J
jgrdaniel
Guest
As Catholics,we believe that God is perfect:
He is perfectly moral- He cannot sin.
He is perfectly good-He cannot do evil.
He is perfectly loving.
In total, He has all the positive qualities ad-infinitum.
But my question is, what is perfection? Why is God perfect?
If we say God is perfect, to what standard do we hold him to be perfect? None, because He is the standard. Then if we try to prove Him perfect, we have to use His own standard, and that is circular reasoning - Am I wrong in saying this?
If we prove it by our own standards of perfection, then we become the judge of God, which is absurd.
This made me uneasy. Perhaps, I though it unjust for Him to be perfect by using His own standard. But then again, we cannot blame reason, for example, by proving its “reasoness” (I just invented the word it seems) with reason, and perhaps that is the nature of being the standard, you measure it against its own standard.
What is evil then? Evil, as St. Augustine said, is a subtraction of good. So evil it seems, is not necessarily what goes against the ultimate Good (i.e. God), but what we do without the nature of God. So Good is the nature, or part of the nature of God, and Evil, is what is done without it. There is no pure evil, it seems.
But this made me, for some odd reason, extremely uneasy. I felt that this definition took away from the concept of perfect good. Good is simply what God has as His nature, but since He is the standard of it (He can’t measure His goodness by another standard other than Himself) the Ultimate Good is God’s (or part of His) nature. In the end, He made it all, and so He decides the rules. So what we consider good in this world, is measured by that Standard, which is Himself. Evil is good subtracted. God did not create evil. Evil is a consequence of us looking an identity away from Him. So good, I think, its not in our actions alone, but in our source. Our actions, even if they are judged by others as good, are not in themselves good. They are good because they come from the source of the Ultimate Good, which is God. The source of my uneasiness is uncertain. I think, on reflecting on it, that it comes from deducting good as God’s nature. It is not an accomplishment of God, but it is His nature. To make you understand this, let me put an example of this, and this is where I need your help:
-Imagine yourself as the only eternal being, with power to create a world and its inhabitants.
-Your attributions are the same you now hold. Forget of imperfections, they aren’t because there is no standard to measure them against. Only you exist.
-You create the world, and its inhabitants, and implant in them a moral law. They are fulfilled when they act upon it, and when they don’t they aren’t.
-This moral law will reflect your attributes. You inhabitants will regard you as perfect. You will be perfect. You will be the standard upon which that moral law is measured.
My discomfort comes from this notion that anyone, as long as he is eternal and creates inhabitants in his nature, would be perfect, independent of his attributes. So, this forces me to conclude that perfection, it seems, comes from being the only eternal, and not from attributes alone. God is perfect because He is the eternal being, powerful enough to create us. Good is simply a name we attribute to His nature. Maybe this is the case, as we can’t say that by simply being good, perfectly good, then one becomes a god (God forbid the thought!). Even if we can become perfectly good we wouldn’t be gods, as we lack the other attributes of God, eternal and power. What do you think of this? Am I wrong? Are these thoughts sinful? If not, what is perfection and why do we attribute it to God?
He is perfectly moral- He cannot sin.
He is perfectly good-He cannot do evil.
He is perfectly loving.
In total, He has all the positive qualities ad-infinitum.
But my question is, what is perfection? Why is God perfect?
If we say God is perfect, to what standard do we hold him to be perfect? None, because He is the standard. Then if we try to prove Him perfect, we have to use His own standard, and that is circular reasoning - Am I wrong in saying this?
If we prove it by our own standards of perfection, then we become the judge of God, which is absurd.
This made me uneasy. Perhaps, I though it unjust for Him to be perfect by using His own standard. But then again, we cannot blame reason, for example, by proving its “reasoness” (I just invented the word it seems) with reason, and perhaps that is the nature of being the standard, you measure it against its own standard.
What is evil then? Evil, as St. Augustine said, is a subtraction of good. So evil it seems, is not necessarily what goes against the ultimate Good (i.e. God), but what we do without the nature of God. So Good is the nature, or part of the nature of God, and Evil, is what is done without it. There is no pure evil, it seems.
But this made me, for some odd reason, extremely uneasy. I felt that this definition took away from the concept of perfect good. Good is simply what God has as His nature, but since He is the standard of it (He can’t measure His goodness by another standard other than Himself) the Ultimate Good is God’s (or part of His) nature. In the end, He made it all, and so He decides the rules. So what we consider good in this world, is measured by that Standard, which is Himself. Evil is good subtracted. God did not create evil. Evil is a consequence of us looking an identity away from Him. So good, I think, its not in our actions alone, but in our source. Our actions, even if they are judged by others as good, are not in themselves good. They are good because they come from the source of the Ultimate Good, which is God. The source of my uneasiness is uncertain. I think, on reflecting on it, that it comes from deducting good as God’s nature. It is not an accomplishment of God, but it is His nature. To make you understand this, let me put an example of this, and this is where I need your help:
-Imagine yourself as the only eternal being, with power to create a world and its inhabitants.
-Your attributions are the same you now hold. Forget of imperfections, they aren’t because there is no standard to measure them against. Only you exist.
-You create the world, and its inhabitants, and implant in them a moral law. They are fulfilled when they act upon it, and when they don’t they aren’t.
-This moral law will reflect your attributes. You inhabitants will regard you as perfect. You will be perfect. You will be the standard upon which that moral law is measured.
My discomfort comes from this notion that anyone, as long as he is eternal and creates inhabitants in his nature, would be perfect, independent of his attributes. So, this forces me to conclude that perfection, it seems, comes from being the only eternal, and not from attributes alone. God is perfect because He is the eternal being, powerful enough to create us. Good is simply a name we attribute to His nature. Maybe this is the case, as we can’t say that by simply being good, perfectly good, then one becomes a god (God forbid the thought!). Even if we can become perfectly good we wouldn’t be gods, as we lack the other attributes of God, eternal and power. What do you think of this? Am I wrong? Are these thoughts sinful? If not, what is perfection and why do we attribute it to God?