Bit of a problem for those of us who aren’t so blessed.
The immediate vision of God is usually called the Beatific Vision and is not something that we on earth have.
That makes it more than base matter, but I am not so sure it makes it supernatural.
Personhood isn’t supernatural; it’s in human nature.
Omnipotence does not require a face or a personality, does it?
Just before that you said we persons could not have been created by an impersonal being, because then something would have come from nothing. So we already know that God creates things out of nothing – and hence, your objection to the idea of an impersonal God creating persons because a thing would be coming from nothing does not stand.
God creates things out of nothing–they come from God not from nothing.
If God were not personal, then all of creation occurred out of necessity since he could not have the faculty of the will without personhood.
If God were not personal, then his act of creation would have to be determined by some cause; the act of creation would be necessary and not free. A cause that would necessarily determine God’s act of creation could not be external to God since before the act of creation there was nothing but God. A cause that would necessarily determine God’s act of creation could also not be internal since that would mean that God is imperfect and not sufficient in himself.
Therefore, if God exists he must have chosen freely to create for the sake of his creatures, and this free choice means that God is personal.
The efficient cause of everything else cannot be determined by another efficient cause.
This defies logic. If A ~ B, B ~ A. If we are like God, God is like us.
What I mean is that we cannot apply terms univocally to creatures and to God. I can say that I am good and that God is good, but the word “good” necessarily means something different in both cases because of the transcendence of God.
Speaking strictly logically, yes, you can say “God is like X” (the Scriptures do it all the time), but when you say “X is like God” it emphasizes the priority of God before all creation as well as making more clear the finitude of the language we use to speak about God.
However, most concepts of God seem rather anthropomorphic – the Old Testament recounts God changing his mind, feeling emotions, and generally acting like a really powerful human being. Problematically, this indicates that God is capable of changing state; and perfection is a unique state. The only motion away from perfection is toward imperfection, so a true deity must needs persist in the same state.
God doesn’t change. We have to use our limited language to describe God. Often, we find the
via negativa or analogical language the most fruitful way to apply our language, which is based on creatures, to God.
Personhood is a dynamic thing; persons change state all the time, make choices, move, perform actions, ‘give oneself’ as you noted. God therefore cannot be a person under the same definition by which we are persons.
Personhood in itself does not require mutability.
Acting also does not require mutability. God is pure act. In him there is no transition from potentiality to actuality. Thus, he acts and is immutable.
I have quite specifically rejected the idea that God is personal and that we are created in his image here; elsewhere I have rejected the doctrine of the Christ’s simultaneously divine and human nature as a paradox if not a contradiction in terms, among countless others. What could be a more authentically Catholic doctrine than those?
That sounds more like a Monophysite doctrine than a Catholic one. The Catholic Church holds that Christ has two natures.