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Does the "God" of Panentheism have anything to do with the God of the Bible? Is that what transcendent god refers to? Curious to hear your thoughts.
Does the "God" of Panentheism have anything to do with the God of the Bible? Is that what transcendent god refers to? Curious to hear your thoughts.
Robert M. Grant and David Noel Freedman write: "As the All, Jesus is everywhere present. He is in wood and under stones. We cannot agree with Doresse (pages 188-189) that Thomas is referring to the cross and the stone at his tomb. A much closer parallel is provided in the Gnostic Gospel of Eve (Epiphanius, Pan., 26, 3, 1): 'In all things I am scattered, and from wherever you wish you collect me.' At this point Thomas's doctrine is pantheist, not Christian. The Greek version inserts the words about wood and stone at the end of Saying 31 to indicate that Jesus is present with his disciples, or with one disciple. The meaning is approximately the same: Jesus is everywhere." (The Secret Sayings of Jesus, p. 178)
Gospel of Thomas Saying 77 - GospelThomas.com
What I remember from what I was taught as a Christian, and my upg:
1. God is beyond, yet pervades the universe: transcendent and immanent.
2. God created and can destroy the universe. Therefore the universe is not part of God, nor is God identical to the universe, nor the universe identical to God.
In those regards, I can't say the God of the bible is either a pantheistic or panentheistic God.
That's pretty much where my thinking is. Could some more progressive theologies within the classical monotheisms be panentheistic? Yes; in fact the mystical segments of classical monotheisms often do break down the division between their idea of gods and the material universe. Is classical monotheism traditionally panentheistic? Not at all. Furthermore, neither pantheists nor panentheists are necessarily monotheistic.
What I remember from what I was taught as a Christian, and my upg:
1. God is beyond, yet pervades the universe: transcendent and immanent.
2. God created and can destroy the universe. Therefore the universe is not part of God, nor is God identical to the universe, nor the universe identical to God.
In those regards, I can't say the God of the bible is either a pantheistic or panentheistic God.
Does the "God" of Panentheism have anything to do with the God of the Bible? Is that what transcendent god refers to? Curious to hear your thoughts.
Rather:Also, In Judaism, it is very panentheistic, especially in the kabbalistic sources.
The panentheistic doctrine is Jewishly unconventional but traces of it are found in some Jewish sources. The Zohar speaks of God both 'filling all worlds' and 'surrounding all worlds.' The Kabbalist Hayyim Ibn Atar writes, in his Commentary, Or Ha-Hayyim (to Genesis 2:1), 'The world is in its Creator and the light of the Creator is in the whole world.'
The German Talmudist Moses of Taku (early thirteenth century) attacked the medieval hymn Shir Ha-Yihud ('Song of Unity') for its panentheistic leanings. In the section of this hymn for recital on the third day of the week the words are found: 'All of them are in Thee and Thou art in all of them' and: 'Thou surroundest all and fillest all and when all exists Thou art in all.'
In Hasidic Thought
The panentheisic doctrine surfaced again in Hasidism, especially in the Habad version. While the Mitnaggedim understood the verse: 'The whole earth is full of His glory (Isaiah 6:3)' to mean no more than that God is manifest in the universe and His providence extends over all, in the Hasidic understanding the verse means that God is literally in all things.
This doctrine was one of the main theological counts against Hasidism, the Mitnaggedim believing that the panentheistic doctrine, according to which God is literally in all things, to be sheer heresy.
Any tendency to blur the distinction between the sacred and the profane, the clean and the unclean, good and evil, poses the greatest threat to a monotheistic religion like Judaism. If God is in all and all is in God, what is to be made of the laws of the Torah based on these distinctions? [source; emphasis added - JS]
Rather:EDIT:Sorry. I didn't notice that this thread is in a DIR. Please feel free to delete it.
I think it is helpful to show the contrast within traditions between strict theistic views and a panentheistic view which has God "in the world". To the strict theist the world is sin and fallen and needs to be overcome, or in Eastern traditions to "flee samsara and seek nirvana". Whereas the panentheistic view is seen as heretical or even blasphemous to sound as if it is equating the fallen world with the holy God. Yet, as you can see by the fact the criticism exists within that tradition, that many within that tradition in fact interpret things in that light, one where the transcendent and the immanent are united; the sacred and profane are not universes apart, but united in the One.I hope it doesn't get deleted, it was very helpful.
I think it is helpful to show the contrast within traditions between strict theistic views and a panentheistic view which has God "in the world". To the strict theist the world is sin and fallen and needs to be overcome, or in Eastern traditions to "flee samsara and seek nirvana". Whereas the panentheistic view is seen as heretical or even blasphemous to sound as if it is equating the fallen world with the holy God. Yet, as you can see by the fact the criticism exists within that tradition, that many within that tradition in fact interpret things in that light, one where the transcendent and the immanent are united; the sacred and profane are not universes apart, but united in the One.
I think there is a confusion about what Gnosticism is historically. Elaine Pagels referred to the other Christian texts such as those found in Nag Hammadi as Gnostic, whereas later scholars such as Karen King points out that's not the case. Early church fathers tended to lump them all together as well. But Gnostic is really more just a bucket term that does not accurately reflect the wide variety of views expressed within them, some of them being Gnostic and others not. The Gospel of Thomas is not Gnostic, but of the Wisdom schools. Traditional Gnosticism back then is a radical dualism, and panentheism would not reflect their views. Theirs is not freed from mythic forms, but is just another interpretation of mythic forms in a radical dualism. Their "true God" is the NT God, and the false God is the OT God.Is the panentheistic God the God of the Gnostic Christians? Is that their way of separating the mythic God from "true God"? Or is it just another dualism where the fallen world is seen as the creation of an evil demiurge? And "true God" is separated from Creation still?
I think there is a confusion about what Gnosticism is historically. Elaine Pagels referred to the other Christian texts such as those found in Nag Hammadi as Gnostic, whereas later scholars such as Karen King points out that's not the case. Early church fathers tended to lump them all together as well. But Gnostic is really more just a bucket term that does not accurately reflect the wide variety of views expressed within them, some of them being Gnostic and others not. The Gospel of Thomas is not Gnostic, but of the Wisdom schools. Traditional Gnosticism back then is a radical dualism, and panentheism would not reflect their views. Theirs is not freed from mythic forms, but is just another interpretation of mythic forms in a radical dualism. Their "true God" is the NT God, and the false God is the OT God.
But I had another thought I wanted to share I had after my post this morning. It's seems to me that panenthiest expressions of God seem to come out of the more mystic traditions within lineages, as opposed to the straight theistic theological definitions that reflect the more 'orthodox' (which means "correct thinking") camps. I see this as the latter being a conceptual framework, and the former being an experiential expression. With mystical experience comes a more 'God is both transcendent and immanent" view, because it speaks to the nature of the experience itself. Whereas a wholly transcendent God seems to reflect a conceptual framework, a mind's eye view of the divine.
I think tying it into a panentheistic description it is the sense of the ineffable, which is experience both within ourselves, and seen and touched in the world. It is seen and sensed outside ourself and within ourself as one. It is understood as in the world, and beyond the world in the sense of its Infinite nature. It therefore 'transcends' the world, as the world is finite.This also makes sense. It's about the experience. I suppose my question becomes "what exactly AM I experiencing in a mystic experience"? I know that I perceive it to be oneness with God, but what is the *nature* of that God? (Only small questions today...)
What does your heart tell you.Does the "God" of Panentheism have anything to do with the God of the Bible? Is that what transcendent god refers to? Curious to hear your thoughts.
What does your heart tell you.
There are some great articles and podcasts by Rabbi Artson (at the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies) all about this topic. In this case God is the god of process thought, which is pan(en)theistic. This view begins by rejecting the account of creation ex nihilo in favor of a god that shapes pre-existent matter, more or less.
One point that I think is important in this debate: There are the texts of the Jewish and Christian traditions, which do not reveal any kind of static creator, and then there is the philosophical overlay of history and tradition. Those are not the same, and there's a pretty good argument for pan(en)theism being a more biblical view. Simply put, there is plenty in the text to support the opposite of creation ex nihilo, plenty to cast doubt on omnipotence, plenty to cast doubt on God being static. Of course there's support for the opposite as well; these are not systematic accounts but historical documents.