Wednesday, January 10, 2018

The mystery of God

Suppose you have never heard music, and you are watching a video of a superb ballet, with the sound turned off. And then someone turns the sound on. You now know a dimension of the dance you wouldn’t have expected or thought of. It transforms your understanding of the ballet radically.

Similarly, but more radically, when we humans learned that the perfectly one God is three persons, we learned something that we would not have expected, something that not only we wouldn’t have thought of, but something that we would have likely denied is at all possible. It is something that should radically (in both the etymological and the common senses of the word) transform all of our understanding of God. Of course, what we learned turns out to be logically compatible with the doctrine of God’s unity, but that it was compatible is a part of the surprise.

I suspect that similar transformations of our understanding of God await in heaven. Doctrines that are related to our doctrinal understanding of God as the doctrine of the Trinity is to the unity and simplicity of God. Experience that are radically different in kind from anything we have had.

But is it not plausible that God is such that any finite understanding of him is subject to such transformation? If so, then this gives us one way of countering the “eternal ennui” worry about heaven. For such transformations of our understanding of, and hence of our loving relationship with, God could occur for eternity then.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

The eternal ennui worry has always stricken me as missing something seemingly clear. As I've seen it the argument starts with one's inability to imagine some way to stave off boredom for an unlimited amount of time and then concludes Heaven (or just eternal life) must not be all that great. That I just don't have that great an imagination seems like a much more plausible explanation than omnipotence being bounded by boredom.

Sean Killackey said...

Could you comment briefly on how God can be simple and triune - doesn't that mean he has parts, some of which are causally depending on one, the Father?