Where Is God?

In the New Testament, we are told that God is an invisible spirit (Colossians 1:15, John 4:24). It appears Yahweh exists as an unembodied infinite mind. He is an incorporeal, non-spatial spirit, which means he cannot accurately be described as here, there, or anywhere. He just is.

When we say “God is in heaven” or “God’s Spirit is in us,” what we mean is God is active here or there.

Some say that God is in all things (and all things are in God). This view is called Panentheism and is closely related to “process theism”—as we improve the world, we improve God. Another non-Judeo-Christian view called Pantheism states everything is God, that God is the universe.

I agree with William Lane Craig that “omnipresence should be understood in terms of God’s being immediately cognizant of and causally active at every point in space. He knows what is happening at every spatial location in the universe and He is causally operative at every such point, even if nothing more is going on there than quantum fluctuations in the vacuum of ‘empty’ space.”

So the question, “Where is God” cannot be answered because the question seeks to spatially locate a non-spatial being. Yahweh is not literally in your heart, in the air that you breathe, or in every drop of coffee that you drink, but he is in control of all things and always at work everywhere.

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Related Posts:
Is God’s Spirit literally “in” me?
God’s Representational Indwelling
Where is God?: Exploring the Nature of Omnipresence, by Jason Dulle

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