Classical theism, the
reigning doctrine of God in Christendom, affirms that God is
void of body, parts, passions, even compassion, wholly simple,
wholly immutable, independent, immaterial, the supreme cause and
never the effect. What creatures have, God does not. I challenge
this doctrine, on five grounds.
First, I find it unbiblical. Now, in so
saying, I realize the Bible is not a book on metaphysics. God's
salvific revelation occurs in history, not nature. Nevertheless,
I feel Scripture implies a metaphysic wholly other than that
found in classical theism. Granted, many biblical passages speak
of God as immutable. But wait a second; many others do in fact
speak of God as changing (e.g., Hosea 11:8, Amos 7:3, Jeremiah
18:8, Exodus 32:14). Indeed, the prophets function so as to
alter the operations of YHWH's will. Malachi 3:5-7 is often
taken to be an affirmation of a wholly immutable God ("I, the
Lord, change not"). But this is followed up by saying, "Return
to me, that I might return to you." Taken together, these
passages mean, at least to me, that God enjoys a fixity of
purpose, and in that fixity, does not vary. But rather than
denying change, such fixity insists upon it. Hence, if we change
in such-and-such a way, then God, too, will change in an
appropriate manner. And the biblical metaphors for God are all
anthropomorphic in nature. God shares the creaturely
characteristics of will, memory, emotion, anger, disappointment,
etc. Quarrel all you want with these metaphors, as but a mere
concession to our feeble intellects. Still, the fact remains
they mean God undergoes changing affective states analogous to
pleasure and displeasure in ourselves. If these metaphors do not
fit the reality of God, then they are useless and should be
dropped. The Incarnation, if it is at all revelatory of God,
reveals his general modus operandi with creation. God is
incarnate throughout the entire universe, which functions as his
body. And the biblical predication of God is generally relative
predication. It's hard to be a creator, without a creation; a
king, without subjects; a father, without children; a lover,
without someone to love.
Second , there is the matter of
epistemology. Knowledge, I think, demands two things. No. 1 , we
must generalize from the familiar to the unfamiliar. No. 2 , to
have knowledge, real knowledge, we must have empathy, a knowing
from "within." Now, if there is one "within" I am most familiar
with, it is human experience. So, I think that unless there is a
genuine analogy, a true likeness, between ourselves and all the
rest of reality, from the atom up to God, then we haven't got an
inkling as to what is going on. Now, one major characteristic of
human existence is that we are continually changing, evolving.
The traditional notion of the "self" as something permanent is a
myth. Rather, the "self" is best thought of as a name for a
society of perishing occasions. Moment to moment, we are
different persons. No thinker thinks twice. God, then, I see as
the most changeable that there is, the supreme effect as well as
cause. And in so saying, I am not overlooking the fact that
there is consistency in God. There is an absolute or abstract
dimension to God. It is what God always does. God always seeks
to maximize beauty, is always omniscient, empathic, loving. But
there is also the matter of the relative nature of God, God in
the concrete, God as continually changing. We must, however, be
careful not to focus just on the common thread running through
various occasions, overlooking their key differences. Well may
God always seek to maximize beauty; but what is beautiful in one
context or era may not be in another. Well may God always be
omniscient; but as new things happen, God's knowledge is
increased, if for no other reason than that he has moved from
knowing X as merely potential to knowing X as a definite,
decided matter of fact. Another major characteristic of human
existence is that we are social, relational beings who arise out
of our relationships. Reality is like a spider's web; you tweak
it here and it jiggles there. God, then, is indeed the supreme
effect as well as cause. As much as God creates the universe,
the universe creates God.
Third , there is the matter of meaning,
value, significance. If God is wholly immutable, as classical
theism argues, then, saint or sinner, it's all the same to him,
he remains blissfully indifferent. If nothing can make any real
difference in God, then his love and wisdom can make no
difference in his decision-making process. But who can put any
real faith in such a cold, dehumanizing God? And if God could be
just as happy, whole, and complete, without a universe as with
one, then why did he bother to create it in the first place? How
would we be anything other than meaningless and insignificant to
him? And how could we think of God as loving? Love means, at a
minimum, to derive part of the content of your being from the
loved object. And how could God deliver us from the evil of
evils, that the past fades? We acquire satisfactions, only to
lose them. So, why bother to do anything, when it's all going to
go up in smoke soon enough? If God is wholly immutable, he is,
then, helpless to deliver us from this evil. On the other hand,
if God is supreme effect, if we can pass our experiences over
into God, then everything is of significance, because everything
is preserved and enjoyed in God's memory forever.
Fourth , there is the matter of divine
transcendence. Classical theism sought to affirm transcendence,
but at the price of immanence. God, in Thomism, exists wholly
outside of creation, wholly unrelated to anything going on.
Hence, we are left with the tragic situation of a world that
never really gets into the life of God, because he is not about
to react to it, and a God who never really gets into the world,
because he would then be affected, conditioned, by it. The
universe, then, has meaning only in the negative sense of a kind
of holding tank to be escaped from if we are to attain to what
is of ultimate value. Thus Christianity becomes a static,
world-negating religion. And then, is God truly transcendent?
The classical model of God pictures him and the world as two
wholly separate circles that do not intersect. The world of
time, change, materiality, contrasted over and against the
divine world of immaterial, changeless simplicity. Well then,
what do we call the whole of reality, the whole shooting match?
Meta-God? Because by that it would seem that God is but one
limited aspect of some larger, more inclusive whole or reality
that includes him and then some. Put another way, classical
theism argued that no reality can stand over and against God, on
an equal footing, so as to exclude him. But, ironically, that is
exactly what classical theism ended up doing: The whole world of
materiality and change is, at best, an anti-God principle, the
complete and total antithesis of God's own nature. I think a
better solution is to say that God is the chief exemplification
of all metaphysical principles. Loosely put, what holds for
creatures also holds for God, but to the nth degree. And this
huge quantitative difference makes for a qualitative one as
well. Everything in the universe is a part of everything else,
is incarnate throughout; but only to a very limited degree. We,
for example, directly interact with little more than our own
brain cells. In sharp contrast, God's body, the universe, is
wholly internal to him. Hence, God enjoys an unsurpassably
direct and immediate empathic response to any and all creaturely
feeling. We are total strangers to sensitivity on such a grand
scale.
Fifth, and finally, there is the matter
of what is sometimes called the "monopolar prejudice" of
classical theism. Now, it sure seems to me that the church
fathers, and many Christians today, set up checklists of
seemingly contradictory divine attributes , such as
being-becoming, and cause-effect. Then they go down the list,
ascribing only one side to God, the side that squares best with
certain Hellenic notions that the "really real" is wholly
simple, immaterial, and passionless . To me, this is lopsided.
Nothing real can be described by reference to only one side or
pole, and each pole represents a virtue. If it is good to be
independent and not deterred by others, it is also good to be
deeply moved and affected by the feelings of others. I think
that creation is God's own eternal evolution from
unconsciousness into self-consciousness and self-actualization .
We should rejoice in the fact that we have a genuine
significance in the life of God.
By Blair Reynolds
3-20-06
Blair Reynolds holds a doctorate in
theology and has done graduate work in psychology. He writes
from Fairbanks, Alaska.