Does God have size? If God has size, how big is He? If God has size now, was God always this big?
No.Some people tell others that their God is too small...
Does this have relevance? .![]()
God is a Spirit, therefore He is not limited by size or space. He is present in all of His creation. That is called "omnipresence".Does God have size? If God has size, how big is He? If God has size now, was God always this big?
So, is that no space? or infinite space?God is a Spirit, therefore He is not limited by size or space. He is present in all of His creation. That is called "omnipresence".
It is generally considered to be true that God both inhabits and transcends His creation .So, is that no space? or infinite space?
God is a Spirit, therefore He is not limited by size or space. He is present in all of His creation. That is called "omnipresence".
What do you mean by "space as we understand it"?Space, as we understand it, didn't exist before God created it. All the universe had a starting point and God is outside of that.
I was referring to God the Father. He is BOTH an omnipresent Spirit and well as the one who sits on His throne in Heaven, surrounded by the cherubim. Is anything too hard for the Lord? For with God nothing shall be impossible.God is not limited to being a spirit. Christ is a perfect example. God has also been seen, which IMO wasn't specifically speaking of the pre-incarnate Christ.
Infinite space would be more like it, although scientists now say that space is in fact finite. Only God knows.So, is that no space? or infinite space?
I was referring to God the Father. He is BOTH an omnipresent Spirit and well as the one who sits on His throne in
Heaven, surrounded by the cherubim. Is anything too hard for the Lord? For with God nothing shall be impossible.
Space as in space within the universe. The universe has a beginning. A starting point. God existed before the universe when He created the universe. It wasn't created with Him inside of it. This is what makes Him omnipresent and omnipotent. He is outside of time and physical space.What do you mean by "space as we understand it"?
Does God have size? If God has size, how big is He? If God has size now, was God always this big?
Does God have size? If God has size, how big is He? If God has size now, was God always this big?
It seems that many people read the word "angel" and assign certain characteristics instead of taking the word at its simplest meaning: messenger. "Angel" is a role, not an identity. So having the pre-incarnate Jesus appear in the role of a messenger from the Father is legitimate. It neither limits nor diminishes Him.We have one scoffer here who claims that Christ could not possibly have been "the Angel of the LORD" in the OT. But a careful study of who this Angel is and how men responded to His presence will confirm that this was one of the aspects of the pre-incarnate Christ. As a matter of fact the third chapter of Exodus will make this crystal clear. The one who said that He is "I AM" is the one who appeared as the Angel of the LORD at the burning bush. When Christ identified Himself as "I AM" to the Jews, they should all have fallen down and worshiped Him. And He identified Himself in this way several times.
Some here seem to doubt that Melchizedek, King of Salem, is not Yeshua Hamashiach.We have one scoffer here who claims that Christ could not possibly have been "the Angel of the LORD" in the OT. But a careful study of who this Angel is and how men responded to His presence will confirm that this was one of the aspects of the pre-incarnate Christ. As a matter of fact the third chapter of Exodus will make this crystal clear. The one who said that He is "I AM" is the one who appeared as the Angel of the LORD at the burning bush. When Christ identified Himself as "I AM" to the Jews, they should all have fallen down and worshiped Him. And He identified Himself in this way several times.
It doesn't surprise me that God likes big trains."the train of His robe filled the temple"
... sorry, that's what popped into my head when i read the question.![]()