J
John_Martin
Guest
God knows things in their whole being, not temporally, not along a timeline, not knowing them in this moment as potential, not in another later moment knowing them moving, not in a final moment knowing them at their final end, act. He knows their full reality as a temporal progression. Knowing them, he desires his apprehended knowledge be objectively present to him (he likes/loves all he knows) and wills the reality of his apprehension to face back at him objectively. So he speaks it (to it) and it IS. He apprehended a changing and contingent being, and that is what we are. He apprehended a being that could apprehend him (know God knowing me), and we have the fulfillment of the apprehension as our final end, as our full actuality (seeing him / knowing him face to face).So, if a Thomist is speaking about potentilaity moving towards actuality, he is actually claiming that “nothingness” moves to “somethingness”?
Or
If
1 all things exist in the eternal knwoledge of God
2 those things change
then
God changes and is not immutable.
We are like him in the order of operations, first apprehending (understanding) within ourselves, knowing it is true, then desiring participation with the true outside ourselves and freely choosing means (causes) of participation.
Potentiality is not nothingness, it is the fullness of me at a snapshot in time, I am me at every moment. When a baby being baptized I am potentially one who knows I am me and one of the chosen people. When I am old I am in Act knowing I am me and one of his people. To God I am apprehended and actual as temporally actualizing, the same way I understand a Cake in its fullness (eggs being cracked, flour and sugar measured, milk and oil, mixing, baking, frosting, seeing, and eating). He knows it and it is, in its entire process. We are the temporal actualization of the Cake.
John Martin