Preface
Process Philosophy in its metaphysics, ontology, and axiology, is an integrative, holistic system of Reality as a processual system. If it is a true picture of reality which grows in its depths as reality continues to expand in its being, then its claims are not bound to belief but arise from the very structure of existence itself, inviting recognition rather than requiring assent.
The first essay examined whether the cosmos is capable of producing increasing complexity, life, and reflective intelligence. The second explored whether such developments may be understood in relational and directional terms, opening toward a non-determinative account of teleology. The third then pressed this trajectory further by considering whether ontology itself may be inseparable from value - whether to exist is, in some sense, to participate in patterns of significance within an evolving relational field.
Each of these steps has remained, as far as possible, within the domains of scientific description and philosophical interpretation. Yet together they give rise to a tension that cannot easily be set aside. A universe that generates value, meaning, and awareness invites questions that extend beyond structural description alone. The issue is no longer only how reality operates, but how its value-laden character is to be understood in relation to its deepest ground of being.
This essay approaches that question through the lens of process theology. It does not assume the necessity of theological belief, nor does it attempt to impose a doctrinal framework upon the reader. Rather, it explores whether a theological interpretation may emerge coherently from the same relational and metaphysical insights that have guided the preceding discussion.
In this sense, the movement from process philosophy to process theology is not presented as a departure from rational inquiry, but as a continuation of it. If reality is relational, generative, and value-bearing, then the question of the ground of value becomes part of the same inquiry rather than an external addition to it.
The purpose of this essay is therefore not to resolve the question of the divine in a final or exclusive way, but to examine it as a coherent possibility: that the generative processes of the cosmos may be understood as unfolding within a deeper dimension of relational depth and value - one that has historically been described in theological terms.
Introduction
A universe that gives rise to value cannot remain fully explained by descriptions which ignore it. The fundamental question then is not only how the world proceeds, but why, within its unfolding, meaning persists.
Modern thought has offered several dominant frameworks through which reality has been interpreted:
Classical theism has typically portrayed God as a transcendent, immutable, and omnipotent being who stands outside the world and governs it through inscrutable sovereign will. While this model emphasizes divine authority and perfection, it often struggles to account for genuine relationality, the openness of the future, and the presence of suffering within an evolving cosmos (theodicy).
In contrast, scientific naturalism has tended to describe the universe as a closed system of impersonal forces governed by invariant (never-changing) laws. Within this metaphysical framework, complexity, life, and consciousness are treated as emergent but ultimately non-teleological phenomena. While such accounts excel in descriptive precision, they frequently leave unresolved indeterminant directionality (evolutionary teleology), the question of value (how meaning, significance, and ethical orientation arise within a reality presumed to be indifferent at its core) and, the deeper ontological question of whether such a reality can adequately account for the very experiences of value, purpose, and orientation that arise within it without implicitly appealing to a richer dimension than its own descriptive framework allows.
Other philosophical positions attempt to navigate between these poles. Deism posits a rational creator who establishes the laws of nature but remains disengaged from the ongoing processes of the world. Pantheism identifies the divine with the totality of the universe, dissolving distinctions between creator and creation but often at the cost of reducing relational depth. Existential and postmodern approaches, meanwhile, tend to locate value within human construction or interpretation, thereby risking a further fragmentation of meaning across subjective or cultural boundaries.
Within Christian theology itself, similar tensions appear. Traditions emphasizing divine sovereignty and immutability often struggle to integrate human freedom, historical development, and the dynamic character of lived experience. Other movements, reacting against these limitations, have emphasized divine immanence or relationality but without always providing a coherent metaphysical framework capable of sustaining those claims.
Taken together, these various scientific, philosophic, and theological perspectives reveal a shared difficulty. Each attempts to account for aspects of reality - vis-a-vis structure, causation, emergence, or meaning - but none fully integrates the relational, generative, and value-laden character of the universe.
If the cosmos is indeed characterized by open-ended development, relational interdependence, and the emergence of value, then any adequate theological interpretation must be consistent with these features. A conception of the divine that overrides relational processes through coercive control, or one that reduces value to subjective projection, fails to align with the very structure of reality it seeks to explain.
It is at this point that process theology enters the discussion - not as an arbitrary alternative, but as a necessary extension of a processual understanding of the universe. Rather than imposing a theological framework upon reality from without, process theology arises from within the same relational and metaphysical insights that inform process philosophy itself. It seeks to articulate the depth dimension of a universe in which value, experience, and creativity are intrinsic rather than incidental.
In this sense, the transition from process philosophy to process theology is not a departure from rational inquiry, but its continuation. If reality is fundamentally relational and value-bearing, then the question of the ground of that value cannot be indefinitely deferred. Process theology represents one coherent attempt to answer that question by interpreting the generative processes of the cosmos as unfolding within a deeper field of persuasive, relational, and value-oriented presence.
Process theology is not merely an optional interpretation layered onto process philosophy - it is an explanatory deepening of why process behaves as it does.
God does not determine the world; God offers it possibilities. - John B. Cobb Jr.
The power of God is the power of love in action. - Charles Hartshorne
In this light, theological claims may be evaluated in terms of their alignment with generative value. Do they contribute to the intensification of relational depth, coherence, and well-being? Or do they diminish, fragment, or suppress these qualities?Process theology thus introduces a criterion that is both philosophical and theological: the legitimacy of a theological construct is measured by its participation in, and contribution to, the enhancement of value within the relational fabric of existence.
- Doctrinal systems that justify harm, exclusion, or coercion in the name of divine authority may be understood as misaligned with the deeper structure of a value-oriented cosmos.
- Conversely, theological expressions that promote compassion, restoration, and relational integrity may be seen as more fully consistent with the processes through which reality advances.
Such a processual view of theology preserves both the freedom inherent in an open universe and the meaningfulness of its direction. The future is not predetermined, yet it is not devoid of orientation. The processes of the world unfold within a field of possibilities that continuously offers pathways toward greater complexity, harmony, and value.