What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
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Jaded Sage
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What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
That is: the position that God both does and does not intervene in the world. I don't mean that God does sometimes and sometimes does not. I mean that God does both simultaneously, by doing it automatically, and by nature. I suppose it is a pantheistic position. Or a panentheistic one.
Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
Hi JS, I agree with Simone Weil on this question:
Panentheism makes the most sense for me and from this perspective the universe is the body of God. The universe continues the process of existence that taking place within NOW. Where the body of God is limited by time and space, God IS. God is NOW which is outside the limitations of time and space. God is within creation and creation is within God, within NOW. This is like a water soaked log in a pond is in the pond yet the pond water is in the log. The Trinity as ONE is God and the Trinity as three is a son of God within creation and deals with the possible.“It is only the impossible that is possible for God. He has given over the possible to the mechanics of matter and the autonomy of his creatures.” Simone Weil ...
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Dalek Prime
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
A: Confused.
Either he acts, or he doesn't. It still doesn't mean his acts, if he does or can, are good. For him maybe, but for anyone else? Meh.
I used to be a deist, until I came across misotheism and dystheism.
Either he acts, or he doesn't. It still doesn't mean his acts, if he does or can, are good. For him maybe, but for anyone else? Meh.
I used to be a deist, until I came across misotheism and dystheism.
Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
That's a vivid imagination you've got there.Nick_A wrote: Panentheism makes the most sense for me and from this perspective the universe is the body of God. The universe continues the process of existence that taking place within NOW. Where the body of God is limited by time and space, God IS. God is NOW which is outside the limitations of time and space. God is within creation and creation is within God, within NOW. This is like a water soaked log in a pond is in the pond yet the pond water is in the log. The Trinity as ONE is God and the Trinity as three is a son of God within creation and deals with the possible.
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Jaded Sage
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
Google pantheism and panentheism and it might make more sense how he could both act and not act.Dalek Prime wrote:A: Confused.
Either he acts, or he doesn't. It still doesn't mean his acts, if he does or can, are good. For him maybe, but for anyone else? Meh.
I used to be a deist, until I came across misotheism and dystheism.
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Dalek Prime
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
I'm not a pantheist, nor a panentheist. I disagree with God, and think he's a shit. And it wouldn't matter if he is in everything. I still think he's a shit.Jaded Sage wrote:Google pantheism and panentheism and it might make more sense how he could both act and not act.Dalek Prime wrote:A: Confused.
Either he acts, or he doesn't. It still doesn't mean his acts, if he does or can, are good. For him maybe, but for anyone else? Meh.
I used to be a deist, until I came across misotheism and dystheism.
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Jaded Sage
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
That has nothing to do with what we are talking about.
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Dalek Prime
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
Okay. But why ask me then, if you already have the answer to the thread? That's what we can term it; Panentheism. Thread closed.Jaded Sage wrote:That has nothing to do with what we are talking about.
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Jaded Sage
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
Yeah, I came up with that half way thru typing. Plus I'm not 100% certain that's what it is. Plus the concept is fascinating to talk about: how he both does and does not interfere.
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Dalek Prime
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
I'm cool with that. We could always coin a new term?Jaded Sage wrote:Yeah, I came up with that half way thru typing. Plus I'm not 100% certain that's what it is.
That's why I'm a misotheist. I'm neither happy with his system, nor the way he interferes with it, or doesn't. Either way, he's the root cause of it.
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Jaded Sage
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
You're skipping the main point.
Plus, misotheism is USUALLY just childish these days.
Plus, misotheism is USUALLY just childish these days.
- Arising_uk
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
A logical contradiction and therefore always false.Jaded Sage wrote:That is: the position that God both does and does not intervene in the world. ...
Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
Forgive me but the hallmark of all your posts is that you don't know what you're talking about.Jaded Sage wrote:That has nothing to do with what we are talking about.
- Hobbes' Choice
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Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?Jaded Sage wrote:That is: the position that God both does and does not intervene in the world. I don't mean that God does sometimes and sometimes does not. I mean that God does both simultaneously, by doing it automatically, and by nature. I suppose it is a pantheistic position. Or a panentheistic one.
I think this would be: "confused".
A pantheistic god, in the model of, say, Spinoza would be neither a Theistic god, nor a Deistic god; but nature itself. Not desirous, not intervening, but embodied in the necessity of causality, absolute, boundless.
Re: What should we call a position that is both theistic and deistic?
A_uk wrote:
How old fashioned you are. You must learn to think out of the box. For example:A logical contradiction and therefore always false.
You want to slam the door shut. How old fashioned!"When a contradiction is impossible to resolve except by a lie, then we know that it is really a door." - Simone Weil