Omnipotence

Three scientists—Papaia, Banani, Ravioli—and their assistant Igor, who are supposed to attend the famous dark matter conference, take the wrong flight and end up on the other side of the world, spending the night at a certain Sunflower Hotel. During the flight, Banani finds a very interesting book.

We are in front of the Sunflowerr Hotel. Banani and Ravioli continue their discussion about the book.

Ravioli: The cause of the universe must be immensely powerful. It seems similar to God’s omnipotence.

Banani: Always keep in mind the book/author analogy. The author has complete control over his work since he can write the book however he pleases. Moreover, he knows every detail of the book because he is the one who creates it.

Ravioli: That would explain why God can perform miracles. He has control over every aspect of reality.

Banani: Yes, that’s why only a Creator like God can be the cause of the universe. His power must be unlimited.

Ravioli: Yes, but what if it isn’t? Couldn’t there be an alternative?

Banani: If the Creator’s power were limited, it would mean that something outside of Him is restricting Him. But if something greater existed that limited Him, then that would be the true Creator.

Ravioli: So, if there is a Creator, He must necessarily be the greatest possible being, with no limits to His power?

Banani: Exactly. If He had limits, it would mean that something or someone made Him that way, which would mean He is not the ultimate cause of everything.

Ravioli: So, basically, God is not only immensely powerful but must necessarily have infinite power?

Papaia: Exactly! Just as an author can change every detail of a story, God has power over every aspect of reality.

Igor: That’s right, Ravioli! God is like an author who can change the plot of your life whenever He wants, and without failing, while you… well, without God, the only thing you manage to change in your life is the way you mess up and fail miserably every single time!

🤣🤣🤣