One of the more fascinating trades I have discovered is that of a scholar - in particular a student of mathematics. And the reason is simple: the more one studies tools available for those fields, the more one has powerful tools to understand and relate to facets of God that other people don't discover.
My favorite example is the concept of multi-dimensionality. With respect to God, this is the idea that there are certain facets of God which exist in a way we don't understand ... perhaps in a different dimension. Engineers learn to deal with certain imaginary properties that have literal and direct effects upon tangible objects - even if those imaginary realities are not directly capable of being discerned. They do so with tools available in mathematics.
(For a fairly good tool to learn or teach multi-dimensionality, try Flatland: the movie)
In short - the study of God is recursive: - the more we learn and understand of God, the more we have tools at our disposal to evaluate and understand the information we have available, the more we realize that God is so profoundly amazing that the more we know, and the more we know the more we don't understand.
Save for the profoundly simple:
God is real.
God isn't mad at you.
Your move.
Sunday, March 02, 2008
The imaginary part of God is more real than we are
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1 comment:
Not sure about the multi-dimensional, imaginary thing, but on the "God is not mad at you" thing:
What about Romans 1:18; Rev 3:16; 6:12-17; Psalm 7:11?
Without faith in Christ, God remains angry with us for our sins against Him.
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