Why do we think God is ‘omnipotent’, ‘omniscient’?

OK, I am going on in a bit of a theological manner, but, I have had a few existential moments lately, so, perhaps that is why. For example, just a few hours ago, I was in a car accident – not hurt, just shaken a bit. A fender-bender.

The previous fender-bender I was in happened when I was taking my puppy in for cancer surgery and a philosophy student on her way to an exam lost control of her car in the snow…yes, a philosophy student.

Today’s fender-bender was minor, but the lady who backed into me in the parking lot did not understand why her car would no longer move backwards – she was so unaware that she had hit my car that she kept trying to back up into it, even as I was standing by her window and waving my arms to try to get her attention.

This sent me musing in so many directions…why do we do what we do, just how limited are we in both our observations and reasoning and why do we project so many of our fears into religions?

Because at the very root of it all, religions are about projecting fears and having them collectively assuaged. They cannot all be true – they are mutually exclusive, so…

Which makes me wonder: why do some religions – at least the most popular ones these days – have omniscient, omnipotent deities?

Yes, one per religion, that is rather definitional – cannot have two omnipotent beings, that would be a contradiction.

But, how did we arrive at this?

Ancient religions regarded Gods as sort of immortal humans with a few extra powers tossed in for good measure, but none of them were considered all powerful, all knowing…and certainly not all good.

Even the Abrahamic faiths are rooted in a view of God that is very much more limited and less unique than what most current Abrahamic worshippers I have spoken to about this are convinced of.

‘God’ did not know that Adam and Eve ate of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. He had to question them to find out. He was shocked that they were hiding from him because they were ashamed of their nakedness…

Then, he rushed off to tell ‘the others’.

That is not ‘omniscient’ – or he would have known, without questioning Adam and Eve.

Then we come to ‘omnipotent’ – that directly contradicts the whole ‘free will’ idea for humans.

This one is a little more complex, so, please, bear with me.

God gives humans free will – to do as they wish, even if it means disobeying him.

But, he is also all-powerful, with the ability to control everything, yet he choses not to control the thought processes of humans.

This is a contradiction: if God wanted perfect slaves (of the mind), he could have created humans to both have freedom of thought and only think in patterns that do not cause him to condemn some of the most eternal suffering.

It is impossible to fully and willingly grant freedom of thought, then punish people with eternal suffering for exercising it – unless you are actually setting people up to fail so you can have an excuse to torture them.

So, why did we ever arrive at a point where we think God(s) are omnipotent?

Certainly not from The Bible – pick the one you prefer, from the Catholic to the Gnostic to the Old Testament: nothing in these religious texts suggests an onmiscient and omnipotent God: so, why do so many people believe that?

What does it mean ‘to be a God’?

This is not as philosophical as it might seem from the title.

Or, perhaps it is…

Whatever this is, it is the result of an actual, real-life (if I may be so bold) dream.

Yes, a dream.

Not one of them ‘pie-in-the-sky’ musings, but, actually, fully asleep, things being projected into my sleepy-consciousness type dream.

Now, there are dreams, and there are dreams.

Many different types, many different textures – if you excuse the term – to the dreams.

Some premises of dreams are nebulous, shifting realities where your mind sort of does not mind that the baseline references are so not-fixed that they shift during the dream and that is perfectly OK to the dreaming you.

One recurring dream I have had every few years had been one where I can glide over – sort of fly, I guess – glide over the ground, just millimeters above, if I just hit my stride the right way…but I can never actually show it to anyone because having an observer completely destroys my ability to ‘glide’. Yes, I understand this reveals more about me than I used to be comfortable sharing, but, well, we are talking about dreams here…

This dream, however, was unlike any other I have ever had – especially in its texture, if you know what I mean. It felt like an alternate reality, but a reality and there was no nebulous and changing quality to it.

It started innocently enough. I was there.

‘There’ was a whole ‘thing’ in and of itself.

It was not ‘here’.

Rather, it was more like a huge colony – a huge, multi-story building, spanning more area than any building I have ever experienced: you could walk for days without reaching its limits. Yet, it was an artificial environment with many, many floors – something I ‘knew’ in my dream.

OK, on the top floor, there was some eco-forming going on – making the area habitable. And, for that, there were these tiny robots, which looked a bit like a cross between bacteria and ants, that would manipulate molecules to create a human-friendly habitat. I was not really supposed to see that, as that kind of ‘gave things away’ that we were all living in an artificial habitat that was, in one way or another, a bio-lab to study us.

OK – throughout all of my life, I have been a bit of a ‘work-around-the-rules’ person.

Not necessarily because I was brave or anything, but because I often did not get that there were rules, so I broke them without understanding the implications. Same in this dream – I kept breaking the ‘unwritten’ rules.

I broke through various (think video games, but not exactly) barriers to get to lower levels of the habitat and it took me time, but I had eventually figured out that each and every one of us had a ‘governor chip’ in our brain and that each ‘floor/level’ of the habitat radiated a different ‘control’ type thingie that got picked up by the ‘governor chip’ and limited that person’s ability to reason beyond what the ‘governor’ allowed. Just did not happen – those thoughts were simply not permitted to register in the brain.

And, yes – there was a strict prohibition for people to move between the habitat levels. If people were caught, the penalty was death. But, that was also my life experience: I was born on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain and being caught trying to escape meant death. So, I get where this bit of the dream came from.

Of course, it did not stop me from trying to escape.

To escape the control over my mind.

I am not a neurotypical in real life, so, that carried over to my dream. Because I was not neuro-typical, the ‘governor-chip’ failed at controlling my mental processing – ok, bit by bit, because I sought to escape – of course – but every level lower I got to, the waves controlling the chip were different and made me ‘reason’ in completely different ways, ways that are alien to what I think reasoning is but what seemed absolutely perfect at each level of the habitat I had entered into until I had managed to regain my self.

Finally, I got to the ground level – the base of this whole habitat. I still did not know who had created it or how it was run – I just threw off the shackles of the various levels and was just discovering what this ‘ground level’ was all about. It seemed that the only people who had made it to this level had been the ones who circumvented or resisted successfully their ‘governor chip’.

Backing up a bit: to get from the high (most controlled) levels to the lower ones, there was always a door. Yes, I get it, a door. Heavily guarded at the top most levels, less guarded as you made your way to the lower levels. This should have rang an alarm bell, but, in my dream, it seemed perfect.

So, I work my way to the lowest level – and there is a door.

Yes, a door.

And it says that if I walk through that door, I will become GOD.

Oh, the temptation!

But, my sleeping, dreaming self did not choose to just go through that door and become GOD.

Why?

Well, did it mean I would gain control over this colony/habitat?

Would I now be in charge of controlling the ‘governors’ that control the thoughts of people in the different levels of the habitat?

Would I want that?

Or, would ‘becoming GOD’ mean I would have not just over the habitat/colony, but also over the ones who had created it?

In my dream, I was flummoxed: what exactly would ‘becoming GOD’ mean? And through it various permutations, would I want that? I walked away to ponder the implications…

Luckily, my alarm went off and I never had to answer that question in my dream.

Yet, it has haunted me since: what would it, really, mean to be GOD.