Growing up in Atlanta in the 1970s, I went to many events at the Omni Arena. Atlanta’s basketball team played there. I saw my first concert there. It hosted the Final Four in 1977, the Democratic National Convention in 1988, and the Summer Olympics in 1996. It even had a hotel attached to it, complete with an ice-skating rink, and the world’s only indoor amusement park. The Omni had everything!
Naturally, when I first heard about God’s omniscience, omnipresence, and omnipotence, I grasped their meaning almost immediately. I already knew omni meant everything, so omniscience had to mean God is all-knowing; omnipresence that He is all-present; and omnipotence that He is all-powerful.
Intellectually knowing God can do everything is different from practically trusting God to be actively working in our lives. Put another way, we say God can do everything, but we often act like He doesn’t do
anything. But what if we could somehow align what we say we believe with how we live our everyday lives? That would change everything!”
God is all this and more. However, intellectually knowing God can do everything is different from practically trusting God to be actively working in our lives. Put another way, we say God can do everything, but we often act like He doesn’t do anything. But what if we could somehow align what we say we believe with how we live our everyday lives? That would change everything!
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