Hi Netti-Netti
Been thinking of you ... keep meaning to mention I read a review of "Ordained Women in the Early Church. A Documentary History" ... interesting.
The notion that G-d is perfectly self-subsistent and totally self-sufficient would seem to derive from a concern that G-d can't need Creation in order for Him to exist.
I think it derives from a definition of God as such. Everything stems from that. I think what we require of God is ruled out by proper objectivity.
Maybe that relates to a more specific concern that the imperfections of matter and the poor judgment of willful creatures would reflect badly on G-d.
Well, the contrary reading would render God no better than man.
And so people maintain that G-d doesn't need Creation, but Creation needs Him. This view is difficult to reconcile to free will.
Not at all. The difficulty comes in assuming pre-determination, which itself is a limitation on the freedom of God. That God knows what we're going to do next does not mean He wills us to do it, as many assume, rather He endorses our freedom by letting us do as we will, even when it's contrary to His will.
Sounds technical, but the idea of a God who wills what He does not will, who wants us to do what he does not want ... is even more schizophrenic.
I'ld say that self-determination is an expression of the human capacity for self-creation.
But we don't create ourselves — we are not self-subsistent nor self-sufficient. And when we self-determine our own good, when we don't know what that is, then that is not self-creation, but self-delusion.
In other words, the human is not totally dependent on G-d. Nor is the human totally determined by G-d.
Relatively speaking, that's true. Ontologically speak, that is not true.
Doctrinally, I think it's actually fairly easy support the idea of G-d needing Creation (mankind) based on the covenants that are described in the Bible.
Really? I don't think so. If it was, it would be doctrine.
Again, if such were true, then God ceases to be God by both theological and philosophical definition.
The Biblical emphasis on obedience bespeaks an attitude of faith and a reverence for G-d. I'm not inclined to assert that G-d's wants His children's obedience just because it's egoically/narcissistically gratifying to Him.
Nor does anyone make any such assertion — that's a pointless argument, nowhere does doctrine say that God is egoistic or narcissistic.
Further, since the Gift of Grace is by definition freely given, it also makes little sense to argue that G-d expects obedience as part of a deal by which an obedient person earns the gift.
It's not freely given in that sense though, is it? There are requirements: The Shema Israel, the Decalogue, the Beatitudes ... it is a gift, freely given, because it is a superabundance of grace, an unmerited gift in that there is nothing we can say or do to necessitate the gift, that is why it is a gift, and not an obligation ... but it's not without conditions.
Therefore, I'd conclude that the Biblical emphasis on obedience and the various iterations of covenant we see throughout the scriptures are intended to convey that G-d benefits from His relationship with us in terms of advancing His plan for this world.
Then I think I've demonstrated that your logic is at fault.
Again, what you're talking about is a being who is not a 'god' in the theological or philosophical sense — in fact he's worse off than even us, because if what you say is true, we've got him by the short hairs.
The benefit is a choice, but it's ours to make: Do we want in or out? If we want in, then we do as The Man says; if we don't, then carry on as we were, and we'll end up tossed out with the trash. That's why Jesus used the image of gehenna, that's the offer: either paradise, or the rubbish tip — take it or leave it.
But it's gonna happen, either with us, or without us.
Have you ever thought: this might not be the only creation? I don't mean transmigration or reincarnation, or some kind of repetitive recycling ... I mean an infinite number of creations, entirely separate and distinct. Some so unlike us we can't imaging them, some so like us, we can hardly conceive a difference ... One more or less won't make much a difference, on the scale of things. Such a scale that even this entire universe fails to register on the scale of either time or space ... then there's you and I in it ... for the briefest instance ... less than a spark ... less than one of those crazy nano-particles that CERN is looking for ...
It's a serious question. Science supports it, in theory at least. How come then, as the Psalmist says:
"What is man that thou art mindful of him? or the son of man that thou visitest him?" (Psalm 8:5 9 ... and elsewhere, Job thought about it, Hebrews thought about it ... it's a big question)
I would go further still and suggest that G-d becomes more fully Himself through us even as He is ultimately Transcendent.
Well for once that actually reduces transcendence to a relativity ... God is not Absolute at all ...
For another does that then not render 'love' as the polite mask of a requirement, a necessity ...
There is then a subtext, and essentially it's a subtext of power. I would have thought every feminist fibre of your being would resent such a God. I know my masculinity does.
It also falls in the face of the question of the Immutability of God:
Thirdly, because everything which is moved acquires something by its movement, and attains to what it had not attained previously. But since God is infinite, comprehending in Himself all the plenitude of perfection of all being, He cannot acquire anything new, nor extend Himself to anything whereto He was not extended previously. Hence movement in no way belongs to Him. So, some of the ancients, constrained, as it were, by the truth, decided that the first principle was immovable.
Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I-I, q9, a1.
Thomas