Please Note: I've utilized AI to draw the pictures below. In this series, ChatGPT 4.0 has tended towards a mystic eastern representation of the early orthodox doctrines rather than the more typically cold and sterile pictures of western medievalism. And since Whiteheadian philosophy feels more Buddhistic than Western Analytical it's all good. Also note, Process is different from Buddhism in significantly major ways though each also share common sympathies in how we live out our lives in beauty and harmony with one another. - re slater
Whitehead's process philosophy offers a fascinating lens through which to reconsider traditional church orthodoxy—not as a static doctrinal construct, but as an evolving, dynamic reality, shaped by relational and experiential factors. His emphasis on becoming rather than being challenges traditional metaphysical assumptions about church orthodoxy, allowing for a more open-ended, dynamically organic living tradition.
If we were to map Whitehead’s influence onto the historical development of early orthodoxy, we might see his work as offering a reframing of theological discourse—one that acknowledges classical doctrines but seeks to integrate them into a more processual and relational paradigm based upon his development of Process Philosophy from which Process Theology derives.
Many of these themes have been reflected elsewhere in this website. Too, Process themes can be individualized to the thematic motif under discussion. This means that process theology will react differently to second and third millennial church orthodoxies in comparison to first millennial church orthodoxies. This is the beauty of a holistic process-based philosophic construct which can supersede all previous, earlier visions of God, life, universe, and meaning. And as an integral philosophy it will be around for a long while; having been discussed in ancient Greek philosophy, redefined by Whitehead et al, and proving adept in the quantum sciences, etc.
R.E. Slater
February 27, 2025
Exploring How Process Theology Can
Transform Key Orthodox Doctrines
By moving church orthodox off it's Hellenistic philosophic foundations (Platonism, NeoPlatonism, Aristotelianism, etc) onto the foundations of process philosophy orthodox church doctrine then may escalate upwards into a vibrant, transformative construct which is more dynamic, relational, and evolving as a contemporary framework now able to dialogue with the sciences and metamodern academia across all areas and topics.
1. The Trinity: From Static Essence to Dynamic Relationality
Traditional Orthodox View
- The Trinity is often framed in substance metaphysics: One divine essence (ousia) in three persons (hypostases).
- The Nicene-Chalcedonian model insists on the co-equal, co-eternal nature of Father, Son, and Spirit.
Process Theology’s Reframing
- Rather than a static ontological unity, the Trinity is seen as a dynamic process of relational becoming.
- God is not a fixed essence but a relational act—the interplay of divine creativity, responsiveness, and transformation.
- The Trinity embodies a divine process of co-creative love:
- Father → The primordial, creative source (the lure toward beauty and novelty).
- Son → The embodied expression of God in history (concretizing divine love and relationality).
- Spirit → The sustaining, guiding force of divine persuasion, working within creation.
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AI Art of Christ's Hypostatic Union | R.E. Slater |
2. Christology: From Static Hypostatic Union to Incarnational Process
Traditional Orthodox View
- Christ is fully divine and fully human (Chalcedon, 451).
- The hypostatic union ensures that Jesus is a single person with two distinct natures.
- Atonement is often framed through penal substitution or satisfaction models (sin, sacrifice, and divine justice).
Process Theology’s Reframing
- Incarnation is not a singular event but an ongoing cosmic process.
- Instead of a static two-nature model, Christ represents the highest actualization of divine becoming.
- Jesus embodies God’s persuasive power, showing the world the lure toward divine harmony rather than divine coercion.
- Atonement is relational, not juridical—Christ’s work is about persuading creation toward cooperative love rather than appeasing divine wrath.
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AI Art of Revelation | R.E. Slater |
3. Revelation: From Fixed Doctrine to Evolving Truth
Traditional Orthodox View
- Scripture is often seen as inspired and authoritative, a direct deposit of divine truth.
- Doctrines like apostolic succession and creedal formulations are viewed as once-for-all revelations.
Process Theology’s Reframing
- Revelation is not a fixed deposit but an evolving interaction between God and creation.
- The Bible and tradition are snapshots of evolving human engagement with God, not final blueprints.
- Truth unfolds as God continuously interacts with the world.
- Theology is never static but participatory—our understanding of God is always growing.
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AI Art of the Nature of God | R.E. Slater |
4. The Nature of God: From Immutable Being to Evolving Process
Traditional Orthodox View
- God is unchanging (immutable) and all-powerful (omnipotent).
- Classical theism assumes God is outside of time, foreknowing all events.
Process Theology’s Reframing
- God is dipolar:
- Primordial nature (envisioning all possibilities).
- Consequent nature (experiencing and responding to creation).
- God is not coercive but persuasive, working through relational influence rather than unilateral control.
- God changes in response to creation—not in essence, but in relational engagement.
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AI Art of the Christian Eschatology | R.E. Slater |
5. Eschatology: From Apocalyptic End to Open Future
Traditional Orthodox View
- Linear eschatology: History moves toward final judgment, resurrection, and new creation.
- The future is predetermined (Augustinian predestination in some traditions).
Process Theology’s Reframing
- The future is not predetermined—God and creation co-create the open possibilities of becoming.
- Heaven and transformation are about processual renewal, not sudden apocalyptic events.
- The eschaton is not a fixed endpoint but an ever-expanding realization of divine harmony.
Conclusion: A Living Orthodoxy
Rather than dismissing traditional orthodoxy, Process Theology reframes it as a dynamic, evolving interaction between God and creation.
- Instead of “orthodoxy” as a static boundary, it becomes a participatory unfolding.
- Instead of fixed doctrines, theology is an ongoing dialogue between God and the world.
- Instead of a top-down divine plan, the universe is co-created with God through relational persuasion.
Here is a visual chart mapping these doctrinal shifts:
Doctrinal Reinterpretation: Orthodoxy vs. Process Theology
Doctrine |
Traditional
Orthodox View |
Process
Theology View |
Trinity |
Fixed
essence, three persons in one divine substance |
Relational
dynamism, ongoing divine becoming |
Christology |
Static two-nature
hypostatic union |
Christ as the
highest actualization of divine process |
Revelation |
Finalized
revelation in scripture and creeds |
Unfolding
revelation, evolving divine-human interaction |
Nature of God |
Immutable,
omnipotent, outside time |
Dipolar,
evolving, responsive to creation |
Eschatology |
Linear,
predetermined end of history |
Open-ended,
co-created future with God |
Just for fun, here is AI's metamodern reinterpretations of each topic, now incorporating Whitehead’s process philosophy within an Orthodox iconographic framework:
- Trinity – A relational dynamism of divine becoming.
- Christology – Christ as the Redeeming Logos producing a continually evolving relationality.
- Revelation – An infinite unfolding scroll, symbolizing continuous divine-human dialogue.
- Nature of God – A woven, interactive force, deeply relational rather than distant.
- Eschatology – A co-created, evolving future, rather than a static final judgment.
The images now merge classical orthodoxy, process theology, and metamodern aesthetics, visually expressing the dynamic, participatory nature of divine reality.
The Trinity as a relational dynamism of divine becoming
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AI Art of the Processual Trinity | R.E. Slater |
Christ as the Redeeming Logos producing a continually evolving relationality
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AI Art of the Processual Christ as Logos of God | R.E. Slater |
Revelation as an infinitely unfolding scroll symbolizing continuous divine-human-eco/cosmic dialogue
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AI Art of the Processual Revelation | R.E. Slater |
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AI Art of the Processual Nature of God | R.E. Slater |
The co-created, evolving future of the church as vs a static final judgment
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AI Art of the Processual Eschaton | R.E. Slater |