Hi again —
Aquinas famously posed the arguments, both cosmological and ontological, but Aquinas also asserts that the God of the philosophers is not the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, nor the God who hung upon a cross.
Thomas
Not even then, the Trinity is a Mystery. It's only people like me that enjoy the investigation.Again, my position is that these kinds of rational arguments, while they may be of intellectual interest, only carry weight for believers ...
I think you misunderstand our appreciation of 'a personal God' — God escapes person, as God escapes every predicate. The point is rather, I can know God not only as a philosophical abstract and principle, but also commune with God at the most fundamental core of my being — a communion of being-to-being, even as I declare that God is beyond-being ... we use the term 'person' to signify such a union, as we do 'nuptial mystery', but the emphasis is upon mystery ... then you go on to a Denys, or an Eriugena, or an Eckhart, where even these barriers are transcended ...But my point remains that the logical difficulties you pose for which a personal god is the answer only arise given certain fundamental dispositions. They are not inherent in the nature of things.
Again, that's not the Christian argument.they all boil down to the idea that the universe can’t explain itself, that the explanation must lie elsewhere.
Aquinas famously posed the arguments, both cosmological and ontological, but Aquinas also asserts that the God of the philosophers is not the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, nor the God who hung upon a cross.
I think authentic Christian spirituality is in the lived, the day to day, and not in numinous experiences of 'the other' or the fruit of exotic or esoteric technique.... which, for me at least, in the end only distracts, obscures & leads away from the direct experience of interest to me.
Thomas