If you were simply to Google “Spirituality”
you will quickly realise the wide world out there that looks at spirituality in
so many different ways. But, briefly, they all indicate an attempt to contact
or to union with Something Else – call it a god, G-d or a God. Or some other name.
“The Divine
Names”, the classic treatise by
Pseudo-Dionysius, defines the scope of traditional understandings in Western
traditions such as Hellenic, Christian, Jewish and Islamic theology on the
nature and significance of the names of God. In a way these show
parallels in the history and interpretation of the name of God amongst Kabbalah,
Christianity, and Hebrew scholarship in various parts of the Mediterranean
world.
In Judaism, the pronunciation of the
name of God (Elohim, masculine, but generally reduced to simply El), has always
been guarded with great care. It is believed that, in ancient times, the sages
are said to have communicated the pronunciation only once every seven years. The
nature of a holy name can be described as either personal or attributive. In
many cultures it is often difficult to distinguish between the personal and the
attributive names of God, the two divisions necessarily shading into each
other.
Philosophy too is full of titles for
this entity that we all seem to search for so much. , “The Unmoved Mover”, “The One”, ….. Aristotle
made God passively responsible for change in the world in the sense that all
things seek divine perfection. God imbues all things with order and purpose,
both of which can be discovered and point to his (or her or its) divine
existence. Much later, Georg Hegel reasoned that the finite has no genuine
being and when that state was reached all that exists will be harmoniously at
one with itself.
Since he viewed the essential stuff of
what exists as something non-material his philosophy became known as Absolute
Idealism. Hegel himself combined his ideas with belief in Christianity though
some of his followers saw it more as a form of pantheism while others saw it as
a sort of religion-without-God, the most radical of them being Marx (who only
saw the material – one economic growth - instead of the spiritual).
Nonetheless, other deep thinkers
continued to ponder the God-existence or not.
In a time of upheaval, Rene Descartes (1596-1650) famously sought
to ground all knowledge on a foundation he could not doubt: that he was a
thinking being, “I think therefore I am”, a statement with obvious throwbacks to Jesus Christ’s own
description of himself.
Descartes says this about himself: “I
know myself to be a very imperfect being, ephemeral and perishable, and finite,
and yet I have in my mind the concept of an infinite being, eternal and
immortal, perfect in every way; and it is impossible that anything should be
able to create something greater than itself out of its resources; therefore
this perfect being must exist, and must have implanted in me an awareness of
itself, like a craftsman’s signature inscribed on an example of his handiwork.
The fact that I know that God exists, and is perfect, means that I can put my
trust n him: he will not, unlike the malicious demon, deceive me. So provided I
play my full part, pay serious attention and do all the disciplined thinking
required of me, I can be certain of the truth of whatever is then presented clearly and distinctly
to me as being true – not by my senses which I already know deceive me – but by
my mind, that part of me that apprehends God and also mathematics, neither of which the senses can
do; the mind that I irreducibly am!” (Bryan Magee / “The Story of
Philosophy”)
CHRISTIAN THINKING
Christian thinking developed from the early Greek
philosophies especially Plato’s (though also including thoughts from his mentor
Socrates and pupil Aristotle) which were taken up by St Paul in his letters. Later
developments came from St Augustine some time later and from St Thomas Aquinas
with his monumental “Summa Theologica”.
He expressed himself through syllogism to express his logic. Such that
he would reason on the lines of “If it is raining, the streets are wet. It IS raining, therefore the streets ARE wet!”
Aquinas described the state of the
being as a combination of the natural and the supernatural, the former
combining the eternal law, the natural law and human law. The supernatural state was simply the divine.
Aquinas puts a moral obligation on
believers to disobey human law. Because,
as he puts it, God speaks to us through our conscience and empowers us to
disobey. (To avoid confusion, a
typical example application of this would be the Germans under Nazi rule and
ideology).
On Wikipedia’s post on Progressive
Ch
CONCLUSIONS?
So, what or where is God that
Christians believe in? Does God exist
after all? How or where do we find God?