Originally Posted by
Hunter Jr.
Very good. This is known as omnipotence and omniscience. God's traits are: omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence. Omnipresence in specific is a paradox, because that is being everywhere all at once, at the same time. Apart of everywhere is impossible due to basic physics, and here's to disprove his ability to break physics:
To move on, his omnipotence can be disproven through the simple question, "Can god create an object that he cannot lift?" If you answer yes, then he cannot lift said object, meaning he is not all-powerful. If you answer no, then he cannot create that object, meaning he is not all-powerful. Theists often try to then teeter around saying "anything within the realms of physical possibility", yet 500 years ago we believed the Earth was flat without a doubt, we have no idea yet how to comprehend the bounds of how physics can be pushed, so you can't say that as a valid answer.
Back to his omnipresence, since he cannot be omnipotent, he does not have unlimited power. Since he does not have this power, there is no way he can be everywhere unless God himself was the universe. In this case, you'd basically be worshiping astronomy, so that argument is essentially pointless. This means that he could not POSSIBLY be everywhere, so he cannot even exceed light speed because:
-Does not possess the power to break the laws of physics;
-Is not the universe;
So no, he is not almighty and great. Does this necessarily disprove his existence? No. It just strips him of his all-mightiness.