C
Cavaradossi
Guest
Please read posts 58 and 60, where I address that issue with quotations from Gregory Palamas, Gregory of Nyssa, John of Scythopolis, and John of Damascus. The issue that I was building up for is that if God’s essence absolutely cannot be known, then we, as creatures within the diastemic world, cannot even properly posit that the essence of God exists or is, because our created being is so far estranged from the uncreated, that in doing so, we try to drag that which is utterly transcendent into the realm of the created. So great is our ontological difference from God that when we use terms like ‘being’, ‘essence’, and ‘existence’ in our discourse about God, we only use these as an equivocation, without which, no discourse about God could take place.I never said that God can be known in his essence. You said that God’s essence doesn’t exist. I disagreed and presented evidence that the Fathers teach that God’s existence exists. I believe “The terms ‘without beginning,’ ‘incorruptible,’ ‘unbegotten,’ as also ‘uncreate,’ ‘incorporeal,’ ‘unseen,’ and so forth, explain what He is not: that is to say, they tell us that His being had no beginning, that He is not corruptible, nor created, nor corporeal, nor visible.” God’s essence, however, does exist.