And that's the category error I was getting at earlier. God is not bound by morals. I'm not saying that God is free to be immoral. I'm saying the words "God is bound by morals" makes about as much sense as "How much does blue weigh?" Do a search for "Euthyphro Dilemma" on this board and/or go read Making Divine Simplicity Simpleto see why.ConfusedMan wrote:To your first question, I would say the only thing God is bound to is morals.
Again, it is not a hard question to answer. You and I have a different understanding of what God is. God is perfect, which means, by definition, He could not want anything outside of Himself. To desire something means tat you want to obtain something that you do not have, and that means that you lack something. If you lack something, you are not perfect. But God is perfect, ergo God lacks nothing, ergo God cannot receive anything, ergo God cannot desire anything. To suggest that He can is to suggest that He is not perfect.I think it is biblically correct to say that God can not do anything unmoral. Other than that I would also say no to the first question. To your second question, can we really know if God does or doesn't desire something outside Himself? It is a hard question to answer. After all His ways are above our ways, and His thoughts above our thoughts. We cannot claim to know for sure about all of God's thought's and desires.
As to the His ways and His thoughts verse, really, go read the book I wrote. I have a whole chapter on that whole issue (chapter five, if you want to skip right to it).
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Now, if you answer yes to the first and imply a yes is possible to the second, then I will go further than your OP. I will state that God is evil and therefore not God. If you can answer "yes" to either of my questions, then I respond that theism itself is incoherent and that we may as well be atheists. Perhaps there is some superman type being out there that is masquerading as a god, but he is no such thing, and to claim to be God would you are not is evil. So even such a being would be evil. In that case, there is no such thing as morality at all. Perhaps such a being rules by the golden rule (he who has the gold makes the rules), but I, frankly, have no reason to think such a being exists, nor am I interested in such a one.
If, on the other hand, you answer both with "no" as you must to be consistent, then Paul's question is pretty easily answered: there is no "why" that God created, nor can there be. He created simply because He chose to. In the old language of the Church, He created because it was fitting. But there is no reason, nor could there be, for such would imply that God was compelled by some set of circumstances to act, and therefore God is not free (and therefore, again, not God). He created for our benefit, to love us, to manifest His goodness (and that for our benefit, not His). He created to allow us to enjoy and share in the eternal, unchangeable, untouchable happiness that is His Existence. He did this, again, not out of some desire to do so, as if He gains something by doing good, but simply out of grace. And that, to me, is a profound that: creation itself is a matter of grace. He does even that for us, not for Himself. We are the beneficiaries of all that He is. He gains absolutely nothing from us, from our praise, or even from doing good for us. He does it all simply because He sovereignly and graciously choose to bless.
So I would answer Paul's question with one last: why does God choose to bless us at all? The answer to that question is the same answer as why He created us in the first place. Because He freely wills it.