Dictionary Definition
omnipotent adj : having unlimited power [syn:
almighty, all-powerful]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Translations
having unlimited power, force or authority
- Czech: všemohoucí
- Dutch: almachtig, almachtige
- Finnish: kaikkivoipa, kaikkivaltias
- German: allmächtig
- Icelandic: almáttugur , almáttug , almáttugt
- Portuguese onipotente
- Russian: всемогущий (vsemogúščij)
- Serbian: svemoguć, svemoćan
- Spanish: omnipotente
- Swedish: omnipotent
- Telugu: సర్వ శక్తివంతుడు (sarva SaktivaMtuDu)
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Omnipotence (from Latin root Omni Potens: "all
power") is unlimited
power. Monotheistic
religions generally attribute omnipotence only to God.
In the philosophy of most Western monotheistic religions, omnipotence is
listed as one of God's characteristics among many, including
omniscience,
omnipresence, and
omnibenevolence.
Since he was God made flesh, Jesus was also said
to be omnipotent.
Meanings of omnipotence
Between people of different faiths, or indeed even between people of the same faith, the term omnipotent has been used to connote a number of different positions. These positions include, but are not limited to, the following:- God is able to do anything, i. e. the answer to "can God do x" is always "yes", regardless of what x may be. However this leads to obvious contradictions and is a view rarely held by theologians.
- God is able to do anything Aquinas Summa Theologica link here.
- God is able to do anything that God chooses to do.
- God is able to do anything that is in accord with His own nature (thus, for instance, if it is a logical consequence of God's nature that what God speaks is truth, then God is not able to lie).
- Hold that it is part of God's nature to be consistent and that it would be inconsistent for God to go against His own laws unless there were a reason to do so.
Under many philosophical definitions of the term
"God", senses 2, 3 and 4 can be shown to be equivalent. However, on
all understandings of Omnipotence, it is generally held that God is
able to intervene in the world by superseding the laws of physics,
since they are not part of his nature, but the principles on which
he has created the physical world. However many modern scholars
(such as John
Polkinghorne) hold that it is part of God's nature to be
consistent and that it would be inconsistent for God to go against
His own laws unless there were an overwhelming reason to do so.).
Although much of the narrative of the Old
Testament describes God as interacting with creation primarily
through persuasion, and only occasionally through force. A primary
New
Testament text used to assert the limit of God's power is
Paul's
assertion that God cannot tell a lie
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Titus%201:2;&version=49;.
Thus, it is argued, there is no scriptural reason to adhere to
omnipotence, and the adoption of the doctrine is merely a result of
the
synthesis of Hellenic and early Christian thought.
Many other verses in the Bible do assert God's
omnipotence without actually using the word itself. There are
several times in the Bible when God is called simply "Almighty",
showing that the Bible supports the belief in an omnipotent God.
Some such verses are listed below:
Psalms 33:8-9: Let all the earth fear the LORD:
let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of him. For he
spoke, and it was done; he commanded, and it stood fast.
Genesis 17:1: And when Abram was ninety years old
and nine, the LORD appeared to Abram, and said unto him, I am the
Almighty God; walk before me, and be thou perfect. (The Hebrew
word used here is "shadday" )
Jeremiah 32:27: Behold, I am the LORD, the God of
all flesh: is there any thing too hard for me?
At his command a storm arose and covered the sea.
(Psalm
107:25)
Paradoxes of omnipotence
Belief that God can do absolutely anything can be thought to yield certain logical paradoxes. A simple example goes as follows: Can God create a rock so heavy that even he cannot lift it? If he can, then the rock is now unliftable, limiting God's power. But if he cannot, then he is still not omnipotent. This question cannot be answered using formal logic due to its self-referential nature. See liar paradox and Godel's incompleteness theorem. This problem led in the High Middle Ages to developing the concept of mathematical infinity, and laid the basis for infinitesimal calculus. Combining omnipotence with omniscience can yield the difficulty of whether or not God can pose a question to which he would not know the answer.Augustine,
in his City of
God, argued that God could not do anything that would make God
non-omnipotent:
For He is called omnipotent on account of His
doing what He wills, not on account of His suffering what He wills
not; for if that should befall Him, He would by no means be
omnipotent. Wherefore, He cannot do some things for the very reason
that He is omnipotent.
Thus Augustine argued that God could not do
anything or create any situation that would in effect make God not
God.
Others have argued that (alluding to C.S. Lewis'
argument above), that when talking about omnipotence, referencing
"a rock so heavy that God cannot lift it" is nonsense just as much
as referencing "a square circle." So asking "Can God create a rock
so heavy that even he cannot lift it?" is just as much nonsense as
asking "Can God draw a square circle?" Therefore the question (and
therefore the perceived paradox) is meaningless.
There is also the argument that omnipotency
breaks logic. Meaning, "God can make a rock so heavy God can not
lift it, and lift it anyways because he is omnipotent." It is the
only way to properly explain omnipotency as to be able to do
everything.
Uncertainty and other views
All the above stated claims of power are all based on scriptual grounds and upon empirical human perception. This perception is limited to our senses. The power of God is related to its existence; for more info on the proof on the existence of God and methods see Existence of God.There are however other ways of perception like: reason, intuition, revelation, divine inspiration, religious experience, mystical states, and historical testimony.According to the Hindu philosophy the essence of
God or Brahman can never
be understood or known since Brahman is beyond both existence and
non-existence, transcending and including time, causation and
space, and thus can never be known in the same material sense as
one traditionally 'understands' a given concept or object.
So presuming there is a god-like entity
consciently taking actions, we cannot know the limits of God's
powers.
Since the current laws of physics are only known
to be valid in this universe, it is possible that the laws of
physics are different in parallel universes, giving a God-like
entity, more power. If the number of universes is unlimited, than
the power of a certain God-like entity is also unlimited, since the
laws of physics may be different in other universes, and
accordingly making this entity omnipotent. Unfortunately concerning
a multiverse there is a lack of empirical correlation. To the
extreme there are theories about realms beyond this multiverse
(Nirvana,
Chaos,
Nothingness).
Also trying to develop a theory to explain,
assign or reject omnipotence on grounds of logic has little merit,
since being omnipotent would mean the omnipotent being is above
logic. A view supported by René
Descartes He issues this idea in his
Meditations on First Philosophy.
It can also be debated that God, assuming there
is a God-like entity, is consciously taking actions. It could be
concluded from an emanationism point of view,
that all actions and creations by God are simply flows of divine
energy (the flowing Tao in conjunction with
qi is often seen as a river;
Dharma
(Buddhism) the law of nature discovered by Buddha has
no beginning or end.) Pantheism and/or
panentheism sees the
universe/multiverse as the body of God, making God everybody and
everything. So if one does something, actually God is doing it. We
are God's means according to this view.
In the Taoist religious or
philosophical tradition, the Tao is in some ways equivalent to God
or the logos. The Tao is
understood to have inexhaustible power, yet that power is simply
another aspect of its weakness.
Notes
References
- Augustine, City of God and Christian Doctrine
- C.S. Lewis, The Problem of Pain
- Charles Hartshorne, Man's Vision of God
- Plato, Sophist
- Tertullian, Against Praxeas
- Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica
See also
External links
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry
- "Does God Observe the Law of Contradiction? ... Should We?" by Richard Pratt, professor of Old Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary
- Omnipotence and Free Will in Judaism
- Problems with Divine Omnipotence
omnipotent in German: Allmacht
omnipotent in Spanish: Omnipotencia
omnipotent in French: Omnipotence
omnipotent in Interlingua (International
Auxiliary Language Association): Omnipotentia
omnipotent in Italian: Onnipotenza
omnipotent in Hebrew: אומניפוטנטיות
omnipotent in Dutch: Almacht
omnipotent in Polish: Omnipotencja
omnipotent in Portuguese: Omnipotência
omnipotent in Russian: Всемогущество
omnipotent in Serbian: Омнипотенција
omnipotent in Swedish: Allsmäktighet
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
absolute, all-knowing,
all-powerful, all-seeing, all-wise, almighty, boundless, changeless, creating, creative, divine, eternal, eternally the same,
everlasting,
glorious, godlike, good, hallowed, highest, holy, immortal, immutable, infinite, just, limitless, loving, luminous, majestic, making, merciful, numinous, omnipresent, omniscient, one, permanent, perpetual, plenipotentiary,
radiant, sacred, shaping, sovereign, supreme, timeless, ubiquitous, unbounded, unchanging, undefined, unlimited, unrestricted