L
Linusthe2nd
Guest
St. Augustine in Book 12, ch 17, para 2 of the City of God gives an answer - pretty deep though. “…For that which specially leads these men astray to refer their own circles to the straight path of truth, is, that they measure by their own human, changeable, and narrow intellect the divine mind, which is absolutely unchangeable, infinitely capacious, and without succession of thought, counting all things without number. So that saying of the apostle comes true of them, for, “comparing themselves with themselves, they do not understand.” 553 For because they do, in virtue of a new purpose, whatever new thing has occurred to them to be done (their minds being changeable), they conclude it is so with God; and thus compare, not God,-for they cannot conceive God, but think of one like themselves when they think of Him,-not God, but themselves, and not with Him, but with themselves. For our part, we dare not believe that God is affected in one way when He works, in another when He rests. Indeed, to say that He is affected at all, is an abuse of language, since it implies that there comes to be something in His nature which was not there before. For he who is affected is acted upon, and whatever is acted upon is changeable. His leisure, therefore, is no laziness, indolence, inactivity; as in His work is no labor, effort, industry. He can act while He reposes, and repose while He acts. He can begin a new work with (not a new, but) an eternal design; and what He has not made before, He does not now begin to make because He repents of His former repose. But when one speaks of His former repose and subsequent operation (and I know not how men can understand these things), this “former” and “subsequent” are applied only to the things created, which formerly did not exist, and subsequently came into existence. But in God the former purpose is not altered and obliterated by the subsequent and different purpose, but by one and the same eternal and unchangeable will He effected regarding the things He created, both that formerly, so long as they were not, they should not be, and that subsequently, when they began to be, they should come into existence. And thus, perhaps, He would show, in a very striking way, to those who have eyes for such things, how independent He is of what He makes, and how it is of His own gratuitous goodness He creates, since from eternity He dwelt without creatures in no less perfect a blessedness…”This solution fails because it splits God into two parts, intrinsic non-change coupled with extrinsic change. If there is only one God, then at least one of those parts cannot be God. You either retain the unchanging non-creator as God or you have the changing creator as God.
The difficulty of reconciling change with non-change is an old one. The multitude of emanations in the Kaballah is just one example of an early attempt at a solution.
You are reifying again. If there are intrinsic and extrinsic parts of God, then we can split God into two parts with opposed properties, the intrinsic part and the extrinsic part. Each part can then be analysed separately. Any attempt at establishing an intrinsic/substantial/real part as opposed to an extrinsic/accidental/reflection part will come up against the same problem.
rossum
City of God etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/AugCity.html
What he is saying is that God’s act of creation is nothing more than the actualization of His eternal will. To God it is part and parcel of His Eternal " Now, " and is thus not a change. But to our time bound intellects it appears to involve a change in the Almighty. In fact it is no change.
Linus