A
Amandil
Guest
Good Evening Amandi: I’m not sure in what way I could elaborate. Is there something in particular you wanted me to explain?
You said this:
Gary Sheldrake:
What do you mean by “a pervasive consciousness”? I only ask because it sounds rather pantheistic.I think God is an all pervasive consciousness that is expressed in all things throughout the universe. In turn, I think the bodies and minds of creatures such as ourselves are the agents of sentient experience by which the temporal universe comes to know itself.
Gary Sheldrake:
I don’t agree at all. For example the way we think of God is not solely limited to the “limitations” or “imaginations” of that “group of people” you mention. Of course they inform us in how we formulate our expressions about God, but they are not our sole reference.My sense is that limits can only be imposed on Gods that we create in our own imaginations. For the most part, the ways in which we portray God are attended by the limitations of the imaginations of a group of people from 3,000 years ago. Let me explain. We propose the existence of a God who is all good and all perfect, yet created a world that in it’s practical permutation turns out to be neither. That is problematic because it leaves only a few options, neither of which suggests a God without limitations.
Secondly, our Catholic faith has never posited that this fallen world as it exists is the “practical permutation” of how God created the world to be. In fact the world as it exists is the exact opposite of what God intended it to be. That the world fell because of sin, thus creation was wounded because of the abuse of free will upon the part of creation(us) which was meant to be the very means, using your words, that the temporal universe was meant to know itself.
Given the promise of the redemption of the world(the protoevangelium) it seems rather apparent that God’s omniscience and omnipotence was never really negated by the Fall but that the abuse of man’s free will and the manifold results of that abuse was already anticipated by God and that the plan for a greater result was already in the works.
In either case these actions presuppose a God without limits and therefore cannot be an argument against it.
Gary Sheldrake:
This seems rather to assume that “evil” is an objectively real thing. It’s not. St. Augustine answered this in his work, “On Grace and Free Will.”Either the world was intended to have bad as well as good, with the potential for bad being inbuilt by the world’s creator, or the creator intended for it to be all good, and it didn’t turn out that way.
Gary Sheldrake:
Which begs the question what are you basing your definition of “good” on?These are option 1 and option 2. Option 3 is that the adverse outcomes we have produced are the product of our own doing through free will, but by giving us free will, the outcomes are an epiphenomenal outcome of God’s own handiwork. If this is the case, we are left with the options that either God is all knowing and knew that it would turn out that way, which makes God less than all good,
Gary Sheldrake:
Which means that you’re positing a strawman. Omniscience, knowing that someone is going to do a thing, is not the same as making them do it. We all possess the will and the grace from God to choose NOT to do a thing that we know is evil. God’s knowledge does not force us to choose the evil committed. Nor does it negate His perfect goodness and wisdom. What it means is that all things, even the evil chosen by His creation, all things ultimately lead to the totality of His plan and the glorification of His Will.… or God had no idea that it would turn out that way, which makes God less than perfect and all-knowing.
cont’d