest, and my brain is for the most part at rest, there is a part of me that is not. I dream, and move, and sense and feel, and reflect. Sometimes the emotion, or reflection is so strong it startles my body back to conciousness, causing a kind of little shock, that my body obviously was not expecting. The mind is often confused for a few seconds, because the experience was not brain generated, so there is no reference for the brain to corrolate to, line up with. And the "dream" dissipates quickly, which does not make sense, if it were brain generated.
Sometimes I feel the most free when I sleep. My self is unfettered from the confines of the shell in which I live. This I believe is the immortal part of us. This is what I believe is in the image and Likeness of God.
If it weren't for my body, my mind, and all the temptations that plague them, distract them, I suspect I would be a pretty good companion for God.
"Sorry God, I'd love to talk with you for ever, but I've got to eat, got to sleep, have this urge to pro-create, want to be around these other bodies, physically feel sick, must tend to my family...", you get the picture.
To answer your question, I opine that our finiteness is in our corporial existence. Our immortality is in our spirit. God has no finiteness because He authored our existence. Now perhaps in time we will find different, as we get to know more about God (at His level, and as our understanding grows).
But I am reminded about a thought I had, as I gazed into my first born child's eyes over twenty years ago. I knew there was a universe, but to him...
...I was the universe.
v/r
Q