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Definition of God

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Q. What can be universally accepted when speaking about god?

A. A god that has limits, such as the god's of the roman and Greek myths, are what could be called 'local god's in charge' at best. Even a god that has absolute control over this universe, but is subject to outside forces, would not qualify as the God that we speak of. Even if that god is the one and only god in existence, it would not be more than a super-being. Such a being would then beg the question of where it came from, or what is the essence of what it exits within; a power outside and over that god.
        The God that we know does not exist within limits, He can not be limited, and does not exist within anything - it is everything. This limitless nature extends in all directions, coming before time, space, the laws of nature, and every force imagined, and yet to be imagined. This being we call God, created all of these things, and nothing existed before He created them. There were no raw materials like the potters clay to shape reality from, everything that exists came from the will of this being.

        Now if your God is different, I would certainly like to hear about it. The God I refer to is the All, from which everything springs from. More than that I can not imagine, and less than that is not the God we commonly refer to.

        To further define God we need to look deeper into the question of it's origins. This starts by considering the issue of First Cause.