Quote:
Originally Posted by jallanite
Whether God (Eru) can change the past is one question. Another is whether God is capable of doing evil.
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That's getting a bit afield from the purpose of this thread, but if one examines "evil" in Tolkien's Arda as being defined "morally reprehensible", or "sinful", I would say no. Eru as Creator would also be the author of Morality, and thus "evil" would have to derive from a refusal to acknowledge and obey his authority.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jallanite
Basically the general religious position is that God in theoretically omnipotent and can do anything he wants to. But there are things that God just doesn’t want to do. Therefore practically God is not omnipotent. God does not break his own rules.
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By those standards though, I think Eru demonstrates his omnipotence in instances like I cited. The destruction of Númenor and the giving of immortality to Tuor were both
unnatural acts, in that they would seemingly not have been accomplished without his direct intervention.