Does the Christian concept of God violate the three fundamental Laws of Logic?
They will either ignore this one or say something along the lines of “God can do anything, even the things he can’t do!” or “Well I have enough proof for me, have fun in Hell with all the other people who use ‘logic’, douchebag.” This is a pretty thoroughly thought out argument that forces logical limits on God’s powers, and I doubt most Christians will come up with a decent answer.
I’ve read some of your questions and I can tell that you are quite insightful. My guess is that you don’t write anything down until you’ve put some real thought into it. I agree with nearly everything that I’ve seen you write, so just consider the following to be some friendly constructive criticism….I think you may be wasting your time with this line of reasoning. Your argument begins with the idea that a Christian will accept that God can not make a square which is also a circle, etc. Okay, fine. But then your argument essentially continues that if something is logical (or illogical) in our universe, then that logic must carry over to the realm in which God exists. I’m sure you’ve heard Christians claim something along the lines that God does not exist in our space-time continuum. Our geometry, our physics, our Math, our time….none of that applies to him. He doesn’t need to follow the rules he set down in our world. Logically, your argument is pretty much infallible if we are giv