If God is a person, how can he be everywhere present?
His person cannot be in more than one place at the same time, but he is everywhere present by his Holy Spirit.
Indeed, we arrive at the conclusion that God (although local in personality) may be said, in various ways and in different senses of the word, to be everywhere present.
He had great wisdom, when he understood that Christ is everywhere present, through his divine nature, who went bodily visible among men.
He stands through his divine nature; because he is, by his power, everywhere present, and needs not go from place to place; because he is in every place through his divine nature.
He will neither do nor speak anything without consulting first his Father in heaven, under whose eye he constantly lives, knowing that He is everywhere present.
And though God by his power and providence is everywhere present, yet his proper habitation, in which he peculiarly operates and kindles his divine light, is the soul of man.
Moreover, as we are assured that God is everywhere present, and preserves and governs everything, it follows that he is so careful of his own servants, that not a hair of their heads can fall to the ground (Matt.
But humanity cannot exist without soul; and if the human Savior is with us, then his humanity, at least so far as respects its immaterial part, must be everywhere present.
God iseverywhere present in the history of Israel, but miracles are strikingly rare.
But this is not to say that Christ's human body is everywhere present.
This ether is everywhere present, between the molecules and atoms; in fact the things of the universe are, as it were, suspended in the ocean of ether.
That Joseph Smith does not here have in mind an omnipresent God, is proved by the emphatic doctrine that God is personal and cannot be everywhere present.
The great consideration is that, since intelligence is everywhere present, all the operations of nature, from the simplest to the most complex, are the products of intelligence.
Nevertheless, it is known distinctly that God, by his power, will and word is everywhere present.
Or does it remain within itself, while from its innermost its powers descend on all things, and is it in this sense that it is regarded as everywhere present?
Is it because the body of the universe is so great that the Soul is everywhere present in the universe, though being naturally divisible in (human) bodies?
Or it is by herself, that she is everywhere present?
And it is likewise just as impossible for a person to be everywhere present, as it is for a dove.
The immaterialist teaches that the godhead consists of three persons of one substance, and that each of these persons can be everywhere present.
Why should our author suppose it possible for a person to be everywhere present, when he admits that a dove could not be in such a condition?
Now in order to be everywhere present, each of these persons must be infinitely extended, or else each must be susceptible of occupying two or more places at the same time.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "everywhere present" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.