Matt16_18:
How, exactly, can I do that? The Orthodox assert that God’s essence is completely and utterly incomprehensible to the human mind, even a mind enlightened by uncreated grace. To embrace Orthodox theology, I would have to accept that one can never know God directly through the beatific vision, at best, one can only know something about God in both this world and in the world to come.
In a very real sense, God us unknowable – we who have finite minds can never know God, all we can know is what He has chosen to reveal to us, and that mostly through His Son.
Eastern theology (both Orthodox and Catholic) is called “apophatic” meaning that we do not attempt to define God (for any definition is limiting and God cannot be limited). Thus, we say what God is not. This means we express God in ways that are negative: God is incomprehensible, unapproachable, unknowable, uncontainable, and so on. Western theology uses a “kataphatic” approach in which they attempt to define what God is: almighty, omnipresent, omniscient, and so on. Yet those very terms are, in fact, incomprehnsible. We cannot understand what “almighty” means for any such comprehension must fall short of reality.
Even the Beatific Vision is, and must be, limited since the finite creature can never understand the infinite creator. While we certainly see God – and the Orthodox believe and teach this as well – we have to understand that the terminology means something different; same words, different meanings.
This is why I suggest that you cannot understand what we mean when we talk about the “uncreated energies” – you attempt to apply a Western understanding to the term and, thereby, arrive at an understanding that is quite different from what I actually mean.
How can anyone prove that something is incomprehensible? By the definition of incomprehensibility, such proof is not a possibility - one can only make the statement that God’s essence is incomprehensible, and then accept that belief on blind faith and incomprehension of how one can know that God’s essence is incomprehensible even when human intelligence is illuminated by divine grace. Orthodox theology strikes me as having its goal a placid resignation of accepting that one can never understand* anything *about the nature of God.
Ah, but the term “prove” is not a part of Eastern thinking – that’s a Western term that has no correlation in Eastern thinking.
For us God is experienced, not known. We live out the mysteries, but we don’t understand them (and, in point of fact, no Western theologian understands the sacraments either, they simply try to explain the unexplainable).
For example, we don’t use the term *transubstantiation *in reference to the Eucharist, not because we don’t believe in what that term signifies, but because we don’t try to explain what happens in the Liturgy beyond the teaching that the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Jesus really present. We explain Original Sin differently because the Augustinian philosophical underpinnings for the Western teaching is not a part of our heritage. Yet we clearly believe in Original Sin and we baptize our infants because of it. We happen to have a different understanding.
Deacon Ed