Hubert Farnsworth (Opening Post) said : “… The problem lies with the answer to the question "Who created God?" The most common answers I hear from theists is that God is uncreated, or that he is somehow "the uncaused cause of the universe." But, if it is the case that God does not need a cause, then why does the universe need a cause?...”
Politesse (post # 22) said : “I'm not sure "created" has any clear meaning in this context. If you're talking from science, we have no reason to believe that anything has ever or could ever be created in the sense of going from non-existent to existent; when we create things normally, we're shifting matter or energy from one form to another, not causing it to exist. That matter needs to have been "created" is a claim that makes no inherent sense to me except as a metaphor, since we have never in fact seen this happen. If it did, it is beyond the reach of science to help us understand, whether it is the universe, God, or both at once.”
Hubert Farnsworth (post #24) replied : “So, basically, you are proposing the idea that the matter that the universe consists of has always existed, but God manipulated it in such a way that it would lead to the universe we have now? I agree this is a somewhat more logical view than the traditional view of ex nihilo creation.”
Quintessence observed : “I'm getting the impression this question is directed towards a particular type of theism, not theism on the whole. “ (post #66)
I like the specific points that Politesse and Quintessence make. Farnsworths’ O.P. is aimed at the later illogical Christian theory that God made everything ex-nihilo (out of nothing) while leaving the earliest logical and historical Christian descriptions untouched on this point.
While the earliest Christian worldviews were that God had an eternal existence, so also did matter in their worldview. In this model, matter is co-eternal with God and God organized this chaotic matter so as to form material things. These early Christians did not believe God “created” out of “nothing”.
1) THE DOCTRINE OF CREATION FROM MATTER WAS TAUGHT ANCIENTLY
Many ancients and early Christians UNDERSTOOD a creation out of pre-existing matter, and not ex-nihilo.
Justin Martyr, in his First Apology, says : “We have been taught that He in the beginning did of his goodness, for man's sake, create all things out of unformed matter” (ex amorphou hyles). First Apology, 49.
Philo mentions : This cosmos of ours was formed out of all that there is of water, and air and fire, not even the smallest particle being left outside" (De Plantatione 2.6). Further, "when the substance of the universe was without shape and figure God gave it these; when it had no definite character God molded it into definiteness. . ." (De Somniis 2.6.45).
Justin Martyr, in discussing this preexistent primal matter (hyle), assures us, :" we have learned" from our revelations was in the tradition of Clement (c. A.D. 96) who had praised God who "has made manifest (ephaneropoiesas) the everlasting fabric (aenaon sustasin) of the world."
Athenagoras, (despite his stress on the transcendence of God), explains concerning the preexistent Son : "He came forth to be the energizing power of things, which lay like a nature without attributes, and an inactive earth, the grosser particles being mixed up with the lighter."
Creation from matter is implicit throughout Greco-Roman literature of the time of Christianity's inception, and there is no indication in the Christian writings that they held a different view. On the contrary, the famous late nineteenth-century study by Edwin Hatch on the inroads of Greek philosophy into early Christianity describes the tacit but widespread assumption of the coexistence of matter with God.
2) EARLY JUDAO-CHRISTIAN WRITINGS
In the Secrets of Enoch, 25.1-3, God says : "I commanded . . . that visible things should come from invisible . . . ."
Dodd, in “The Bible and the Greeks”, p. 111 explained that to the ancients, such creation meant organization of the elements, as the Codex Brucianus tells us, "Creation IS organization" (Manuscript No 96). And it indicates that first, there is matter and that matter is organized into things created. (Cosmos MEANS order / organization...)
The early Jewish Apocalypes of Abraham hails God as the one who brings order out of confusion, ever preparing and renewing worlds for the righteous. The Berlin (Mandaean) Papyrus says " At the same time, the great thought came to the elements in united wisdom, spirit joining with matter." Matter can be imbued with spirit, but it will always be undergoing change and processing.
Pistis Sophia says : "I (christ) called upon Gabriel from the midst of the worlds (aeons) along with Michael, pursuant to the command of my Father...and I gave to them the task of outpouring of the light and caused them to go down into matter unorganized (chaos) and assist Pistis Sophis"
Even 2 Maccabees, which is often used to SUPPORT ex nihilo, has Syriac recensions as well as some Greek manuscripts describing an organization of [chaotic] matter, which is also the explicit position of Wisdom of Solomon 11:17 where we read of God's hand which "created the world out of unformed matter (ktisasa ton kosmon ex amorphou hyles)," Even the "non-existent" cited in 2 Maccabees 7:28 is not absolute nothing, but rather is . . . the metaphysical substance . . . in an unformed state." This relative "nonbeing" referred to a chaotic, shadowy state of matter before the world was made; as we might say in biblical terms, "without form and void."
The Early writings are full of references regarding how chaotic matter is used. The ancients understood that "At a new creation there is a reshuffling of elements " This particular 'restating' of the 'conservation of mass' is from Ben Sirach. But the principle is also found in the Odes of Solomon; it's in the Ginza; it's in the Mandaean Johannesbuch; it's in Berlin Manichaean; it's in the Pistis Sophia, and it's in the oldest and most impressive Coptic writings.
The point here is that these were common teachings and the ancients were NOT unaware of matter and how it was used in creation from chaotic matter (rather than the later doctrine of creation from "nothing").
3) THE DOCTRINE THAT GOD ORGANIZED ALL THINGS FROM ETERNALLY EXISTING MATTER CHANGES THE PREMISE
The implications of creation from eternal chaotic matter are profound in how they affects the context; the understanding and the debates that have raged among theists; philosophers and scientists since later Christians abandoned the belief in creation of material things from “matter”. These arguments have lasted for hundred and hundreds of years.
A return to the historical doctrine has profound implication for religious philosophers and Theists.
For example, The Organization of all Material things from eternally existing “matter” (which has it’s own innate eternal characteristics) rather than organizing them from “nothing” changes the locus of responsibility for evil. The principle revolutionizes both the debates AND their underlying assumptions and questions since the question of WHY GOD “CREATED” EVIL IS ONE OF THEIR GREAT DEBATES with Christianity.
If the universe is created from eternal matter, then there are principles as eternal as God, and these principles possess their own innate characteristics. This is important, since, if God does not create the conditions from which arises evil, then he is not responsible for it. Obviously there are many other philosophical implications that are just as profound.
The restoration of this principle has profound implications for scientists. Creation from matter is a type of creation that they can agree with and which can rationalize (make rational) religious creation with their scientific knowledge. Such a creation makes for better sense and for better science. The Scientific Laws of Thermodynamics which are universally applied in modern science, no longer argues with a conflicting Religious Law of Creation from “Nothing”. Religious truth and Scientific truth will stop fighting and may again agree with each other on this point by the simple restoration of this ancient principle of creation from matter.
The restoration of this principle has it’s most profound implications for religion. The implications seem to run deeper and are more profound than the implications for all other disciplines. The principle of Creation from eternally existing matter provides a framework for all subsequent religious considerations. If matter is eternal with its own basic eternal characteristics, yet God uses that matter and organizes it into spirits which have some inherent characteristics, such as “intelligence” and the ability to “progress”, this forms a context for all other subsequent considerations.
In this early Christian model, one can better predict the subsequent ancient doctrines as to WHAT God is doing with this matter; with the spirits of men; and WHY he is doing it; and HOW he going to accomplish these purposes. It provides better logic and understanding of why Moral law is eternally important both outside and inside the atonement of Jesus Christ. The re-adoption of the principle that God organized and created the Material universe and all other material things from eternally existing “matter” is a simple principle that acts as one of the important beacons that sets men on the path to understanding what God is doing with that matter and why.
In any case I hope your journeys are good as you work out these questions for yourselves
Clear
σισεακω