What has Thomas got to do with it? …
Thomas has everything to do with it. Thomas originated the concept of *actus essendi ( act of existing or act of existence or act of being, all of which mean the same thing). *
No. Pantheism is when the esse of God and the essence of the universe is identical
I know that is what you have said but you did not prove it.You have said that the
esse of God is the
esse of created
essences. You have been doing so several months now. For every
essence either is its own
esse or it has an
esse given to it by that
essence which is its own
esse, which is God. If an
essence has no
esse in either sense, then it does not actually exist, because to be an actually extent being or substance, every
essence must either be
esse itself ( God ) or it must have an
esse given to it.
So, if neither is the case, then the
essence does not actually exist, it is a mere concept. But if you say that the
esse of created
essences is the
esse of God, then you are saying God is part of created beings or substances. And that is Pantheism.
There is no real distinction between esse and essence in pantheism. …
Pantheism, and there are many varities, simply says that God is some how mixed up with or is a part of the beings or substances of this universe. And this is exactly what you have done.
Conjoining does not make esse and essence identical. Have you even read Edward Fesers book on Aquinas? Even though God is my esse he is not my **nature **(essence); my essence is what defines my identity.
Exactly. But you have said that the
esse of created
essences is the
esse of God. That is what the debate has been about for the last two months. What I have said, and what Thomas has said, and what traditional Thomists, including Feser, Etienne Gilson, etc, have said, is that the
esse of created
essences are distinct principles in every
being or substance. And that the principle which they must have in order to exist as real beings or substances is an
esse given to them by God.
Feser never said anywhere that the
esse of God was your
esse. You will have to provide the exact page and paragraph or you will have to admit you have either misread or fabricated that. I agree that we are defined by our nature. But we have to have an act by which our nature is an actually existing thing. It has to have a principle by which it acutally exists and that principle is given to it by God but it is not God’s own
esse.
Proofs that the
esse of creatures is not the
esse of God.
S.T. 1,8,1, " I answer that, God is in all things; not, indeed, as part of their essence, nor as an accident, but as an agent is present to that upon which it works. For an agent must be joined to that wherein it acts immediately and touch it by its power…Now since God is very being by His own essence, created being must be His proper effect… Now God causes this effect ( existence) in things not only when they first begin to be, but as long as they are preserved in being… Therefore as long as a thing has being, God must be present to it, according to its mode of being. But being is innermost in each thing and most fundamentally inherent in all things since it is formal in respect of everything found in a thing…Hence it must be that God is in all things, and innermostly. " underline is mine]
As Thomas says in S.T. 1, 45, 4 " God is the cause of created substances, which includes existence. And to be created, means also to be absolutely other than God, even in their " act of existence. "
Again, in 45, 5 he states, " Among all effects the most universal is existence itself…"
and further on he says, " Now God’s proper effect is that which is presupposed to any other, namely existence tout court ( simply ). "
And again in S.C.G., Book 1, ch 26 Thomas says: "… Chapter 26
THAT GOD IS NOT THE FORMAL BEING OF ALL THINGS
[1] We are now able to refute the error of certain persons who said that God is nothing other than the formal being of each thing.
[2] This being is divided into the being of substance and the being of accident. Now, we have proved that the divine being is neither the being of substance nor that of accident. God, therefore, cannot be that being by which each thing formally is…"
dhspriory.org/thomas/ContraGentiles1.htm#26
Or again, in 1 Sentences, Distinction 37, Ques 1, Thomas says : " Solution: I answer that it should be said that God is essentially in all things, not nonetheless so that he is mixed together with things as if he were a part of any thing…"
www4.desales.edu/~philtheo/lo…ntd37q1a1.html
So when Thomas says created beings " share " in existence, he means they share in the common note or perfection of existence God has given to each created extent. They are said to " share " or " participate, " not because they share in God’s own Existence, but becuase they each have a limited or imperfect existence, which is the same type of " act " that each other created being has been given, but differing in its perfection, as determined by the limiting potency of their respective forms.
Now since they each have the same perfection, differing only in degree, none can have caused that perfection. It can only be caused by that Being who is Perfect Existence. But this applies to their entire substances and all that goes into the make up of their substances, includling matter, form, and existence, their whole and entire being. They " share " nothing with God. But they do have a real Realation with God, as effects which are caused by Him.
Linus2nd