"The stone too heavy for God to lift"
This ancient paradox challenges the very concept of unlimited power. If a being is truly all-powerful, can it limit its own power? The question has puzzled theologians and philosophers for over a thousand years.
Omnipotence means the power to do anything logically possible. Creating a "stone too heavy for an omnipotent being to lift" is self-contradictory—like a "square circle." God cannot do the logically impossible, not because of weakness, but because such things are meaningless.
If God is omnipotent, then "a stone too heavy for God to lift" is a contradiction. Asking God to create one is like asking Him to make 2+2=5. The question isn't a real limit on power—it's a linguistic trick.
God CAN do the logically impossible! He could create the stone AND lift it simultaneously. Logic itself is created by God and doesn't bind Him. The paradox only shows our limited understanding.
Distinguish first-order omnipotence (power to act) from second-order omnipotence (power to modify powers). God could use second-order power to limit His first-order power—then genuinely be unable to lift the stone.
The paradox creates a dilemma with no escape:
Either answer seems to disprove omnipotence. The very concept appears to be self-contradictory!
The paradox has medieval roots, appearing as early as the 10th century when Saadia Gaon, a Jewish philosopher, addressed whether God's power extends to logical absurdities.
It was later discussed by:
The omnipotence paradox has many variations:
Each variation probes the same fundamental tension: can unlimited power limit itself?