Hello Schnitz:
I agree that Catholic philosophy looks at god as an infinite, all-powerful being, but how does it reconcile with the Bible?
The Bible circumscribes, defines, and limits God from page 1.
Of course, the bible is ‘story’, and as such presents what people thought was their relationship to their creator. But the real problem is biblical literalism, by which we circumscribe our ability to discover greater meaning.
We are told of a being that is gendered, needs six days to create this little puny Earth. (I would imagine this is considered slow among infinite, all-powerful beings,) who particularly cared for one group of goatherds roaming the Sinai and adjoining counties, regularly got angry, and has a preference for fear and obedience from its subjects.
If taken figuratively and from the perspective of a patriarchal, nomadic herding people’s perspective, yes, God is to them a protective and powerful father figure.
Sorry to break the news, but Catholic thought can’t have it both ways. If the Bible is to be taken for truh, then God is circumscribed. If we are to favor Catholic thought on the matter, then the god of the Bible isn’t recognizable as a serviceable Supreme Being. He would be more of a tribal entity.
Catholic thought encompasses a great deal more than is being given credit for here. I suggest the book “And God Said What?” by Margaret Nutting Ralph, which explains the genres and ways of perceiving the various literary forms incorporated into OT and NT scripture.
About the Trinity: Is there any doubt that it was born from the nuclear family concept (father/mother/child) and modified to fit a more misogynistic outlook?
I agree entirely with equating the trinitarian concept as nuclear family. That places one’s understanding in terms of being actively involved in an ongoing creation within a relational configuration that includes God and humankind.
The lyrics of “God Beyond All Names” gives a glimpse of that relational propostion:
Verse One
God. beyond our dreams,
your have stirred in us a mem’ry;
you have placed your pow’rful spirit
in the hearts of humankind.
*
Refrain
All around us we have known you,
all creation lives to hold you.
In our living and our dying
we are bringing you to birth.
*
Verse Two
God, beyond all names,
you have made us in your image;
we are like you we reflect you;
we are women, we are man.
*
Verse Three
God, beyond all words,
all creation tells your story;
you have shaken with our laughter,
you have trembled with our tears.
*
Verse Four
God, beyond all time,
you are laboring within us;
we are moving,
we are changing in your spirit ever new.
*
Verse Five
God of tender care,
you have cradled us in goodness,
you have mothered us in wholeness,
you have loved us into birth.
*