Identifying God with Kathryn Tanner


      
This is a brief portion of a chapter on which I am working on identifying God. I am doing so primarily with Wolfhart Pannenberg in this Systematic Theology. However, I have recently been reflecting with Kathryn Tanner. I hope the following is at least a start on the topic of the divine and human relation.
       Sixth, another part of this conversation in identifying God is the notion of the spiritualty, knowledge, and will of God. Most of us would assume such things of God. Such language is personalist. It suggests we have a psychological disposition to appeal in worship to what is like oneself. Yet, such language is a useful way for us to talk about God as a creative agent.[1] Yet, such anthropomorphic notions came under suspicion through Spinoza, Hume, Fichte, and Feuerbach. To take one example, to refer to divine intelligence is a metaphor similar to saying God is a rock or light. Interestingly, Hegel viewed the Absolute or the Concept as creative power that is constantly realizing itself. “It” has a “personal” quality. Further, the Hegelian logical categories have an anticipatory nature, opening the door for freedom and the significance of the future. The knowledge of God means nothing in creation has escaped the attention of God. The notion of the will of God derives from the human experience of a reality that presses upon us with power. The orientation of this will is as creative and life-giving Spirit.

            Seventh, how are we to think of divine action? In particular, how are we to think of divine action in relation to created beings that have their own power and efficacy? We will need to explore metaphysics if we are to deal with the question of divine agency.[2] God is radically transcendent and God is immediately present in creative agency with respect to all that is. How can we speak coherently in holding such truths together?[3] The result of creation and history has been suffering. Christianity at this point will remind us of the eschatological consummation of creation and history in this future action of God. The Eternal God is present at all times. The goal of divine action incorporates the creatures of God into the eternal fellowship of the Trinity. The preaching of Jesus regarding the nearness of divine rule is an example of how we are closer to the consummation of divine action than we are to its commencement. Think of it as divine self-actualization in the spiritual and loving relations of the Trinity. A notion of self-actualization within Trinitarian relations with the world opens us to the discussion of between classical theism and open or process theism. Classical theism describes God as pure act, a corollary to the notion of the unchangeable quality of God. It affirms the power of God in creating and governing the world as unconditional and unlimited, an affirmation that can imply coercive tyranny to modern ears. It suggests the fullness of divine actuality. It would also suggest the absence of realized potential. In contrast, actualization denotes change and movement. Yet, even with classical theism, the gift of life is perpetual action of the divine toward the creature. The divine is always moving toward particular creatures in giving and sustaining life. The divine is always intimately involved with particular creatures and is never aloof from them. The divine fullness of actuality sustains temporal contingent existence during each of these moments. In giving being to each particular creature, God knows, wills and relates to each contingent creature. The will of God is intentional and always active in each moment of contingent creatures even in the “not-yet” in the unfolding of time.[4]

            Eighth, the Infinity of God is also a discussion of holiness, eternity, omnipotence, and omnipresence. What Christianity needs to do is move away from the tempting path of God as first cause, derived from Aristotle and Aquinas. It needs to move toward the unthematic awareness of God in which philosophy offers the notions of the Infinite and Eternal. Our first thought of the Infinite is that it is in contrast to the finite. Through Hegel, we learn that if all we do is contrast the Infinite and the finite, we place a limit on the Infinite, which would be a contradiction. We can resolve the contradiction in a Hegelian way by understanding that the true Infinite embraces the finite. Non-thematic awareness of the Infinite can gain in clarity as we engage in theological reflection.

One, considering the Infinite as embracing the finite (Hegel), divine holiness is separate from the profane, but also embraces it and brings it into fellowship with the holy God.

Two, considering the Infinite as embracing time, the eternity of God opposes the frailty of the finite, but is more than just endless time; it becomes the basis for our experience of time. Eternity examines, weighs, measures, and tests the genuineness of being. Being and non-being are what they are in relation to eternity. This means that it is a poor and shortsighted view to understand the eternity of God only from the standpoint that it is the negation of time. Eternity is separation between beginning, succession, and end in the context of a positive characteristic that as true duration, the duration of God is the beginning, succession, and end. Boethius gives the positive quality of eternity. He took up the concept of eternity in Plotinus in his famous definition of it as the simultaneous and perfect presence of unlimited life. Eternity is the unending, total, and perfect possession of life. Eternity becomes an authentic duration and not just a negation of time. Aquinas offered the definition of “Total, simultaneous and complete possession of unlimited life.” This positive meaning of the concept of eternity suggests that the statement that God is eternal tells us what God is, rather than what God is not. The path to the goal is time, suggesting again the primacy of the future in our understanding of time. Boethius describes eternity as the perfect possession of life. Eternity has a positive and embracing relation to time. We experience life with an anticipation of its wholeness. A melody has a sequence of notes, but we hear the whole. Speech is a sequence of syllables, but we hear it as a whole. True eternity includes this possibility, the potentiality of time. True eternity has the power to take time to itself, this time, the time of the Word and Son of God. Eternity has the power itself to be temporal in Christ. In virtue of Trinitarian differentiation, the eternity of God includes the time of creatures in its full range, from the beginning of creation to its eschatological consummation. The eternity of God accompanies time. Time may also accompany the eternity of God which creates it and in which it has its goal. The eternity of God goes with time. The eternity of God is in time. Time itself is in eternity. Its whole extension from beginning to end, each single part of it, every epoch, every life-time, every new and closing year, every passing hour, are all in eternity like a child in the arms of its mother. Time does not limit eternity. Eternity is in the midst, just as God is in the midst with us. It is not a divine preserve. On the contrary, by giving us time, God also gives us eternity. Our decisions in time occur with a responsibility to eternity that is not partial but total, and we may and must understand and accept the confidence with which we can undertake them as a complete confidence that we gain from eternity. Having loved us from eternity, and granted us from eternity our existence, fellowship with God, life in hope and eternal life itself, God also loves us here and now, in the temporality ordained for us from eternity, wholeheartedly and unreservedly. We move to God as we come from God and may accompany God. We move towards God. God is, when time will be no more.

Three, with the notions of the omnipresence and omnipotence, we can see the Infinite as the presence and power of God as comprehending all things. The Trinity makes the transcendence and immanence of God compatible. We see in God the art of using power to make free.[5] To turn aside from the source of life is to fall into nothingness, while the omnipotence of God shows that God can save the creature from the nothingness the creature chooses. Divine activity is universal and immediate in such a way that created beings depend upon God for their independent agency. Created being becomes itself in this intimate relation to the divine. God works in all things, but God does not work alone. The work of God does not negate the integrity of the action of individuals. Alongside the divine activity is a place for the activity of the individual. Individual agency and the freedom suggested in it are a gift of God. Within limits, one can even think of created beings influencing divine activity, especially through prayer. It suggests the mutuality of divine and human agency.[6] Such a way of viewing the divine and human relation avoids the Pelagian tendency of modern discussions, in which individuals have a sphere of activity separate from divine activity. We are preserving the sovereignty and priority of divine action.[7]



[1] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988) Kindle edition, Location 862, 864.
[2] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988) Kindle edition, Location 29.
[3] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988), Kindle edition, Location 596.
[5] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988) Kindle edition Location 1029.
[6] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988) Kindle edition, Location 1068, 1077, 1115, 1161, 1236, 1272.
[7] (Tanner, God and Creation in Christian Theology: Tyranny or Empowerment? 1988) Kindle edition, Location 1972, 1997, 2027.

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