V
Vico
Guest
In Christianity, the nature of creation is not divine nature and what is created is from nothing, so it not pantheism. The doctrine of creation teaches that all things are distinct from God and God is their efficient cause, not producing things from His own substance nor from any pre-existing reality, but by an act of His will bringing them out of nothing.This, dear Vico, now becomes pantheism.
I have knowledge in me. I have love in me, as do you. By this theology, one must conclude, therefore, that God’s essence is manifested in creation. This is pantheism.
To maintain simplicity, Baha’i theology asserts that God’s essence is BEYOND all humanly expressed attributes. We assign the attributes of All-Loving, All-Powerful, All-Merciful, etc so as not to assign any IMPERFECTIONS onto His essence, but the essence cannot be expressed on this finite level of existence in creation.
The human painter is BEYOND the expressions found on his painting. The human painter is not the beauty, order and textures and colours found in His painting, he is far far far more than those expressions. One cannot find the neural pathways in the painting, one cannot find the optic nerve in the painting, nor can the paint on the painting fathom what an optic nerve could possibly be.
This is a manifest contradiction in applying the concept of “simplicity” to God.
What we see in Creation is an emanation of Gods active attributes, not His essential attributes.
"God in His Essence is unknowable, inaccessible to man: we can only say that He exists, but we cannot know anything else about Him, not even what `to exist’ means for Him.
And yet, we are used to ascribe to Him names and attributes: Creator, All-Knowing, Provider, or Word, Will, Love, and so on. The meaning of this ascription of names and attributes is explained in the Bahá’í texts in two ways:
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- The names and attributes we ascribe to God refer to what we understand of them in the world of creation.
Abdu'l-Bahá says:Their [the attribute’s] existence is proved and necessitated by the appearance of phenomena’:[7] we see that the universe follows a harmonious and ordered way, and we say that God is its Ordainer; we see creatures, and we say that God is their Creator. But our understanding of these attributes is only what we have under-stood, in the plane of the world of creation, of these spiritual truths, which are far beyond our minds. This is what Western philosophers call via eminentiae.- The names and attributes we ascribe to God `are only in order to deny imperfections, rather than to assert the perfections that the human mind can conceive’.[8] For example, we say that He is the Almighty, meaning that He is not powerless, as His creatures are. This is what Western philosophy calls via negationis or remotionis."