The Doctrine of God
I. His Existence
-1. Assumed by the Scriptures
-2. Proofs of the Existence of God
--a. Universal Belief in the Existence of God
--b. Cosmological - Argument from Cause
--c. Teleological - Argument from Design
--d. Ontological - Argument from Being
--e. Anthropological - Moral Argument
--f. Argument from Congruity
--g. Argument from Scripture
II. The Nature of God (vs. Agnosticism)
III. The Attributes of God
I. His Existence
1. Taken for Granted by the Scripture Writers
It does not seem to have occurred to any of the writers of either the Old or the New Testaments to attempt to prove or to argue for the existence of God. Everywhere and at all times it is a fact taken for granted. "A God capable of proof would be no God at all" (Jacobi). He is the self-exstent One (Exodus 3:14) and the Source of all life (John 5:26).
The sublime opening of the Scriptures announces the fact of God and His existence: "In the beginning God" (Genesis 1:1). Nor is the rise or dawn of the idea of God in the mind of man depicted. Psalm 14:1: "The fool hath said in his hearth, There is no God," indicates not a disbelief in the existence, but rather in the active interest of Godin the affairs of men - He seemed to hide Himself from the affairs of men (see Job 22:12-14).
The Scriptures further recognize that men not only know of the existence of God, but have also a certain circle of ideas as to who and what He is (Romans 1:18,19).
No one but a "fool" will deny the fact of God. "What! no God? A watch, and no key for it? A watch with a main-spring broken, and no jeweler to fix it? A watch, and no repair shop? A timecard and a train, and nobody to run it? A lamp lit, and nobody to pour oil in to keep the wick burning? A garden, and no gardener? Flowers, and no florist? Conditions, and no conditioner?" He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh at such absurd atheism.
Tomorrow, we will look at some of the arguments for the existence of God.
I. His Existence
-1. Assumed by the Scriptures
-2. Proofs of the Existence of God
--a. Universal Belief in the Existence of God
--b. Cosmological - Argument from Cause
--c. Teleological - Argument from Design
--d. Ontological - Argument from Being
--e. Anthropological - Moral Argument
--f. Argument from Congruity
--g. Argument from Scripture
II. The Nature of God (vs. Agnosticism)
III. The Attributes of God
I. His Existence
1. Taken for Granted by the Scripture Writers
It does not seem to have occurred to any of the writers of either the Old or the New Testaments to attempt to prove or to argue for the existence of God. Everywhere and at all times it is a fact taken for granted. "A God capable of proof would be no God at all" (Jacobi). He is the self-exstent One (Exodus 3:14) and the Source of all life (John 5:26).
The sublime opening of the Scriptures announces the fact of God and His existence: "In the beginning God" (Genesis 1:1). Nor is the rise or dawn of the idea of God in the mind of man depicted. Psalm 14:1: "The fool hath said in his hearth, There is no God," indicates not a disbelief in the existence, but rather in the active interest of Godin the affairs of men - He seemed to hide Himself from the affairs of men (see Job 22:12-14).
The Scriptures further recognize that men not only know of the existence of God, but have also a certain circle of ideas as to who and what He is (Romans 1:18,19).
No one but a "fool" will deny the fact of God. "What! no God? A watch, and no key for it? A watch with a main-spring broken, and no jeweler to fix it? A watch, and no repair shop? A timecard and a train, and nobody to run it? A lamp lit, and nobody to pour oil in to keep the wick burning? A garden, and no gardener? Flowers, and no florist? Conditions, and no conditioner?" He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh at such absurd atheism.
Tomorrow, we will look at some of the arguments for the existence of God.
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