God Flashcards

(37 cards)

1
Q

Monotheism

A

The belief held by all Christians that there is only one God

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2
Q

Exclusive monotheism

A

the view that there is only one singular God

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3
Q

Inclusive/pluriform monotheism

A

the recognition of multiple gods but each seen as extensions of the same God

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4
Q

Polytheism

A

the view that there are multiple independent gods

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5
Q

Ethical monotheism

A

The view that there is one God and that he is the source of morality, of what is right and wrong. Follows of God should obey his commandments and respond to his moral guidance

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6
Q

Understandings of God’s omnipotence

A
  1. Descartes’ view: God can do absolutely anything. This interpretation raises issues relating to the problem of evil
  2. God is able to do anything that is logically possible. This answers the PoE issue (logically impossible to create beings with free will but not allow them to choose evil) but raises further issues relating to free will and determinism
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7
Q

Understandings of God as creator

A
  1. Minority think of the universe as coming out of God’s own being (ex Deo). Most reject as it limits God (i.e. God is bound by the universe, God loses transcendence)
  2. The universe was created by God out of nothing (ex nihilo)
  3. Process theology - earth was already in existence an in a state of chaos. God then worked at ordering it.
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8
Q

Understandings of God as controller

A
  • Biblical references to God as King express the belief that everything is subject to God’s control
  • God not only created the universe, he also sustains it - holds it in existence and prevents its destruction
  • God is omniscient - creates issues both for the PoE and for human free will
  • Aquinas - God exists timelessly, so he sees the future but does not cause future events
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9
Q

Approaches to omniscience

A
  1. Theological determinism - God knows past, present and future absolutely and in a causative sense. This means that he controls everything that goes on in the universe, including human actions
  2. Aquinas’s view - God sees and knows all things, but his knowledge is not causative (i.e. knowing something does not mean he caused it).
  3. Swinburne’s view - God exists within time and knows all that is logically possible for God to know. He cannot be the cause of human future choices, as he cannot know them, though he might be able to predict them
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10
Q

God as transcendent and unknowable

A
  • God is beyond and outside the world of space and time
  • God is eternal and limitless
  • Catholic teachings refer to God’s aseity
  • God is infinite and incomprehensible
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11
Q

Aseity

A

the belief in God’s self-existence; it is in his nature to exist

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12
Q

Evidence of the Trinity in OT and NT

A
  • Trinitarian belief is implied in OT
  • The Hebrew word often used in OT for God (Elohim) is plural
  • In Genesis 1, God as the ‘father’ of the universe created through his word and his spirit broods over the watery chaos
  • Hints of Trinity in NT is seen in the baptism of Jesus, where the Spirit descends on him and God the Father’s voice speaks to him
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13
Q

The doctrine of the Trinity

A
  • There is one God in three Persons: Father, Son and Holy Spirit
  • Each Person possesses fully all the attributes of the Godhead: eternity, omnipotence, omniscience etc.
  • The relationship between the three Persons is one of mutual indwelling
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13
Q

Perichoresis

A

Mutual indwelling and interpenetration of three co-equal persons of the Trinity

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14
Q

Hypostases

A

Refers to the ‘substance’ of the persons of the Trinity. The Trinity is one God is three hypostases. Could also be interpreted as ‘ways of being’ or ‘modes of existing’.

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15
Q

Homoousion

A

The Father and the Son are of the same essence. This idea was later extended to the Holy Spirit too.

16
Q

Godhead

A

Refers to the essential unity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit

17
Q

The importance of the doctrine of the Trinity

A
  • connects with Christian beliefs about sin and atonement
  • Christians who believe in original sin claim that God sent his Son to atone for that sin through his crucifixion and resurrection to reconcile humanity with God
  • the HS works within believers’ hearts and lives, giving hope of eternal life
  • explains how God is both transcendent and immanent (otherwise paradoxical)
  • Jürgen Moltmann: the relationship between persons of the Trinity shows the mutual self-giving and receiving of love, which is to be reflected in human relationships
18
Q

Jesus as the Son of God - John 10:30

A

“If you are the Messiah, tell us plainly” - The Jews

“I and the Father are one.”
- Jesus

  • This was Jesus’ response to those who asked him if he was the Messiah
  • ‘One’ could refer to common essence, ‘of one Being with the Father’ (Nicene Creed) - the Greek word for “one” is “hen”, which is neuter
  • ‘One’ could also refer to unity of purpose/views - God’s purpose for humanity and Jesus’ mission were in harmony
19
Q

Jesus as the Son of God - 1 Corinthians 8:6

A

“yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we live; and there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we live.”

  • parallel structure - God and Jesus are the same in some way
    Different interpretations:
  • Jesus is God
  • ‘through’ suggests Jesus was God’s agent in creation but not in the sense of being divine
  • Lord in Greek is ‘kyrios’ - master, sir (human connotations)
20
Q

Anthropomorphic

A

the attribution of human traits, emotions, or intentions to non-human entities, in this case God

21
Q

Evidence of anthropomorphic descriptions of God

A

‘on the seventh day he rested from all his work’
- Genesis 2:2

‘I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt…and I am concerned about their suffering’
- Exodus 3:7

God is depicted as having human emotions and a human body

22
Q

God as Personal

A
  • refers to the belief that humans can relate to God
  • God is immanent i.e. involved in the world and accessible
  • God hears and answers prayers
  • this is seen in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the spirit of a believer
  • reassures humans that they can be saved and forgiven
23
Q

God as Father

A

This attributes to him a number of roles:
- creating the universe
- rescuing Israel when in trouble
- setting standards of behaviour (e.g. in giving the Ten Commandments)
- exercising justice, rewarding obedience and punishing misdemeanours
- gives ideas of both protective love and power

24
God as Love
- NT refers to agape, which denotes God's selfless, generous, unconditional love for humanity - according to 1 John, 'God is love' - because they are created in God's image, human relationships have agape at their heart - provides guidance and reassurance - presents omnibenevolence
25
God as King
- puts God in position of authority/power - provides reassurance to believers and bolsters God's omnipotence - bolsters God's quality of justice - bestows upon him ownership and responsibility as a ruler
26
God as Personal - disadvantages
- goes against characteristics of being transcendent and impersonal - raises questions about God's interactions in the world, including those related to PoE
27
God as Father - disadvantages
- masculine portrayal of God - limits God and may attribute negative qualities - controlling, hierarchal, dictatorial
28
God as Love - disadvantages
- lack of epistemic distance - undermines unknowability - God has committed acts that do not promote love (e.g. Noah's Ark) - Conflicts with existence of evil, motivates PoE - love may be thought to be too abstract and confusing
29
The problems with anthropomorphic language
- undermines God's transcendence and unknowability - undermines traditional divine attributes - suggests that God is someone like us, someone changeable and therefore not reliable and not worthy of worship (limits God) - many metaphors used for God are associated with domination and are male
30
The use of gender-neutral language
In the past two decades, new translations of the Bible have appeared that are gender neutral - 'man' (the human race) -> 'mortals'/'humankind' - 'man' (a male) -> 'person'/'anyone' - 'son' -> 'child' - 'father' -> 'parent'
31
Why the use of gender-neutral language is controversial
Terms such as 'Father' and 'King' are part of the patriarchal culture of the Ancient Near East, and to remove them from the text is to remove them from their proper context. To refer to God as Father and King is a cultural norm in the context of the Old Testament
32
McFague - God as Mother (feminism)
- *agape* - giving, selfless and unconditional love - creation - as mother and child, God and the universe are neither distant nor different from each other - justice - in terms of establishing justice in the present (creating systems that promote equity and inclusion), not concerned with future condemnation or handing out of sentences
33
McFague - God as Lover (feminism)
- God is the lover and the world is the beloved - by being loved, the world has value - love presented through salvation for all living things - healing - our physical bodies rely on the world for survival and healing, and as the world is the body of God, this healing comes from God
34
McFague - God as Friend (feminism)
- *philia* - the love of a friend, provides joy, freedom, trust and solidarity - God, as sustainer, has freely chosen to be in a relationship with the world - image of companionship
35
Process theology - God is not the Creator
- Griffin rejects creatio ex nihilo - the universe is uncreated and eternal; God only gave order to chaos - God, like the universe, is uncreated and eternal - the relationship between God and the universe is panentheistic - the universe is in God and God is in the universe - God's role is to persuade the universe into order and complexity
36
Process theology - God is not omnipotent
- God does not have unlimited power, as he did not create the universe - God only has persuasive power (as opposed to coercive power)