Thus
the divine omnipresence is a theological interpretation of the universality and centrality of the fundamentals by which the religious attitude is defined.
The divine omnipresence means the divine Love's universal action; the divine omniscience means the divine Love's awareness of the depths and heights of possibility; the divine transcendence means the divine Love's utter inexhaustibility; the divine immanence means the divine Love's unfailing presence.
Not exact matches
In the areas of omniscience, theodicy and
omnipresence,
divine relativity appears to have the potential to make significant contributions.
My results regarding
divine relativity are tentative, but there are already ramifications for the attributes of omniscience and
omnipresence as well as for the problem of theodicy.
Contrariwise,
divine relativity can make sense of
omnipresence, especially when seen in terms of Hartshorne's understanding of the world being the body of God: «For God there is no external environment, the
divine body just is the spatial whole; moreover, this body is vividly and distinctly perceived» (OOTM 94).
Omnipresence tells us that the
divine Love is everywhere and always present and at work to augment the good, often in very surprising places — a Christian would point especially to a humble human life, to a man born in a manger, and to that same man rejected and put to death, as the place where such active presentness is most clearly seen.
His
omnipresence, our
divine equality.
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes emphasized the danger of invoking
divine morality when he wrote, in a 1917 opinion, «The law is not a brooding
omnipresence in the sky.»
If one starts with clear belief in the
divine unity and
omnipresence, one may safely worship in many places, as we do, without losing the sense of God's oneness; but when the presuppositions of thought and imagination are polytheistic, as with the early Hebrews, many shrines keep alive and vivid the tradition of many gods.
The most common among these include omniscience (infinite knowledge), omnipotence (unlimited power),
omnipresence (present everywhere), omnibenevolence (perfect goodness),
divine simplicity, and eternal and necessary existence.