“Panentheism” is a constructed word composed of the English equivalents of the Greek terms “pan”, meaning all; “en”, meaning in; and “theism”, derived from the Greek ‘theos’ meaning God. Panentheism (all-in-God) considers God and the world to be inter-related, with the world being in God and God being in the world.
While panentheism offers an increasingly popular alternative to classical theism, both panentheism and classical theistic systems affirm divine transcendence and immanence. But, classical theistic systems, by prioritizing the difference between God and the world, reject any influence by the world upon God while panentheism affirms the world’s influence upon God.
On the other hand, while pantheism emphasizes God’s identity with the world, panentheism maintains the identity and significance of the non-divine.
... A rich diversity of panentheistic understandings has developed in the past two centuries primarily in Christian traditions responding to scientific thought.... Although panentheism generally emphasizes God’s presence in the world without losing the distinct identity of either God or the world, specific forms of panentheism, drawing from different sources, explain the nature of the relationship of God to the world in a variety of ways and come to different conclusions about the nature of the significance of the world for the identity of God.... - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
In this commentary I will try to speak clearly but as well, specifically, building layer upon layer upon the initial idea expressed. Please bear with me. I do not wish this to be a difficult read but an illuminating read without all the philosophical mumbo-jumbo. Thank you. - res
When one speaks of Relational Process Theology, the concept of a process-imbued relational panentheism must also be admitted. One where God and the world are (I) together eternally conjoined in relational experience with each other and, (II) where each is processually affecting the other, both in the present processual moment, as in all past and future processual moments which have occurred and will occur. Neither can be unseparated from the other. Both God and the cosmos form a (III) necessary functional link in arrangement even as they each together form (IV) a necessary economic link of vitality as next explained.
V. Importantly, God is the First Process of all succeeding processual processes, even as God is the First Prehender, the First Actuality itself, and the First *Concresence of any-and-all prehending possible actualities (*e.g., concresence is "the coalescence, or condition of, growing together of all originally diverse, or separate, parts to one-another relationally in all aspects: metaphysically, ontologically, existentially, etc.) In a relational cosmology, especially a panentheistic one, there can never be unrelated, unaffected, inconsequential relationships. Implied in the "God-Thou" combine will always be the "Processual-Relational" combine of a relational processual panentheistic continuum of Divine to the cosmos.
- V/a. An Implied Caveat: Many theologians might speak to the cosmos as a "non-divine material/immaterial substance," but this would take away from the implicit idea "wherein all things coming into contact with the divine necessarily partake, absorb, or share in, the essence of the divine nature of that processual experience - such as the resultant relationality of all things to all things - but not ontologically, as to the Person or Being of God, but as to those traits of God so imparted via mere contact, metaphysically.")
Please view the Tabular Summary here |
VI. Next, to say a thing is "created" does syllogistic harm to the "God-Thou combine" where in a creatio continua cosmology, there was never a "created moment" but rather a linking of the (Divine) Relationship-Giver to all "non-relational material/immaterial substances". This cosmological state of unrelatedness might be used to describe the Genesis "Void" of the bible, or to the "primordial universe" itself, which existed before the Planck Era:
Stage 0. The Very Early Universe. This is the first picosecond (10−12) of cosmic time. It includes the Planck epoch, during which the currently established laws of physics may not apply. [This era exists before] the emergence [of the quantum] stages of the four known fundamental interactions or forces—first gravitation, and later the electromagnetic, weak and strong interactions. [And it exists before] the expansion of space itself and [the rapid] supercooling of the still immensely hot universe due to cosmic inflation. [Quantumtatively] tiny ripples in the universe at this stage are believed to be the basis [for the formation] of large-scale structures that formed much later [much like a tree or a plant results from a tiny seed]. Different stages of the very early universe are understood to different [temporal] extents [or eras]. The earlier parts are beyond the grasp of practical experiments in particle physics but can be explored through other means. - Wikipedia [all bracketed words are mine, RE Slater]
VI/a. This means that before the Planck Era there was an era by which one might describe as a "Spatial Void" (but not a space-time void) wherein there was only liquified, homogeneous space of one dimension where all matter was indistinguishable from one another implying there were no eventful irregularities occurring (sic, until the Lord God set it in motion). Consequently, there would exist an infinity of time (where time = 0, zero), where we might describe as an era "without time" because there were no event-relationships occurring within the primordial mix of this timeless, dimensionless, quantumized soup of primordial matter which would someday form the universe as we would experience it today.
A symbolic graphic which might help the present visualize discussion |
VII. Further, this Cosmic Primordial Era was so completely unrelated to itself as to lie without cause or effect upon its neighboring force or energy. One which could not affect even a casual spacetime relationship with one another. It was only at the act of God as the First Inviting Relational Processual Causal Casual (words fail here) acting upon all existing non-relational substances/possibilities/entities (again, words fail here) where an "existing but not self-creating cosmos" is processually enacted to form eventful processual relationships. Until this time, there was a matter universe but not a matter-forming universe. Hence, creatio continua but NOT creatio ex nihilo.
- VII/a. God as Creator may more properly be thought of as God the Enactor (or Divine Actor) upon all uncasually-unrelated relationships which were unformed, non-interacting, and essentially, a spatial void to all possible spacetime cosmologies.
- VII/b. In quantum physics terms, the primordial quantum soup of all elementary objects (quantum strings, quantum gravity loops, etc) are absent any spatial interaction within-or-without themselves. That there can be no "irregularity" as there can be no interactional relationships existing during this phase of a non-relational spatial context. That the concept of "time" may only result from (a cascading of) concrescing inter-relational and intra-relational interactions a) within a substance's interior or, b) without it's exterior to other interacting substances.
- VII/c. NOT until this happens may the concept of spacetime form from this primordial soup which is a timeless, one-dimensional "void" of unformed space existing "apart from" - or "separated from" - a Relational God. But when coming into contact with this Relational God is energy/force/matter immediately transferred either by a) divine fiat as the "First Cause" or, more likely, b) by coming into relational contact with the "One who imparts Relationality," who LOVINGLY acts upon the "inseparably unrelating" cosmological substance. This "relational processual birth" is usually incorrectly referred to as God "forming, or creating" substance. More correctly, God is "breathing upon, reviving, or imbuing," a material "cosmic void" with eventful life, wellbeing, and value up to which point it had none. Not so much as the cosmos' Creator per se, but more like it's Redeemer upon directionless living matter.
VIII. In sum, Creatio Continua therefore admits to a necessarily relational-panentheistic creational linkage to the God which is "separate" but "necessarily conjoined" with all which exists apart from God (however we wish to term this primordial process-relationship metaphorically). That Creatio Ex Nihilo from nothing into something is a physical-material-a/temporal impossibility. An older Platonic classical concept which bears no relevance to the discussions of today's processual quantum sciences.
IX. More correctly, creatio ex nihilo is as improbable as creatio continua is the more tenable - the first cannot be, as the latter must be, as respecting a process-based panentheistic relational structure between God and the resultant material/immaterial cosmos.
- IX/a. That they are currently bound metaphysically together as an essential combine between the Divine as the First Life-Giving Processual Process to all subtending relationally-bonded processual life-giving processes.
- IX/b. A resultant cosmology borne of a concrescent-pantheistic process reflecting God as the Life Source, Giver, and Sustainer.
- IX/c. A God who passes along all past and present processual influences into all future processual possibilities of wellbeing and valuative concresing moments to come.
- R.E. Slater
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CLASSICAL CHURCH DEFINITIONS
The term creatio continua refers to God's continuing creative activity throughout the history of the universe. In a sense, most theologians accept creatio continua, since creation is the dependence of the whole of space-time on God. But more traditional views hold that because God is timeless and immutable, there is only one divine creative act, which originates the whole of space-time from first to last. Those who speak of creatio continua think of creation taking place in many successive acts, partly in response to events in time. Thus, at any particular time God's creation has not been completed, and the future is partly open, in some theological views, even for God. - Philosopher Theologian Keith Ward
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Creatio Continua is a concept within the Christian doctrine of creation, specifically within the Eastern Orthodox tradition and some Process Theologies. It refers to speaking of God’s action in relation to the world.According to this idea, we are to envisage this not as a single act in the past, but as a continuing presence here and now, hence it is legitimate to speak of a continuing creation (sic, evolution of cosmology).
Historically, it is an approach located in the writings of Maximus, Hildegard of Bingen and Gregory Palamas. It is not a past event, but a present relationship, an initial act that constitutes a starting point. In spite of the different ways this phrase is put to use, it need not be seen as in opposition to the classical position of creatio ex nihilo. - CounterBalance
Creatio ex Capacitas and Creatio Continua: "When having Power just isn't Enough" - article link
In the beginning when God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep . . . Then God said, "Let there be light;" and there was light. ~ (Genesis 1:1-2a; 3 NRSV).
The biblical passage above has been the subject of much debate in light of not only how God created, but also as to out of what He created. There are two main camps in this debate: those who affirm creatio ex nihilo and those who affirm panentheism. Both speak of God's omnipotent creativity expressed through the generation of new modes of existence. Creatio ex nihilo advocates claim that God did this 'out of nothing;' creating all things out of absolutely nothing. Panentheists purport that God created by influencing a realm of 'non-divine actualities.' These non-divine actualities are comprised of 'moments of experience,' which have always been, and these actualities present the options from which the next moments are created. Panentheists believe a realm of actualities has always existed alongside God, although the individual actualities themselves are neither eternal nordopossess any divine power in, or of, themselves.
Those on both sides of this debate profess God to be a sovereign, holy, omnipresent, and a personal being who interacts with the loving intent of bringing about the most possible good for all creation. The discrepancy in the debate is found in the different views of how this goal is carried out. As a result, some of the attributes of God are conceived differently: in particular God's love and omnipotence, and free creaturely response to God.
Those professing creation ex nihilo come under fire by those who ask the question "what is nothing?" This question cannot be ignored, because, while it endows God with unlimited power over creation by showing Him to be the sole actor in creating, creatio ex nihilo seems paradoxical. Or as Peter Van Inwgen says,
To say that there is nothing is to say that there isn't anything, not even vast emptiness. If there were a vast emptiness, there would be no material object - no atoms or elementary particles or anything made of them - but there would nevertheless be something: the vast emptiness (Qtd. "Creation Out of Nothing" Lodahl. 2).
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PENROSE'S VERSION OF A CYCLICAL
PROCESSUAL UNI-VERSE
(as vs. a MULTI-VERSE)
"The last star will slowly cool and fade away. With its passing, theUniverse will become once more a void, without light or life or meaning."
How can the very same state be a cold, empty universe from one perspective and a hot dense universe from another? The answer lies in a complex mathematical procedure called "conformal rescaling", a geometrical transformation which in effect alters the size of an object but leaves its shape unchanged.
In conformal cyclic cosmology, the direction of explanation goes from old and cold to young and hot: the hot dense state exists because of the cold empty state. But this "because" is not the familiar one – of a cause followed in time by its effect. It is not only size that ceases to be relevant in these extreme states: time does too.
For a lover of myth, Penrose's vision is beautiful. In Penrose's preferred multi-cycle form, it promises endless new worlds born from the ashes of their ancestors. In its one-cycle form, it is a striking modern re-invocation of the ancient idea of the ouroboros, or world-serpent.