If the God of
classical theism existed, an objective foundation for morality would exist.
Not exact matches
This traditional Western conception of deity — this
classical theism — also teaches that God
exists from the divine and of the divine; aseity is taken to be the root attribute of the divine.
, my critic, with a certain partial consistency, also holds (with
classical theism) that God does not necessarily create at all and might have
existed solus.
In fact, it seems fair to say that the most common criticism process theists level against the God of
classical free will
theism is the claim that if such a being really
existed and were wholly good, we should expect to see displays of divine coercive power more often.
One can not sensibly dispute that the unchanging, simple, and necessary God of
classical theism, if he
exists, would differ from our changing, composite, contingent universe in requiring no cause of his own.