Pantheism does not make a real distinction between esse and essence.
When you make that real distinction, it is logically possible for God’s esse to be conjoined to a potential essence without being identical with it, since the two remain distinct even after being conjoined. For example the essence of a dog is not the esse of God since the nature of a created thing is not the esse of a created thing. The two are not identical and therefore it is not pantheism even if the argument itself is wrong.
For the convenience of the readers, this topic has been the topic of debate on three or four threads. It always boils down to the paragraph above. Everyone should read all my posts on this thread to understand what is going on.
The basic error is that if God " conjoined His Esse with a potential essence, " God would be simply be creating another " God. " It is the basic error of all Pantheism. A thing cannot be and not be the same thing at the same time. He cannot be " conjoined " to another being and not be that other being at the same time.
The dog in the example will not be a real being if its essence does not have an " act of existing " of its own. But if that " act of existing " is God’s " act of existing, " then the dog does not have an " act of existing " of its own, so it cannot exist as a dog. This kind of thinking would make the dog just an " emanition " of God, which is Pantheism.
There is no " nature " of a created being without an " act of existence " of its very own, which God creates as the first act of its substance. As I pointed out in one of my posts above, when God creates, he creates substances, whole and entire. And the most important aspect of that creation is " existence, " without which no substnace can exist. And that " existence " is nothing other than the " actuality " given by God to the potential essence, which makes it a real substance. But that " actuality " is a " act of existence, " which belongs to the substance, it does not belong to God, it is not God’s
" act of existing, " period.
See all my posts on this thread to see what I am saying.
We are either entirely other than God, or we are not. If we are not, then we are God. And that is Pantheism and heresy.
P.S. When you say Pantheism does not make a real distinction between
essence and
esse, you are evading the obvious. Pantheists are not philosophers, and certainly not of the Thomistic sort who would even understand what you mean by those two terms. Any time you mix God and reality together in any manner, in the same essence or substance or being, that is Pantheism.
Linus2nd