Grace & Peace!
dennisknapp:
So, truth is…? A role of the dice, chance? Just a gray haze that we hope to gleam a bit of the truth from? Truth is black and white and God does see like this. He can not lie and no darkness can dwell in Him.
Dennis, I think this is a very interesting statement, but I think it is more wishful thinking than it is a description of the reality of the situation (which, in all of its complexity, is unknowable to us).
I think truth being a grey haze is very much akin to Paul’s statement that now we see through a glass darkly, but then we shall see face to face. Truth may not be the haze in itself, but our perception of the truth is hazy. By God’s grace (working in us and in the church), the truth becomes clearer and clearer, but the general condition of seeing through the glass darkly remains until we are on the other side of the veil. True, the veil may be lifted now and again (the saints attest to this), but this seems to be a very personal spiritual experience–how do you describe what is on the other side of the veil to those who know only through the veil? You use language, image, allusion, metaphor–things that will reveal, but things that, by their nature, are also veils of a sort.
To say, “The truth is crystal clear, see?” and then to run through various doctrines and dogmas (revealed and vessels of grace though they may be) is still looking through the glass darkly. To say, “The truth is crystal clear–
know it, experience it” is a different thing altogether and is an invitation to peer through the veil, not resting content with the contours of the veil itself as the ultimate image of the truth. I think this is the invitation of the church, “Taste and see that the Lord is good,” not “Let me explain how the Lord is good.” Of course, the knoweldge derived through the explanation serves as the primer for the experience of God, tilling the soil of the soul, but if we do not continue on to “Taste and see” then I wonder if we are fully answering the call of the church or her Lord.
You write that truth
is black and white, that God sees it that way, and then conclude by saying that there is no darkness in God. I see these statements as contradictory. Origen writes that because there is no darkness in God, God consequently does not see the darkness–it does not exist for him–the metaphysical consequence of which is that it does not properly exist at all. Augustine and Dionysius the Areopagite are both clear on this point–evil has no positive existence and absolute evil cannot exist because being in itself is a good and anything that can be said to
be cannot be
wholly evil.
I think, then, that–insofar as one can say such things–truth is light and God knows the light because Christ is the Truth and the Light of the World–the light is not separate from God. To go further and say that God knows the truth as black and white is to posit two absolutes, the Light and the Dark, God and Not God as if the Not God were a principle in itself! Such a situation is untenable–there can be only one absolute. Ours is not a dualist faith–qualified dualism, perhaps–that is, we in the phenomenal realm can experience light and dark, good and bad mostly due to a failure in perception–we have fallen from a vision of the original unity and seen ourselves and our created natures as separate
and opposed to God. But to attribute to the realm of Principle an experiential knowledge of dualism, of one thing irrevocably opposed to another, is to divide the Godhead. The Not-God of creation finds its completion in the fullness of God in Christ. For this fullness to not be reached is for creation to destroy itself of its own accord by denying its own principle. Creation exists because God
knows it, and because God knows Godself in it. For Creation to pass out of the knowledge of God by denying God or setting itself up as a separate god (for it to deify and objectify it’s Not God-ness) is for creation to destroy itself. Whatever has no share in the knowledge of God cannot be said to be. As Stratford Caldecott writes (and I’m paraphrasing), “I am whatever God knows me to be.”
All of which is to say: God knows the Light. To say that he knows the truth as black and white, light and it’s absence, as this and that, I think is incorrect, divides the Godhead, and introduces dualism into the Union of the Trinity.
Just my two.
Under the Mercy,
Mark
Deo Gratias!