M
MindOverMatter2
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In ontological terms this is true. But in terms of human understanding a person cannot know why an infinite power can create out of nothing simply by saying that a being is infinite. In a certain context you are saying that God can do logically impossible things. But this is false. Simply saying that a being is infinite doesn’t tell me why I should consider it a possibility. If God can create something from nothing, then it means that things can come out of nothing; which means that logically impossible things can happen so long as there is enough power, which leaves the atheist or the debater wondering why they must consistently reason that one requires infinite power. Since rationality and consistency is no-longer required to find an explanation, one can simply say that the universe came out of nothing by itself.I think to make out of nothing can be accomplished only by a power that is infinite and only God can do that.
If we are to be taken seriously at all, we must continue to argue that it is always true regardless of the degree of power available that out of absolutely nothing comes nothing.
The distinction between Esse & Essense
But is it possible in any other context? This is where things get interesting because firstly I think you can prove that physical or finite essences are essentially not the same thing as God (for example; an apple is essentially not God, just like it is essentially not a table or a mouse); and in this sense they are created partly through Gods knowledge of himself and also through the potential possibilities that exist in relation to himself. This doesn’t yet tell us how it is possible that God creates; but it provides a foundation to work on since it explains that there is essentially an absolute difference between a blue elephant and God, that is, once you understand the meaning of essence. We should also know that Creation is certainly impossible if you mean that you can get “esse”, that is “existence”, out of absolutely nothing.
Now that we have those two requirements dealt with we can move on to what it means to exist. To come in to existence; is to come in to God. To have existence is to have God. This is where the distinction of esse an essence becomes important in-order to avoid essential pantheism. To cut a long story short, we share or participate in Gods esse (we exist through God and we share in Gods eternal act of reality), but we have our own essence. God is existence or esse; in other words God is that by which a potential thing becomes real and is real because God is the act of reality. Thus in conclusion God intimately shares his reality with us, and God is that by which a thing is real. On the other had, when it comes to finite things, one cannot say that a mouse is real on the basis that it is a mouse. If it was real because it was a mouse, it would have always been real, because in that case to essentially be a mouse is to be real. But this is not the case because a mouse is a potential being and thus its esse is not the same is its essence. Therefore one must conclude there is something that is making potential reality real and is sustaining it in reality and this thing is quite distinct from the essential nature of a mouse of what ever else you have in mind. In fact the esse does not belong to the mouse because the esse is God and the mouse is not. We are, by our selves, quite literally nothing. The only thing that truly exists by its nature is God.
But to understand this you will have to learn about the distinction between essence and esse. You will have to understanding that the existence of an apple is not the same as the essence of an apple.
I believe it is possible to further demonstrate this logically in terms of how God creates essence without contradicting the rule that out of nothing comes nothing. However; to be fair to Aquinas; it is he who developed the esse/essence distinction. I am merely a humble student.