“Oh give thanks unto the God of gods...
“[1] says the Bible. Please note the
upper and lower case “G” and “g.”
Merriam-Webster
offers several thoughts on the meaning of God[2],
and god.
God:
“… the Being perfect in power, wisdom, and goodness who is worshipped as
creator and ruler of the universe.” Quite a resume.
The Webster definition of god is “… a being or object
believed to have more than natural attributes and powers and to require human
worship; specifically : one controlling a particular aspect or part
of reality…”

Neither Merriam-Webster nor we, on our own, can define who he
is in reality. He is what He is. But
these definitions express two over-arching views of reality: there is either
one God (monotheism) or more than one god (polytheism).
The Psalm above declares that God is the God of gods. The
gods are subordinate. If a god was over the sea and another over fire, neither
could be the God of gods. Both have limits to their power. If the “… person or thing of
supreme value…”is money, remember Lennon sang, “Money
can’t buy me love.” It’s limited. If god
is “that person I can’t live without,” that
person might decide to live without me. These
gods have boundaries. They cannot be
the God of gods.
The United States can have only one Commander in Chief. If
you elect a second simultaneously, then the first Commander is no longer Chief.

Neither. The Bible says He is infinite and personal.
If there is more than one god, - be it Ganesh, money, or another person, - they must be
limited. If they are limited, then are they really God? A limited god will
disappoint at some level.
God, the Creator
and Ruler of all, is over all and
under none. He is the only limitless, personal God. He is God of gods and will
not disappoint.
“Now
unto the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory forever and ever.
Amen.”[3]
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