- Auto Scroll
Part One: The Doctrine of GodThe Being of God
III. Relation of the Being and Attributes of God
Some dogmaticians devote a separate chapter or chapters to the Being of God, before taking up the discussion of His attributes. This is done, for instance, in the works of Mastricht, Ebrard, Kuyper, and Shedd. Others prefer to consider the Being of God in connection with His attributes in view of the fact that it is in these that He has revealed Himself. This is the more common method, which is followed in the Synopsis Purioris Theologiae, and in the works of Turretin, à Marck, Brakel, Bavinck, Hodge, and Honig. This difference of treatment is not indicative of any serious fundamental disagreement between them. They are all agreed that the attributes are not mere names to which no reality corresponds, nor separate parts of a composite God, but essential qualities in which the Being of God is revealed and with which it can be identified. The only difference would seem to be that some seek to distinguish between the Being and the attributes of God more than others do.
A.THE BEING OF GOD
It is quite evident that the Being of God does not admit of any scientific definition. In order to give a logical definition of God, we would have to begin by going in search of some higher concept, under which God could be co-ordinated with other concepts; and would then have to point out the characteristics that would be applicable to God only. Such a genetic-synthetic definition cannot be given of God, since God is not one of several species of gods, which can be subsumed under a single genus. At most only an analytical-descriptive definition is possible. This merely names the characteristics of a person or thing, but leaves the essential being unexplained. And even such a definition cannot be complete but only partial, because it is impossible to give an exhaustive positive (as opposed to negative) description of God. It would consist in an enumeration of all the known attributes of God, and these are to a great extent negative in character.
The Bible never operates with an abstract concept of God,
but always describes Him
as the Living God, who enters into various relations with His creatures,
relations which
are indicative
of several different attributes. In Kuyper's
Dictaten Dogmatiek
Some of the early Church Fathers were clearly under the
influence of Greek
philosophy in their doctrine of God and, as Seeberg expresses it, did
not advance
"beyond the mere abstract conception that the Divine Being is
absolute attributeless
Existence." For some time theologians were rather generally
inclined to emphasize the transcendence of God, and to assume the impossibility of any adequate
knowledge or
definition of the divine essence. During the trinitarian controversy the
distinction
between the one essence and the three persons in the Godhead was strongly
emphasized, but the essence was generally felt to be beyond human
comprehension.
Gregory of Nazianze, however, ventures to say: "So far as we can
discern,
ho on and
ho theos are somehow more than other terms the names of the (divine) essence,
and of these
ho on
is the preferable." He regards this as a
description of absolute being. Augustine's conception of the essence of God was closely akin to that of Gregory. In
the Middle Ages
too there was a tendency, either to deny that man has any knowledge of
the essence of
God, or to reduce such knowledge to a minimum. In some cases one
attribute was
singled out as most expressive of the essence of God. Thus Thomas
Aquinas spoke of
His aseity or self-existence, and Duns Scotus, of His infinity. It
became quite common
also to speak of God as
actus purus
in view of His
simplicity. The Reformers and their
successors also spoke of the essence of God as incomprehensible, but
they did not
exclude all knowledge of it, though Luther used very strong language on
this point. They stressed the unity, simplicity, and spirituality of God. The
words of the Belgic
Confession are quite characteristic: "We all believe with the
heart, and confess with the mouth, that there is one only simple and spiritual Being, which we call
God."
B. THE POSSIBILITY OF KNOWING THE BEING OF GOD
From the preceding it already appears that the question as to the possibility of knowing God in His essential Being engaged the best minds of the Church from the earliest centuries. And the consensus of opinion in the early Church, during the Middle Ages, and at the time of the Reformation, was that God in His inmost Being is the Incomprehensible One. And in some cases the language used is so strong that it seemingly allows of no knowledge of the Being of God whatsoever. At the same time they who use it, at least in some cases, seem to have considerable knowledge of the Being of God. Misunderstanding can easily result from a failure to understand the exact question under consideration, and from neglecting to discriminate between "knowing" and "comprehending." The Scholastics spoke of three questions to which all the speculations respecting the Divine Being could be reduced, namely: An sit Deus? Quid sit Deus? and Qualis sit Deus?The first question concerns the existence of God, the second, His nature or essence, and the third, His attributes. In this paragraph it is particularly the second question that calls for attention. The question then is, What is God? What is the nature of His inner constitution? What makes Him to be what He is? In order to answer that question adequately, we would have to be able to comprehend God and to offer a satisfactory explanation of His Divine Being, and this is utterly impossible. The finite cannot comprehend the Infinite. The question of Zophar, "Canst thou by searching find out God? Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?" (Job 11:7) has the force of a strong negative. And if we consider the second question entirely apart from the third, our negative answer becomes even more inclusive. Apart from the revelation of God in His attributes, we have no knowledge of the Being of God whatsoever. But in so far as God reveals Himself in His attributes, we also have some knowledge of His Divine Being, though even so our knowledge is subject to human limitations.
Luther uses some very strong expressions respecting our
inability to know
something of the Being or essence of God. On the one hand he
distinguishes between
the Deus absconditus
(hidden God) and the Deus revelatus
(revealed God); but on the other hand he also asserts that in knowing the Deus revelatus, we only know Him in his
hiddenness. By this he means that even in His revelation God has not
manifested
Himself entirely
as He is essentially
but as to
His essence still remains shrouded in
impenetrable darkness. We know God only in so far as He enters into
relations with us.
Calvin too speaks of the Divine essence as incomprehensible. He holds
that God in the
depths of His Being is past finding out. Speaking of the knowledge of
the
quid and of
the
qualis of God, he says that it is rather useless to speculate about the
former, while
our practical interest lies in the latter. Says he: "They are
merely toying with frigid speculations whose mind is set on the question of what God is (quid sit Deus), when
what it really concerns us to know is rather what kind of a person He is
(qualis sit) and
what is appropriate to His nature."
In dealing with our knowledge of the Being of God we must
certainly avoid the
position of Cousin, rather rare in the history of philosophy, that God
even in the depths of His Being is not at all incomprehensible but essentially
intelligible; but we must also
steer clear of the agnosticism of Hamilton and Mansel, according to
which we can have
no knowledge whatsoever of the Being of God. We cannot comprehend God,
cannot
have an absolute and exhaustive knowledge of Him, but we can undoubtedly
have a
relative or partial knowledge of the Divine Being. It is perfectly true
that this knowledge of God is possible only, because He has placed Himself in
certain relations to His moral
creatures and has revealed Himself to them, and that even this knowledge
is humanly
conditioned; but it is nevertheless real and true knowledge, and is at
least a partial
knowledge of the absolute nature of God. There is a difference between
an absolute knowledge, and a relative or partial knowledge of an absolute being. It
will not do at all
to say that man knows only the relations in which God stands to His
creatures. It would
not even be possible to have a proper conception of these relations
without knowing
something of both God and man. To say that we can know nothing of the
Being of God,
but can know only relations, is equivalent to saying that we cannot know
Him at all and cannot make Him the object of our religion. Dr. Orr says:
"We may not know God in the
depths of His absolute being. But we can at least know Him in so far as
He reveals
Himself in His relation to us. The question, therefore, is not as to the
possibility of a
knowledge of God in the unfathomableness of His being, but is: Can we
know God
as He enters into relations with the world and with ourselves? God has entered into relations with
us in His revelations of Himself, and supremely in Jesus Christ; and we Christians
humbly claim that through this Self-revelation we do know God to be the
true God, and
have real acquaintance with His character and will. Neither is it
correct to say that this
knowledge which we have of God is only a relative knowledge.
It is in part a knowledge
of the
absolute nature of God as well."
C. THE BEING OF GOD REVEALED IN HIS ATTRIBUTES
From the simplicity of God it follows that God and His attributes are one. The attributes cannot be considered as so many parts that enter into the composition of God, for God is not, like men, composed of different parts. Neither can they be regarded as something added to the Being of God, though the name, derived from ad and tribuere, might seem to point in that direction, for no addition was ever made to the Being of God, who is eternally perfect. It is commonly said in theology that God's attributes are God Himself, as He has revealed Himself to us. The Scholastics stressed the fact that God is all that He has. He has life, light, wisdom, love, righteousness, and it may be said on the basis of Scripture that He is life, light, wisdom, love, and righteousness. It was further asserted by the Scholastics that the whole essence of God is identical with each one of the attributes, so that God's knowing is God, God's willing is God, and so on. Some of them even went so far as to say that each attribute is identical with every other attribute, and that there are no logical distinctions in God. This is a very dangerous extreme. While it may be said that there is an interpenetration of the attributes in God, and that they form a harmonious whole, we are moving in the direction of Pantheism, when we rule out all distinctions in God, and say that His self-existence is His infinity, His knowing is His willing, His love is His righteousness, and vice versa. It was characteristic of the Nominalists that they obliterated all real distinctions in God. They were afraid that by assuming real distinctions in Him, corresponding to the attributes ascribed to God, they would endanger the unity and simplicity of God, and were therefore motivated by a laudable purpose. According to them the perfections of the Divine Being exist only in our thoughts, without any corresponding reality in the Divine Being. The Realists, on the other hand, asserted the reality of the divine perfections. They realized that the theory of the Nominalists, consistently carried out, would lead in the direction of a pantheistic denial of a personal God, and therefore considered it of the utmost importance to maintain the objective reality of the attributes in God. At the same time they sought to safeguard the unity and simplicity of God by maintaining that the whole essence is in each attribute: God is All in all, All in each. Thomas Aquinas had the same purpose in mind, when he asserted that the attributes do not reveal what God is in Himself, in the depths of His Being, but only what He is in relation to His creatures.
Naturally, we should guard against separating the divine
essence and the divine
attributes or perfections, and also against a false conception of the
relation in which
they stand to each other. The attributes are real determinations of the
Divine Being or, in
other words, qualities that inhere in the Being of God. Shedd speaks of
them as "an
analytical and closer description of the essence."
QUESTIONS FOR FURTHER STUDY: How can we distinguish between the being, the nature, and the essence of God? How do the philosophical views of the essential Being of God generally differ from the theological views? How about the tendency to find the essence of God in the absolute, in love, or in personality? What does Otto mean when he characterizes it as "the Holy" or "the Numinous"? Why is it impossible for man to comprehend God? Has sin in any way affected man's ability to know God? Is there any difference between Luther's and Barth's conception of the "hidden God"? Does Calvin differ from them on this point? Did Luther share the Nominalist views of Occam, by whom he was influenced in other respects? How did the Reformers, in distinction from the Scholastics, consider the problem of the existence of God? Could we have any knowledge of God, if He were pure attributeless being? What erroneous views of the attributes should be avoided? What is the proper view?
Literature: Bavinck, Geref. Dogm. I, pp. 91-113,; Kuyper, Dict. Dogm., De Deo I, pp. 124-158; Hodge, Syst. Theol. I, pp. 335-374; Shedd, Dogm. Theol. I, pp. 152-194; Thornwell, Collected Works, I, pp. 104-172; Dorner, Syst. of Chr. Doct. I, pp. 187-212; Orr, Chr. View of God and the World, pp. 75-93; Otten, Manual of the Hist. of Dogmas I, pp. 254-260; Clarke, The Chr. Doct. of God, pp. 56-70; Steenstra, The Being of God as Unity and Trinity, pp. 1-88; Thomson, The Christian Idea of God, pp. 117-159; Hendry, God the Creator (from the Barthian standpoint); Warfield, Calvin and Calvinism pp. 131-185 ( Calvin's Doctrine of God).