Ex nihilo is ex Deo, because God eternally precedes the void and the void of nothingness comes from His somethingness (as it were). We’re looking at a mystical, universal interpretation here. The holy Word of God, Genesis 1:1-2, says “In the beginning, God created Heaven and Earth, and the Earth was void and empty, and darkness was on the face of the deep”. If this void of emptiness was the initial state of material existence between “nothing” and “something”, it follows that even the “ex nihilo” comes “ex Deo”. Void is emptiness, and to be empty is to be nothing. If void empty nothingness was the initial state of material existence, then God must precede “nothing”, in some ineffable way.
I called God the material cause because it is from His eternally-extant Necessity and spiritual existence that all things whatever proceed. My notion is entirely opposed to Pantheism.
Glorious:
You have to think this through: how is it even remotely possible for an infinite being to have a
before or an
after, like a snake slithering through the grass? And
creation is
procession and
production. Christ and the Holy Spirit are exigencies
created by God, with the word meaning
procession from. God can’t be matter. Secondary and Primary Matter are things the lack something. They lack the
character that will differentiate them from all else. God lacks nothing, nor is God matter, which is precisely what the word “material” means in the phrase “material cause.”
I believe the Church teaches that created forms were first conceived of in the infinitely perfect mind of God, the “Thought” who we call “the Father”. They were spoken into existence by the “Word” that we call “the Son”. The first form, out of which all forms in creation are taken, must be the Blessed Trinity - an intellectual and not a material or imagination-based form, but still a form of a sort. For example: since all created things are in relationship to one another, we can say that the Blessed Trinity is the initial form of universal relationship, because it is always perfectly in relationship, with its three Persons in one God.
"Form is the end of matter. It intrinsically determines and intrinsically organizes matter. As substantial form united to primary matter, form or the formal cause brings about a species or essence.- St. Thomas’
On Truth, q. 28, a. 7; q. 9, a. 3, reply 6.
Once more, this is a mystical interpretation of super- material ‘substance’, ‘essence’, ‘necessity’, and ‘form’. Please forgive me if I’m not clear, or if this is heretical. I am here to learn and be educated by experienced Thomists - something which I am definitely not. I’m applying his thought-system, not necessarily his answers.
You’re getting close. Although the four causes are inextricably related to each other, they are not so strictly related that they
depend upon one another in some absolute way. They are separate, discernible parts in the schema of motion:
local and
essentially subordinated: i.e., the simple motion of simple things (opposed to complex things: things with parts) and/or coming-to-be.
- All things really must end, except God. If there was any one thing that never did end, it would share the eternal aspect of divinity, thus nullifying God’s necessity. For example: in our very substance, we human beings are not inherently immortal; God can destroy us, but in His beautiful and just love He does not. God alone cannot be destroyed by any means, and that means God alone has no end but Himself, no consideration but Himself, and no love but Himself. To say that all things must end is simply true, or else God does not exist (because then there would be at least one thing that self-sufficiently exists by itself, obviating the need for God).
- By “all dependent things are assumed into independent things by nature”, I meant to say something like this: a plant is entirely dependent upon the sun for its essential functions. Despite the need for water and soil, we can say that the sun - and the photosynthesis which it initiates in the plant - is the prime mover of the plant’s essential life functions at an immediate level. In this little system, the sun is an independent creature and the plant is a dependent creature, relying on that one independent creature for its continued life.
“End,” in Thomistic usage here, means
reason for or
purpose, not “finality.”
In terms of causality: when the sun dies, the plant will die. The plant’s lack of necessity is assumed into the sun’s necessity, in this instance. When the former dies, it is only because the latter dies. This means that all things dependent on other things must inevitably be taken up or ‘assumed’ into that which they’re dependent upon. I’m not saying that God is dead, or that God will die at the end of time. I am saying that since God is the proper object of all creation, all things will, causally-speaking, be directed towards Him, the “Life” that is beyond mere living.
Actually, when the universe dies by entropy, its cold, remaining objects may simply continue to persist. Lifelessly. Although they may continue to move: further out into oblivion. Some physicists think that the universe will re-collapse; but, there’s absolutely no indication of that possibility. It’s no more than a conjecture.
Sorry to be confusing.
Well, OK, you’re forgiven.
God bless,
jd