Canonum De Lex Ecclesium
Canons of Ecclesiastical Law

one heaven iconII.   Supernatural

2.2 Supernatural Entity

Article 32 - Deity

Canon 3647 (link)

A Deity is a supernatural being believed to possess miraculous or magical powers that is regarded by certain followers to be a god as distinct from a lesser spiritual force. Hence, a god is always a form of deity.

Canon 3648 (link)

As valid Divine Law recognizes that life and existence is a dream in motion in accordance with the Canons of valid Natural Law, so long as a Deity is believed to exist and worshipped as existing, it has valid existence.

Canon 3649 (link)

Belief, worship and subsequent existence of a Deity is separate to any claimed power or influence as attributes of a particular Deity. All spiritual forces remain subject to Divine Law and the limits of Natural Law.

Canon 3650 (link)

As existence depends upon the immutability of valid Natural Law, no spiritual force, including the Absolute, the one, the ALL can abrogate, suspend or change a single Natural Law without causing the collective dream of existence to collapse. Therefore, no Deity possesses the power to abrogate, suspend nor change any valid Natural Law.

Canon 3651 (link)

In accordance with a particular faith, a deity may represent a spiritual force of supreme goodness, sanctity and holiness, a spiritual force of great destruction, negativity and ill intent, or possessing a duality personality of both good and evil.

Canon 3652 (link)

Any religion that recognizes multiple personalities of a singular supreme deity recognizes a pantheistic or multiple deity perspective of the universe and heaven, even if such a conclusion is repudiated and denied by the religion itself.

Canon 3653 (link)

When a particular religion recognizes the existence of a unique spiritual force greater than a form of angel or demon, but less than a singular supreme deity, then such a religion recognizes a pantheistic or multiple deity perspective of the universe and heaven, even if such a conclusion is repudiated and denied by the religion itself.

Canon 3654 (link)

All religions that profess a singular supreme deity above all other forms also presume a supreme being with a dual personality, even if the negative aspect of such an absolute dichotomy of a single supreme deity representing absolute holiness and simultaneously absolute evil is hidden, repudiated or poorly explained.

Canon 3655 (link)

All deity less than a singular supreme deity exists in dimension and is dependent upon a dimension known variously as the Heaven and as the Unique Collective Awareness.