ris3n's Apologetics Codex

Concept

God is Impossible Paradox Cluster

Intro

There are ads on our codex that pay for hosting and keep the codex free. If you can, please consider whitelisting ris3n.com or allowing scripts to support the work.

Sponsored

"The Christian God can't even exist as described. The attributes contradict each other." This is the family of popular skeptic arguments that says God is not just unproven but logically impossible. You see it on sites like evilbible.com and in pop-atheist YouTube.

The shape is always the same. Take two divine attributes (say, all-powerful and all-good, or all-knowing and free). Push each one to its strongest meaning. Then show that those two strong meanings cannot both apply to a single being. Conclusion: God is a square circle, end of story.

This page walks through nine of these paradoxes one at a time. Can a perfect God create imperfect creatures? Should an all-good God just make people who can only choose good? Is infinite punishment for a finite sin even fair? If God already knows the future, can He change it? Can a being who never changes have real feelings?

The short answer the page gives is that the paradoxes mostly come from sloppy definitions. Omnipotent does not mean "can do logical nonsense"; it means "can do anything possible." Free will (in the strong sense) requires the real chance of choosing wrong, so building a being that can only choose right is not building a free being, it is building a puppet. Perfect in the deep classical sense means "complete in being," and a creature, by definition, is not the Creator, so being less than God is not a defect, it is just what creature means.

The classical framework behind all this, divine simplicity, actus purus, ipsum esse subsistens, treats God as the ground of being, not one more being competing on the same shelf as everything else. When the divine attributes are read inside that framework instead of as separate properties stacked on top of each other, the contradictions stop looking like contradictions. The page admits where real costs remain (especially the problem of evil) and points to the dedicated answers.

In full

The skeptic-popular philosophical argument-cluster (e.g. evilbible.com's "God Is Impossible") that the classical-theistic God is logically incoherent: the divine attributes (omniscience, omnipotence, omnibenevolence, perfection) generate internal contradictions that no logically-coherent being could simultaneously instantiate. Nine specific paradoxes typically advanced: (1) perfect God cannot create imperfect beings; (2) omnipotent God should create beings unable to choose evil; (3) omniscient + compassionate God shouldn't create beings doomed to suffer; (4) infinite punishment for finite sins is unjust; (5) judging by belief rather than works is unjust; (6) perfect God would reveal Himself perfectly, Bible isn't perfect; (7) Bible self-contradicts on justice; (8) omniscience vs omnipotence, knowing-the-future precludes changing it; (9) omniscience + emotion is contradictory. The hub presents each paradox in standard form, gives the classical-theistic response with strengths and costs, and connects to the broader classical-theistic framework of divine attributes (Actus Purus, Ipsum Esse Subsistens, Divine Simplicity, flagged below as missing-but-needed).

The structure of the paradox cluster

Each paradox in this cluster has a common form:

  • (P1) God has attribute A in the maximal sense (e.g., fully omnipotent).
  • (P2) God has attribute B in the maximal sense (e.g., fully omnibenevolent).
  • (P3) Attribute A and attribute B, taken in the maximal sense, are jointly inconsistent, they cannot both be instantiated by a single being.
  • (C) Therefore, the classical-theistic God (who is supposed to have both A and B maximally) is logically impossible.

The skeptic argument depends critically on (P3), the claim that the attributes are jointly inconsistent. The classical-theistic engagement consistently shows that (P3) is false in each case: the attributes are not jointly inconsistent when properly defined within the classical-theistic framework. The paradoxes dissolve when:

  • Attributes are defined precisely (omnipotence ≠ "ability to do everything including the logically impossible");
  • The classical-theistic framework of divine simplicity is recognized (God's attributes are not separable additive properties);
  • The relation between creation and Creator is properly framed (God is the ground of being, not one being among many).

Paradox 1, Perfection cannot create imperfection

Statement: A perfect being cannot create anything imperfect (because the creation would carry the perfection of its Creator). God created humans. Humans are imperfect. Therefore, God is not perfect.

Response:

  1. Equivocation on "perfect." The claim conflates two senses of "perfect": (a) ontological perfection, the maximal completeness-of-being, which only God has; (b) moral perfection, the maximal goodness-of-character, which is one aspect of God's perfection. Humans are not God-level ontologically (we are creatures, not the Creator); humans are not always God-level morally (we can choose to fail). Neither of these defeats God's perfection.
  2. Creation is not God-extension. If God created another being identical to Himself, that being would be God, and there would be two Gods. Logically impossible given monotheism. Created beings are necessarily less than the Creator in some respect (otherwise they would be the Creator). The "imperfection of creation" is built into the concept of creation; it does not defeat divine perfection.
  3. Creaturely "imperfection" is finite-being, not moral-defect. The human's finitude is not a defect; it's the kind of being a creature is. A spoon's not-being-a-knife is not the spoon's "imperfection." Humans being finite and creaturely is similarly not an "imperfection"; it is what being a creature means. Moral imperfection (sin) is a different question, see Privation for the privation theory of evil.
  4. Augustine's classical answer. Augustine in Confessions VII; City of God XI-XII develops this carefully: God created creatures with the capacity for moral excellence; sin is the creaturely-wrong-choice that introduces moral-imperfection (privation of due good). The original creation was very good (Gen 1:31). The introduction of sin was creaturely-act, not Creator-defect.

Cost / residual question: Why did God create with the risk of sin? See Problem of Evil, Free Will Defense for the free-will-defense response.

Paradox 2, Omnipotent God should create beings unable to choose evil

Statement: An omnipotent, perfectly good God could create beings with free will but unable to choose evil. Such beings would be possible. Therefore, a God who creates beings capable of choosing evil is not maximally good (or maximally powerful).

Response:

  1. The claim assumes that "free will" and "necessarily-only-choosing-good" are compatible, but classical-libertarian-free-will denies this. Libertarian free will requires that an agent could-have-done-otherwise. A being who is necessarily unable to choose evil is not genuinely free in the relevant sense. The skeptic claim depends on a contested compatibilist-vs-libertarian framework question.
  2. Plantinga's free-will defense (1974). Alvin Plantinga's God, Freedom, and Evil argues this point at length. The free-will-defense: it is possible that every creaturely essence God could actualize would freely choose at least some evil in some possible world. This is the transworld depravity hypothesis. If true (and it's at least possibly true), then no possible-world in which God creates free creatures has only-good choices, and God cannot be blamed for the resulting evil because no logically-possible alternative existed.
  3. The greater-good defense. Even granting that a hypothetical "free-but-only-good" being is possible, God may have created free-with-evil-possibility beings because the good of genuinely-free-loving relationship (which requires the possibility of refusal) outweighs the evil of some-creatures-actually-choosing-refusal. The eschatological completion (every tear wiped away, Rev 21:4) shows that the final-state is good despite the temporal evil along the way.

Cost / residual question: Even granting Plantinga's transworld-depravity hypothesis, why does any world with some evil pass the bar over a world with no evil at all? See Problem of Evil, Free Will Defense for the deeper engagement.

Paradox 3, Omniscient + compassionate God shouldn't create beings doomed to suffer

Statement: An omniscient God knows in advance all the suffering that will occur. A compassionate God would not create beings whom He knows will suffer. This God did create such beings. Therefore this God is not compassionate.

Response:

  1. The argument assumes that not-creating is the only morally-defensible response to foreknown-suffering. This is contested. Creating-with-suffering-but-also-with-redemption is a different option, and the Christian story is precisely that. God knew creation would involve suffering AND knew the redemption-story would conclude with every-tear-wiped-away (Rev 21:4). The compassion is shown in the redemption arc, not in the non-creation.
  2. The argument assumes the worth-of-existence is judged solely by suffering-content. This is contested. A life that includes suffering and redemption may be better than non-existence on multiple ethical frames, virtue-ethics, eschatological-completion frameworks, Christian-classical-theism. Most humans, when asked, prefer existing-with-some-suffering to never-having-existed. The skeptic argument depends on an ethical-anti-natalism premise that few hold and that the skeptic typically does not defend.
  3. The Christian answer specifically. God's compassion is most fully revealed in His own self-substitution for creaturely suffering, the cross. God does not create beings doomed to suffer and abandon them; He creates beings whom He Himself enters and bears their suffering for them. The kenotic self-emptying of Christ (Phil 2:5-11) is God's compassionate response to creaturely-suffering. The skeptic argument that "compassionate God wouldn't create suffering-beings" misses the structure of the Christian narrative: God does create suffering-beings and enters their suffering on the cross.

Cost / residual question: Why does God allow the magnitude of suffering He does, given that even His self-substitution doesn't eliminate temporal suffering? See Problem of Evil, Free Will Defense and the broader theodicy.

Paradox 4, Infinite punishment for finite sins is unjust

Statement: Justice requires proportionality between offense and punishment. Infinite punishment cannot be proportional to finite sins. A just God would not inflict disproportionate punishment. Therefore a God who sentences finite sinners to eternal torment is not just.

Response:

This is the deepest of the paradoxes and merits a separate treatment. See Hell and Eternal Punishment (the existing codex synthesis) for the full multi-position engagement. The brief responses:

  1. The "finite sin" framing is contested. Sin against an infinite being (God) is not a "finite" act in the simple sense. The dignity-of-the-offended-party affects the gravity of the offense, striking a stranger is one offense, striking a sovereign-king-in-treason is another, even if the physical act is identical. Sin against the infinite God carries an infinite-dignity-violation that the skeptic framing misses.
  2. The eternal-torment view is one of several Christian positions. Annihilationism (the wicked eventually cease to exist; eternal-conscious-torment is rejected) and conditional-immortality (immortality is contingent on covenantal-relationship with God) are mainstream evangelical positions that handle the disproportionality problem differently. Universalism (all are eventually reconciled) is held by some Christian theologians (e.g., David Bentley Hart). The skeptic argument that targets only the strongest-eternal-conscious-torment position doesn't defeat Christianity in general.
  3. The "punishment" framing may be misleading. Some Christian theologians (C.S. Lewis, The Great Divorce; The Problem of Pain ch. 8) argue hell is more accurately described as the natural-final-state of those who have refused God's love throughout life, not God inflicting punishment from outside but the self-chosen distance from God becoming permanent. On this reading, hell is separation from God (which all sin chooses partially in time) becoming settled-eternal-state, not active divine torture.
  4. The eschatological-final-justice frame. Whatever the specific mechanism, Christian theology holds that God's final-judgment is just, Rev 16:7, "Yes, Lord God Almighty, true and just are your judgments." The skeptic argument that human moral-instinct can fully evaluate God's eternal-judgment-decisions assumes humans have moral-knowledge sufficient to judge the eternal-cosmic-court, itself a contested epistemological claim.

Paradox 5, Belief over works is unjust

Statement: A just God judges people by their actions, not by their beliefs. The Christian God judges people by their belief in Jesus. Therefore the Christian God is not just.

Response:

  1. The claim presupposes a particular understanding of justice. Many ethical frameworks (covenantal-fidelity ethics; relationship-based ethics) treat trust-and-loyalty as morally constitutive, alongside actions. Belief-as-trust is not separable from action; it shapes the entire orientation of life.
  2. NT consistently affirms both belief and works. The skeptic framing as "Christianity says belief alone, not works" is a misreading. Jas 2:14-26, "faith without works is dead"; Mt 25:31-46, the sheep-and-goats are judged by what they did; Rev 20:12, judgment is "according to what they had done." Christianity's consistent teaching: saving faith produces works; faith without works is not saving faith. The "belief alone, not works" caricature targets a position no major Christian tradition holds.
  3. Belief in Christ is not arbitrary; it is the appropriate response to who Christ is. If Christ is who Christianity claims He is, God incarnate, the only mediator between God and man, the one who has accomplished the substitutionary atonement, then not-trusting-Him is not innocent-uninformedness; it is misalignment with reality. A judge who says "you must trust the only person who has paid your debt" is not unjust; he's reflecting the actual situation.
  4. The Reformed-classical answer (Augustine, Calvin, the major confessions). Justification is by faith in Christ's finished work; this faith is the means by which Christ's righteousness is imputed to the believer. Works follow as the fruit-and-evidence of saving faith. The skeptic-popular framing presents this as if works don't matter, but that's not the Christian position. Works matter; they're the evidence-and-fruit of saving faith, not the ground of justification.
  5. The exclusivity question. The deeper question is whether God can justly demand belief in Jesus specifically when many people throughout history have not heard of Him. This is the salvation-of-the-unevangelized question, see the existing codex synthesis Salvation of the Unevangelized which presents the four positions (restrictivism / inclusivism / postmortem-evangelism / universalism) and the inclusivist-on-application-exclusivist-on-ground synthesis.

Paradox 6, Imperfect revelation

Statement: A perfect God communicating perfect will would reveal it clearly and directly. The Bible is imperfect, contradictory, and subject to human interpretation. Therefore the Bible cannot be God's perfect word, or God is not perfect.

Response:

  1. "Perfect revelation" needs definition. What does "perfect" revelation look like? If "perfect" means zero-interpretive-difficulty, then no communication is "perfect", every communication requires interpretation. If "perfect" means fully-effective for the divine purpose, then the question is whether the Bible succeeds in its actual purpose, which the Christian claim is yes.
  2. The Bible's "interpretive challenge" is feature, not bug. Scripture's text-form (narrative + poetry + law + wisdom + epistles + apocalyptic) requires interpretation-with-the-Spirit-and-the-Church. This is not a defect; it's how God designed revelation to function. Augustine's On Christian Doctrine and Aquinas's ST I q. 1 develop this carefully: scripture's surface-meaning is accessible; its deeper-meanings require ongoing-interpretive-work; this is part of God's pedagogical-formation of His people.
  3. The "contradictions" claim is heavily contested. Most alleged biblical contradictions dissolve under careful exegesis (chronological-context, audience-context, genre-context, original-language considerations). The codex engages many of these directly, see Christ Was Made (Misread Proof-Texts), Failed Messianic Prophecy Objections, Inherited Guilt and Visiting Iniquity, etc.
  4. Christianity does not claim the Bible is the only revelation. Classical Christianity (Catholic, Orthodox, classical-Protestant) holds that God's revelation is progressive, through creation (Rom 1:20, general revelation), through Christ (the full revelation, Heb 1:1-2), through scripture (the inscripturated revelation), through the church's teaching tradition (in Catholic / Orthodox traditions). The Bible is one mode of revelation, not God's only revelation.
  5. The Christ-as-fullest-revelation point. Heb 1:1-2, "Long ago, at many times and in many ways, God spoke to our fathers by the prophets, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son." The clearest, most-direct revelation is the incarnate Christ. Scripture witnesses to Christ; it is not a substitute for the Christ-revelation. The skeptic argument that targets the Bible's textual-imperfections may miss that Christianity's primary revelation is Christ Himself.

Paradox 7, Biblical self-contradiction on justice

Statement: Bible promises sons shall not be punished for fathers' sins (Deut 24:16; Ezek 18), yet God destroys households for one man's sin (Achan in Joshua 7; David's family in 2 Sam 12). The Bible self-contradicts on justice.

Response: This is the Inherited Guilt and Visiting Iniquity question; see that hub for the full engagement. The brief: the apparent contradiction dissolves when the judicial-legal-personal-responsibility texts (cluster B) are distinguished from the lived-experience-multi-generational-consequences texts (cluster A). Both are simultaneously true; they address different questions. See the dedicated hub for full detail.

Paradox 8, Omniscience vs omnipotence, knowing the future precludes changing it

Statement: An omniscient God knows all future events. If God knows the future, the future is fixed (because if God's knowledge is true, what He knows must occur). If the future is fixed, God cannot change it, which limits His omnipotence. Omniscience and omnipotence are mutually inconsistent.

Response:

  1. The argument confuses epistemic-foreknowledge with causal-determination. God's knowing what will happen is not the same as God's causing what will happen. A perfect time-traveler observing tomorrow's weather doesn't cause tomorrow's weather; she observes it. Similarly, God's foreknowing future free choices does not determine them, it tracks them. The future is fixed in the sense of being-what-it-will-be; it is not fixed in the sense of being unable to be different from what would-have-been-without-divine-foreknowledge.
  2. God's omnipotence doesn't include the ability to do the logically impossible. Aquinas (ST I q. 25 a. 3): "Whatever implies contradiction does not come within the scope of divine omnipotence, because it cannot have the aspect of possibility." Divine omnipotence is the ability to do all that is logically possible. Changing what one knows is going to happen is logically impossible (because if I successfully change it, I didn't know what was going to happen, I only thought I did). This is not a limit on God's power; it's a clarification of what divine power means.
  3. The classical-theistic frame: God is eternal, not temporal-and-foreknowing. On the classical-theistic view (Augustine, Confessions XI; Boethius, Consolation of Philosophy V; Aquinas, ST I q. 14 a. 13), God exists in eternity, the simultaneous-and-perfect-possession-of-unlimited-life, not in a temporal relationship with the past, present, future. From God's eternity, all temporal events are equally present. God doesn't "foreknow" the future from a temporal-now; He knows all temporal events from an eternal-now. The "future is fixed because God foreknows" framing fails because God's relation to time is not the temporal-foreknowing relation the skeptic argument assumes.
  4. The Open-Theist alternative. Open Theists (Boyd, Pinnock, Sanders) reject the classical-theistic eternity-frame and argue God's omniscience does not include exhaustive foreknowledge of free future choices, because future free choices are not yet objects-of-knowledge. This avoids the omniscience-omnipotence paradox by adjusting the omniscience claim. The codex engages this view in Open Theism; the position has costs in classical-Christian-orthodoxy but avoids the paradox the skeptic argument raises.

Paradox 9, Omniscience + emotion is contradictory

Statement: Emotions arise from learning new information or encountering uncontrollable problems. An omniscient God knows everything; an omnipotent God can fix everything. Therefore an omniscient + omnipotent God experiences no emotion. Yet the Bible depicts God as having emotions (anger, grief, love, joy). Therefore the Bible's God is not the classical-theistic omniscient + omnipotent God.

Response:

  1. The argument misunderstands what divine "emotion" is. Classical-theistic theology distinguishes passions (emotions caused by external stimulus, requiring change-in-the-subject) from affections (settled dispositions characterizing the subject's character). Aquinas (ST I q. 20 a. 1): God has love, joy, mercy in the affection sense (settled-character-disposition), not in the passion sense (caused-by-external-change). God's love is His unchanging character; God's anger is the consistent-and-unchanging divine response to creaturely-evil. These are not the kinds of emotions that require learning or being-thwarted.
  2. Anthropomorphic biblical language. The Bible regularly uses anthropomorphic language for God ("the eyes of the Lord"; "the arm of the Lord"; "God repented", 1 Sam 15:11). Classical-theistic interpretation (Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin) reads these as accommodations, divine-realities communicated in human-experiential-language so we can understand them. Saying God "is angry" doesn't mean God has the passion-of-anger in the temporal-affective sense; it means God has the unchanging-judicial-disposition against evil that the human experience of anger approximates.
  3. The Open-Theist / Process-Theology alternative. Open Theists and Process Theologians do attribute genuine passions to God, God genuinely changes in response to creaturely actions. This avoids the paradox at the cost of weakening classical divine attributes. The codex engages these positions; the classical-theistic alternative dissolves the paradox without weakening the attributes.
  4. The Christological answer. In Christ, God does take on human passions, Christ weeps (Jn 11:35), grieves (Mt 26:38), is angry (Mk 3:5), feels compassion (Mt 9:36). The Christian doctrine of the incarnation explicitly affirms that the Son took on the full human-experiential nature including passions. The God who is immutable in His divine nature nonetheless enters into human experience in Christ. The paradox dissolves through the Christological-incarnation framework, the same God who is impassable in His divinity is genuinely passable in His humanity.

Why the paradox cluster fails as an argument against God's existence

The paradox cluster represents philosophical-skeptic-popular engagement with classical-theism, but it consistently fails to engage the classical-theistic framework precisely:

  1. Each paradox depends on a non-classical understanding of one or more divine attributes. "Omnipotent = able to do everything including the logically impossible"; "Omniscient = temporal-foreknowing rather than eternal-knowing"; "Perfect = identical-with-creation"; "Just = punishment-equals-act-content-without-dignity-of-offended-party"; etc. Once the attributes are properly defined within the classical-theistic framework, the paradoxes dissolve.
  2. The paradox cluster ignores the classical-theistic apparatus of Divine Simplicity, Actus Purus, Ipsum Esse Subsistens. The classical-theistic God is not one being among many with separable additive attributes, God is being-itself, simple, pure act. The paradoxes assume a theistic-personalist framing where God's attributes are like properties of a discrete-individual; the classical-theistic framing is fundamentally different and dissolves the paradoxes.
  3. The paradox cluster operates in modern-analytic-philosophy mode while ignoring classical-theistic counter-engagement. Plantinga's God, Freedom, and Evil; Stump's Wandering in Darkness; Feser's The Last Superstition and Five Proofs; Hart's The Experience of God; Davies's The Reality of God and the Problem of Evil, major contemporary classical-theistic works engage each paradox at length. The skeptic-popular argument typically engages with Sunday-school-level theism rather than with the major-Christian-philosophical-tradition.
  4. The paradoxes treat the divine attributes atomistically rather than systematically. Classical-theism understands God's attributes as unified-and-mutually-implying in the divine simplicity; the paradoxes drive wedges between attributes that classical-theism sees as inseparable. The "God's love" and "God's justice" are not competing in classical-theism; they are both expressions of the single divine essence.

How to engage the cluster in conversation

For practical apologetic deployment:

  1. Force precise attribute-definitions. Before engaging any specific paradox, ask the skeptic to define the attribute(s) involved precisely. Most of the paradoxes depend on imprecise definitions; pinning down the definition is half the apologetic work.
  2. Distinguish classical-theism from theistic-personalism. The skeptic argument typically targets theistic-personalism (God as a discrete being with separable attributes) and assumes Christianity is committed to it. Many sophisticated Christian theologians (Hart, Davies, Feser, Stump) are explicit that classical-theism is structurally different. Show this distinction; the paradoxes dissolve in classical-theistic mode.
  3. Connect to classical-theistic apparatus. Divine Simplicity, Actus Purus, Ipsum Esse Subsistens are the load-bearing classical-theistic concepts that handle most of the paradoxes. Reading without these is reading a different tradition than the one the apologist is defending.
  4. Engage Plantinga's free-will defense. For paradoxes 2-3 specifically, Plantinga's God, Freedom, and Evil (1974) is the standard analytic-philosophical response. The argument has been engaged for 50 years and has held up; the skeptic-popular argument typically is not aware of it.
  5. Use the Christological answer for paradoxes about God's compassion / impassibility. The incarnation frames how God relates to creaturely-suffering: not by avoiding it, but by entering it. This is not a logical contradiction; it is the Christian narrative.
  6. Acknowledge residual hard questions. The paradox cluster includes some genuinely hard questions (Hell and Eternal Punishment proportionality; the magnitude of evil in creation). The honest Christian engagement does not pretend they fully dissolve; it points to the deeper classical-theistic and biblical-theological frame that gives them their proper context.

Connection to scripture

Patristic / classical / modern engagement

  • Augustine, Confessions VII, XI; City of God XI-XII; On the Free Choice of the Will, develops classical-theistic framework on attributes, eternity, the problem of evil, free will.
  • Boethius, Consolation of Philosophy V, locus classicus on eternity-vs-foreknowledge.
  • Anselm, Proslogion, develops divine perfection / aseity.
  • Aquinas, ST I qq. 2-26, the comprehensive classical-theistic systematic treatment; engages every paradox in the cluster either directly or via the apparatus.
  • Calvin, Institutes I.10-18, Reformed-classical articulation.
  • Modern classical-theistic recovery:
  • David Bentley Hart, The Experience of God (2013), recovers classical-theism against theistic-personalism conflations
  • Brian Davies, The Reality of God and the Problem of Evil (2006), Aquinas-tradition engagement of the problem of evil
  • Edward Feser, The Last Superstition (2008); Five Proofs of the Existence of God (2017); Aristotle's Revenge (2019)
  • Eleonore Stump, Wandering in Darkness (2010), Aquinas-tradition theodicy
  • Steven Long, Analogia Entis (2011), analogy-of-being framework
  • Modern analytic-philosophical theism:
  • Alvin Plantinga, God, Freedom, and Evil (1974), locus-classicus for the free-will defense
  • Plantinga, Where the Conflict Really Lies (2011), engagement with science / theism
  • William Lane Craig, Time and Eternity (2001), engages the eternity-vs-foreknowledge question
  • Richard Swinburne, The Coherence of Theism (1993, 2nd ed.); Providence and the Problem of Evil (1998)
  • Peter van Inwagen, The Problem of Evil (2006)
  • Open Theist (the alternative position): Greg Boyd, God of the Possible (2000); Clark Pinnock et al., The Openness of God (1994); John Sanders, The God Who Risks (1998).
  • Process Theology (the further alternative): Charles Hartshorne, The Divine Relativity (1948); John Cobb, A Christian Natural Theology (1965).
  • Skeptic-engagement (the position the codex engages but does not endorse): J.L. Mackie, The Miracle of Theism (1982); Quentin Smith; Graham Oppy, Arguing About Gods (2006).

Suggested missing concepts (flagged for future builds)

The hub surfaces several adjacent topics that deserve their own future hubs:

  • Divine Simplicity, concept hub on the doctrine that God has no parts; foundational classical-theistic doctrine. Currently mentioned across many hubs but not hub'd at full-treatment depth. Highest priority missing concept for the classical-theistic apologetic.
  • Classical Theism vs Theistic Personalism, concept hub on the distinction between the Aquinas-classical-theism tradition and the modern-analytic-theistic-personalism. Critical for engaging the paradox-cluster.
  • Eternity (Divine), concept hub on the classical doctrine of God's eternity (Boethius's interminabilis vitae tota simul et perfecta possessio). Touches the foreknowledge-vs-omnipotence paradox specifically.
  • Divine Impassibility, concept hub on the classical doctrine that God is impassible (not subject to passions); engages paradox 9.
  • Theistic Personalism, concept hub on the contemporary-analytic-theism approach (William Lane Craig's framework, much of contemporary evangelical philosophy of religion).
  • Anthropomorphic Language for God, concept hub on how Scripture's anthropomorphic language about God should be interpreted. Touches multiple paradoxes.
  • Plantingas Free Will Defense, concept hub or syllogism specifically on the structured argument. The codex has Free Will and Determinism but the FWD as a structured argument deserves its own treatment.
  • Salvation of the Unevangelized, already exists as synthesis; should be cross-linked here.
  • Hell and Eternal Punishment, already exists as synthesis; should be cross-linked here.

See also