We can define what a table is, or a human, or a planet. We know what it's made out of. We know where it came from or how it came about. We know what it isn't. We know what it can and cannot do. Even if we can't explain how something came about, we can still define something by the real world properties that it has. We can observe these properties and record them objectively.
You can't say answer anything like this about a god. This is because the concept of a god is necessarily intangible. Because once you define what a god is in real terms, and more importantly what it isn't, it ceases to become a god.
No one can say what a god is because the very concept relies on being undefined and open to interpretation.
Theists therefore don't exactly even know what they believe in.
You can't say answer anything like this about a god. This is because the concept of a god is necessarily intangible. Because once you define what a god is in real terms, and more importantly what it isn't, it ceases to become a god.
No one can say what a god is because the very concept relies on being undefined and open to interpretation.
Theists therefore don't exactly even know what they believe in.