What you fail to understand is that the word "God" or "Father" are just that. Names and titles and do not tell us what God is.
The question of what God is has been approached in countless ways across different religions, philosophies, and personal beliefs. Generally speaking,
God is often described in terms of attributes, experiences, and relationships rather than in definitive, limited terms. Many traditions present God as:
Transcendent: Beyond human comprehension and existing outside of time and space.
Immanent: Present and active within the world and within all living beings.
Omniscient: All-knowing, with complete knowledge of the past, present, and future.
Omnipotent: All-powerful, capable of anything.
Omnibenevolent: All-good, embodying the highest moral perfection.
Different cultures and spiritual systems also frame God through various titles, metaphors, or roles. For example
The Creator in many Abrahamic religions.
The Divine Presence or
The Source in mystical traditions.
The Self or
Atman in certain Eastern philosophies, like Hinduism.
The Absolute or
The Ground of Being in existential and process philosophy.
Ultimately, what God
is might depend on your own perspective or worldview, and the search for understanding God is often viewed as a personal, deeply transformative journey.
None of these above are me. ARE THEY YOU?
That God is the eternal everlasting spirit who designed and created us to love and be loved through a future eternity of companionship with Him, and the Son, who is also God, and the Holy Spirit the third in the Godhead.
I say this because of my personal relationship with Christ Jesus and the Holy Spirits relationship within me.
IOW
God is the
eternal, self-existent Spirit, the source of all life and being. He did not create out of need, but out of
love. Within God Himself is relationship—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—perfect love shared eternally. Out of that overflowing love, He designed and created us
to know Him, to love, and to be loved, and to share in that life forever.
The
Father is the origin and will of love.
The
Son, who is fully God, reveals that love in a way we can see and touch—entering creation, sharing our nature, and restoring broken relationship.
The
Holy Spirit, also fully God, makes that relationship real and living within us—guiding, comforting, and transforming us.
So God is not just power, or law, or mystery alone.
God is
personal, relational, and eternal love, inviting human beings into an unending companionship with Himself.