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In this volume, Richard Creel sets forth a thesis that offers a "third way" to approach divine impassibility. Defining impassibility as "imperviousness to causal influence from external factors," Creel sketches a path between Aquinas and Hartshorne, by asserting that once this definition is accepted, one must still distinguish the various respects in which God is or is not impassible. Virtually no one would dispute that the divine nature is impassible. God will never cease to be God, no matter what happens in creation. With respect to the divine knowledge and will, however, there are conflicting views. Creel claims that God's will is impassible because God knows everything that can be accomplished by divine power. Yet, unlike Aquinas, Creel believes that God has this knowledge in virtue of a 'plenum' of possibilities eternally coexistent with the divine being. The absolute is not simply God, but rather God plus the 'plenum'. Creel suggests that God's knowledge is passible with respect to the contingent future actions of creatures. God knows these actions, therefore, not in their presentiality from all eternity, as Aquinas would hold, but only as they happen and become actual. God's will, however, remains immediately impassible because the divine will is ordered to possibilities, not actualities. God never has to wait until after we do something in order to decide his response to it. He has eternally decided his response to all that we might do. Ultimately God's feelings remain impassible, no matter what concrete decisions human beings make, because the basic intent of the divine plan for us is always achieved: we exercise our freedom to choose for or against God. God is impassible with respect to the divine nature, divine will, and divine feelings; but God is passible with respect to the divine knowledge of future contingent events. - Publisher.
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Previews available in: English
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Suffering of God, Souffrance de Dieu, God, Philosophical theologyEdition | Availability |
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1
Divine Impassibility: An Essay in Philosophical Theology
June 2005, Wipf & Stock Publishers
Paperback
in English
1597522732 9781597522731
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2
Divine impassibility: an essay in philosophical theology
1986, Cambridge University Press
in English
0521303176 9780521303170
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3
Divine Impassibility: An Essay in Philosophical Theology
November 27, 1985, Cambridge University Press
Hardcover
in English
0521303176 9780521303170
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Bibliography: p. 223-233.
Includes index.
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