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When people say they want to know God more, they usually mean they want to feel him more — more present, more real. But knowing God more deeply requires understanding who he actually is, not just what we imagine him to be.
The classical doctrine of divine simplicity states that God is not made of parts. He is not partly love and partly holiness — he is wholly and entirely each of his attributes at once. He does not merely have love. He is love. This distinction changes everything about how you approach him, pray to him, and understand the gap between what he says and what you feel.
This episode explores the doctrine of divine simplicity — what it means that God is not composed of parts, why this protects against a reduced or domesticated view of God, and why understanding it leads to deeper worship. This episode teaches the classical doctrine of divine simplicity, why God's attributes are not separate components but a single undivided whole, and what this means for your relationship with him, hosted by two pastors.
You will learn what divine simplicity means and why theologians throughout church history considered it essential. You will hear how a God who is composed of parts would be limited in ways that undermine trust and worship. You will walk away with a richer understanding of what you mean when you call God "good" or "loving."
A small God produces small faith. The God revealed in Scripture is larger than any single attribute, more unified than any category. This episode will expand your vision of who you are actually dealing with.
Related episodes:
God Is Triune — EP 47
God Is Eternal: Why God's Eternity Changes How You Live Today
God Is Infinite: How God's Boundlessness Changes Prayer, Trust, and Faith
Take the free Spiritual Health Assessment at growgodly.com/health-check.
By Khalil Burton4.8
3939 ratings
When people say they want to know God more, they usually mean they want to feel him more — more present, more real. But knowing God more deeply requires understanding who he actually is, not just what we imagine him to be.
The classical doctrine of divine simplicity states that God is not made of parts. He is not partly love and partly holiness — he is wholly and entirely each of his attributes at once. He does not merely have love. He is love. This distinction changes everything about how you approach him, pray to him, and understand the gap between what he says and what you feel.
This episode explores the doctrine of divine simplicity — what it means that God is not composed of parts, why this protects against a reduced or domesticated view of God, and why understanding it leads to deeper worship. This episode teaches the classical doctrine of divine simplicity, why God's attributes are not separate components but a single undivided whole, and what this means for your relationship with him, hosted by two pastors.
You will learn what divine simplicity means and why theologians throughout church history considered it essential. You will hear how a God who is composed of parts would be limited in ways that undermine trust and worship. You will walk away with a richer understanding of what you mean when you call God "good" or "loving."
A small God produces small faith. The God revealed in Scripture is larger than any single attribute, more unified than any category. This episode will expand your vision of who you are actually dealing with.
Related episodes:
God Is Triune — EP 47
God Is Eternal: Why God's Eternity Changes How You Live Today
God Is Infinite: How God's Boundlessness Changes Prayer, Trust, and Faith
Take the free Spiritual Health Assessment at growgodly.com/health-check.