Aquinas does not say “God creates existence.” That is your claim.
The article you quoted, and which I first brought to the attention to all on this thread and several others, does not speak about creation. It does not have to. I have cited to you, and to Linux and to the whole world, many Articles in which Thomas says that God creates existence and gives it to creatures along with their entire substance. I have not counted the number of times Thomas makes such statements in both Summas and elsewhere, but it is multiple. So that is not " my claim, " as you put it.
God cannot create esse (existence) because God is existence and he cannot “create” himself. God creates "acts of being” (ens) which are actualized participations in existence.
First of all, you have just taken one of Linux’s major assumptions and accepted it as proven, when, in fact, it has never been proven. You have assumed that God’s Esse is the only esse. Therefore you have concluded that " God cannot create himself. " ( with which I heartily agree). Then you follow with a totally incoherent statement, " God creates " acts of being ( ens ) which are actualized participations in existence. But the real fault here is that you say that God is the act of existence of creatures. This is the same erroneous and inadmissable conclusion Linux makes.
Here you have confused
ens with
acts of existence. An
ens is an actually existing being, an actually existing substance, a " this" or a " that. " An
act of existence, an
esse, is the
act, the
to be-ness which makes an
essence an actually existing being or substance.
Ens is not equivalent to
act of existence.
No faithful Christian, Jew, or Muslim can accept that and, besides, it is repugnant to reason. It smaks of Pantheism.
And I have shown you from the very article you quoted that to
paticipate means to be
similar to, it does not mean to share the same nature, nor even to share a bit of the same nature.
Again, created things cannot have their own existence because then existence (esse) would take on the nature and limitations of the created being, which Aquinas says is impossible.
My goodness, is this intentional deception? Your statement would be true only if your initial assumption were true. And we simply cannot accept that God’s Esse, is the only esse. That is a
Huge Assumption that neither you, nor Linux has bothered to prove.
And of course Aquinas agrees that God’s Esse cannot take on the nature and limitations of created being. ( Which I agree with.) However, you did not tell Thomas you had previously assumed that God’s Esse was the only esse and that you were going to magnify that atrocity by saying that God gives His Esse to creatures - thus you hope to excape one of the horns of the delimma, that of the spectical of being eyewitness to God creating Himself. But in so doing, you fall on the alternate horn of the delimma, now God is " creating " pure forms which have no existence of their own. Gee willikers, Mr. Mc Gee, whatever are you saying!!!
So, created beings must have their own existence, because that is the only way they can exist without falling into some sort of Pantheism.
And clearly, no genuine Christian, Jew, or Muslim can agree that God’s Esse is the only esse or that the esse of creatures is the act of existence of God.
Properly speaking, created things can be said to subsist in existence, are actualized or have “ens” within existence. They do not exist or have esse unto themselves - existence cannot be parceled out that way. They “subsist” rather than exist (have ens or act of being) rather than esse (being itself) within existence, which is one reality, God, who is existence itself, fullness of being.
That is your private interpretation. Do you really want to have a debate on the issue of whether or not a created substance can be said to " subsist? " I suggest you spend the next couple of weeks reading over Part 1 of the S.T. and Books I and II of the S.C.G. before engaging any such debate. Because you will simply loose.
Reread carefully my
post #550
Well Peter, you should have listed your " religious preference " as Sophist rather than Socratic, because it is clear than you are taking Linux’s tack of skirting issues, leaping to conclusions, using isolated pharases to represent the meaning of an entire philosophy.
The article you quoted and which I first brought to the attention to all on this thread and several others does not speak about creation. It does not have to. I have cited to you and to Linux and to the whole world many Articles in which Thomas says that God creates existence and gives it to creatures along with their entire substance. I have not counted the number of times Thomas makes such statements in both Summas and elsewhere, but it is multiple.