Difference between revisions of "God" - New World Encyclopedia

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:''This article discusses the term '''God''' in the context of [[monotheism]] and derived [[henotheism|henotheistic]] forms. See [[deity]] or [[goddess]]es for details on [[polytheistic]] usages. See [[Names of God]] for terms used in other languages or specific faiths. See [[God (disambiguation)]] for non-religious abbreviations.''
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[[Image:isvara.jpg|right|300px|thumb|An abstract representation of [[Isvara]] (a [[Hindu]] word for God) painted by Antti Silvekoski (copyright 2007)]]
  
The term '''God''' is used to refer to a specific [[monotheistic]] concept of a [[supernatural]] '''Supreme Being''' in accordance with [[Christianity]], and is capitalized in the [[English language]] as a [[proper noun]]. The notion of such a supreme being exists in virtually all world religions, even those which deny the existence not of a god-figure such as Buddhism. However, the precise definition varies greatly from culture to culture and often from person to person.
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Few concepts in human [[history]] have generated as much fascination, intense longing, rapturous devotion, somber contemplation, and endless debate as the topic of God. In the [[English language]], the term '''God,''' when capitalized and singular (as a proper noun), is typically used to refer to the sole Divine Being in [[monotheism|monotheistic]] religions, and more broadly to Ultimate Reality in many other faiths. An uncapitalized spelling (both singular and plural) has generally been used to refer to an individual deity found in a [[Polytheism|polytheistic]] or [[Henotheism|henotheistic]] pantheon (such as in ancient [[Vedas|Vedic]] and [[Greek Mythology|Greco-Roman religion]]).
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Throughout history, the vast majority of people in the world have believed in a God.<ref>This point remains true today despite the criticisms of [[Atheism|atheists]], who deny that there is a God, and [[Agnosticism|Agnostics]], who express uncertainity about the existence of a God or gods.</ref> Yet, although notions of an absolute divine power are found in virtually all of the world's religions, the precise definition of what God is (and "is for us") varies greatly among the religions, within specific sects, and even from person to person. Typically, monotheistic [[theology]] describes God as omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent (and in most theologies, immutable), as well as both the [[creation (theology)|creator]] and sustainer of the [[universe]]. God may be understood as male, as female, as both male and female, or as beyond gender (such as an impersonal abstract power or energy).
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Frequently, God is conceived of as a personal being that can relate with all aspects of human experience, and has attributes of [[goodness]], [[justice]], [[love]], etc. In most religions, God is recognized to have the disposition of a [[parenting|parent]], who watches over [[human being]]s—God’s children, protecting, educating and disciplining them in an effort to raise them well. In addition to the conception of God as a divine Father, other depictions of God include Mother, friend, healer, child, a judge, and even a lover. As such, some theologians speak of God's heart (see below) that longs for fellowship with human beings, and even suffers to see them in misery.
  
 
==Etymology==
 
==Etymology==
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The word ''God'' comes from the [[Old English language|Old English]]/[[Germanic languages|Germanic]] terms ''god'' (''guþ, gudis'' in [[Gothic language|Gothic]], ''gud'' in modern [[Scandinavian languages|Scandinavian]] and ''Gott'' in modern [[German language|German]]). The original meaning and [[etymology]] of the Germanic word ''god'' has been widely disputed, though most agree it takes root in the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word ''*khutóm''. ''*Khutóm'' is a passive perfect participle from the root ''*khu-'', which likely meant "libation" or "sacrifice." Evidence for this theory is provided by comparisons of the [[Sanskrit]] ''hu-'' ("to sacrifice"), the [[Greek language|Greek]] ''khu-'', ''kheu-'' ("to pour") as well as the Common Germanic strong verb ''*geutan'' ([[Anglo-Saxon language|Anglo-Saxon]] ''gēotan'') "to pour," and the English ''in-got''. The connection between these terms likely derives from the meaning "pour a [[libation]]." The word ''God'' was first used in the Gothic translation of the [[New Testament]] by Ulfilas to represent the Greek term ''Theos'', ([[Latin]] ''Deus'') in translations of the [[Bible]].
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==Early Conceptions of God==
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{{main|Polytheism}}
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Both [[polytheism]] and [[henotheism]] seem to have been the predominant conceptions of divinity throughout most of the ancient world. Although their expressions varied considerably from [[culture]] to culture, some common characteristics of these conceptions can be identified. The gods of polytheistic and henotheistic belief systems have independent and individual personalities with specific skills, needs and desires. Although often lacking material form, they could (on occasion) assume physical bodies. They are seen to possess a high level of relevance to human life, as they can intervene in human affairs. They can do so by their own volition, or worshipers can encourage them by way of [[ritual]]s and [[sacrifice]]s.
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The gods are generally conceived to be immortal. They are often portrayed as [[anthropomorphism|similar to humans]] in their personality traits, failings and vices, but with additional supernatural powers and abilities. Some have jurisdiction or governance over a large area, as the "patron god(s)" of a [[Geography|geographical]] region, town, [[mountain]] or clan. In many [[civilization]]s, the [[pantheon]]s grew over time as the patron gods of various [[city|cities]] and places were collected together as empires extended over larger territories. In others cases, the various gods may have arisen due to a perceived "division of labor," with each having dominion or authority over specified elements in the human and natural worlds.
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Many of the earliest conceptualizations of divinity were actually [[Goddess|goddesses]]. Both carved figures and paintings of pregnant women were the dominant foci of worship during the [[Paleolithic]] times (35,000-10,000 B.C.E.). These depictions typically emphasized the reproductive parts of the female anatomy, such as large breasts, the pregnant womb, and the vulva, which presumably represented women's [[creativity|creative]], maternal, nourishing, and embracing traits. The female was symbolically [[Gaia|linked to the earth]], maintaining the life cycle, representing fertility and the creation of new life. Excavations from [[Catal Huyuk]] in what is now [[Turkey]] suggest that settlements existing between 6500 and 5500 B.C.E. also held the goddess in highest esteem, and artifacts recovered form the [[Indus Valley Civilization]] suggest that goddess worship was also the earliest form of religious practice in [[India]].
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[[Image:PallasGiustiniani.jpg|thumb|200px|The ''Athena Giustiniani'', a Roman copy of a Greek statue of Pallas Athena ([[Vatican]] Museums)]]
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The ancient [[Greek mythology|Greek gods]] provide the best example of henotheism that is most familiar to Western scholarship. Their extensive mythological tales (preserved in plays, visual art, and epic poems) show that the ancient Greeks believed in independent, highly personified deities who were not aspects of a greater divinity. Rather, they were seen to stand on their own, representing certain aspects of the cosmos or human experience. The first gods were largely tied to natural or primordial processes, such as Uranus, the father god of the sky; [[Gaia]], the mother goddess of Earth; and [[Chronos]], the godly personification of time. Later gods, such as the [[Twelve Olympians|Olympians]], became identified with more specific aspects of experience. For instance, [[Apollo]] was the god of light, dance, reason, [[music]], [[archery]] and [[medicine]], while also exemplifying the difficulties of human relationships through the stories of his many failed loves. [[Athena]] was heralded as the goddess of wisdom, artistry, education and inner [[beauty]], as well as war. [[Zeus]] represented the god of [[weather]]. While each of these gods and goddesses evidently had dominion over a certain portion of reality, they also were members of a celestial pantheon and were, at various junctures, ruled over by Chronos, Uranus, and finally Zeus.<ref>Later, Christians living in the [[Roman Empire]] would be quick to identify the pagan gods of the Greco-Roman pantheon with [[demon]]s, especially since these gods were the official ideological support behind an oppressive imperial order that persecuted Christianity.</ref> Their belief in a father/ruler God meant that the Greek polytheism was perhaps best described as a [[henotheism]].
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===Greek definitions of God===
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Developments in Greek [[philosophy]] shifted from [[polytheism]]/ [[henotheism]] to a [[monotheism|monistic]] theism. This trend began with the [[Pre-Socratic]] philosophers, who suggested that this [[pantheism|pantheisitic]] essence for the universe perhaps took root in a natural element—such as [[Anaximenes]] (who claimed the essence to be air), or [[Thales]] (who thought it was water). Eventually these elements came to be more abstract, reaching beyond the physical world. [[Anaximander]] (c.609-547 B.C.E.), for instance, proposed an uncreated and indestructible being which could not itself be considered a thing, yet was responsible for the existence of all things and ruling them all. For [[Pythagoras]] (c. 570-496 B.C.E.) and his followers, all things were ruled by [[mathematics]] and [[geometry]]. [[Xenophanes]] (c. 570-c. 478 B.C.E.) propounded the idea of a changeless, indestructible and unified entity which possessed infinite intelligence and was present in all things, which he called the "All-One." He claimed this notion of unity and oneness to be the highest and most reasonable form of religious thought.
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These ruminations as to the singular essence behind the universe culminated in the later philosophical monotheism espoused by both [[Plato]] (c. 428-c. 348 B.C.E.) and [[Aristotle]] (384-322 B.C.E.). Plato construed God as representative of the single good which existed in contrast to the physical world, which was in constant flux and therefore evil. This so-called "Form of the Good" was held by Plato to exist beyond specific instances of good in the world, because each of these particulars was subject to mutability and therefore not eternal. Plato claimed these transient appearances of the Form of the Good were created by a Demiurge. The point of life was to rise up from all that is ugly, evil and fallacious and realize the true, permanent Good.
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Likewise, [[Aristotle]], the famous student of Plato, believed that truth can be found within a proper understanding of the natural world, which is attributable to its ultimate source. This source, also known as the "First Mover" or "Pure Form," is a completely actualized, immutable, and indivisible entity, which represents the ultimate ground of truth and singularly provides the explanation as to why all things exist with the characteristics they do, as well as how they came into being. Aristotle propounded the idea that all people must seek to understand truth, as the search for truth is ultimately a form of participation in God. Both Plato and Aristotle's conception of the highest entity in the universe would go on to wield massive influence on the conceptions of God in the [[Abrahamic religion|Abrahamic]] [[faith]]s, especially [[Christianity]].
  
[[Image:Gudis Argenteus.jpg|thumb|140px|Earliest attestation of the Germanic word in the [[6th century]] [[Codex Argenteus]] ([[Gospel of Matthew|Mt]] 5:9)]]
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===Early monotheism in Egypt===
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Another example of a conception of the one transcendent God growing out of polytheism occurred in the iconoclastic cult of the [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]] solar god, [[Aten]], which was promoted by the [[pharaoh]] [[Akhenaten]] (Amenhotep IV), who ruled between 1358 and 1340 B.C.E. Upon inheriting the throne, Akhenaten brought Aten from relative obscurity among the other gods and made him synonymous with the [[Sun]], which Egyptians of that time period thought to be the single most powerful entity. Furthermore, Aten came to represent a more personal conception of the divine than the other gods, all of whom had been the primary focus of public ritual in temples. As these other gods in the pantheon came to be perceived as inferior to Aten, their idols were destroyed.
  
The word ''God'' continues from the [[Old English language|Old English]]/[[Germanic languages|Germanic]] terms ''god'' (''guþ, gudis'' in [[Gothic language|Gothic]], ''gud'' in modern [[Scandinavian]] and ''Gott'' in modern [[German language|German]]). The original meaning and [[etymology]] of the Germanic word ''god'' has been widely disputed, though most agree to a reconstructed Proto-Indo-European form ''*khutóm'', which is a passive perfect participle from the root ''*khu-'', which likely meant "libation" or "sacrifice". Evidence for this theory is provided by comparisons of the  [[Sanskrit]] ''hu-'' ("to sacrifice"), the [[Greek language|Greek]] ''khu-'', ''kheu-'' ("to pour") and the Common Germanic strong verb ''*geutan'' ([[Anglo-Saxon]] ''gēotan'') "to pour", and the English ''[[ingot|in-got]]''. The connection between these terms is likely derives from the meaning "pour a [[libation]]". Another possible meaning of ''*khutóm'' is "invocation", related to the [[Sanskrit]] term ''hūta''. The word ''God'' was  first used in the Gothic translation of the [[New Testament]] by [[Ulfilas]] to represent the [[Greek language|Greek]] term ''Theos'', ([[Latin]] ''Deus'') in [[Bible]] translations.
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Even though such works as Akhenaten's [[hymn]] to Aten offers strong evidence that Akhenaten considered Aten to be the sole, omnipotent creator, Akhenaten's program to enforce this monotheistic worldview was promptly put to a halt upon his death. The worship of gods other than Aten never fully ceased outside Akhenaten's court, and the older polytheistic cults soon regained prominence. However, the Aten cult could still be classified one of the earliest known examples of monotheism, and it is claimed by some scholars to have possibly been a formative influence on early [[Judaism]]'s eschewal of polytheism, due to the presence of Israelite slaves in Egypt.
  
== Definition ==
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===Zoroastrianism===
Common traits attributed to most conceptualizations of God are [[The Absolute|absoluteness]] and other superlative qualities. In much religious and philosophic thought, God is considered the [[Creator God|creator]] of the [[universe]]. However, many other definitions of the word exist. Some concepts of God center on a view of God as ultimate, [[immanent]], transcendent, eternal Reality which exists beyond the malleable multiplicities of the sensible world. In many cases, god is attributed these qualities while also Some bearing [[anthropomorphic]] traits, such as a particular gender,  name, and sometimes even ethnic exclusivity. In other cases, God may be ''Supreme'' but is not necessarily a ''Being'', instead conceived of as an ambiguous impersonal force or philosophical concept. For example, the concept of God is often embedded in definitions of abstractions such as truth, where the sum of all truth is equated to God.  
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[[Zoroastrianism]] provides another example of early monotheistic belief. [[Zarathustra]] founded Zoroastrianism at best estimation sometime during the tenth century B.C.E.. perhaps under inspiration to elevate divine-human relations above the Indo-Iranian polytheism of his time, a tradition steeped in an elaborate ritualism. Under Zarathustra the various notions of divinity found within these assorted faiths were recognized as attributes of one all-encompassing deity called [[Ahura Mazda]] (or "Wise Lord"). Zarathustra set his teachings apart from his rivals by insisting that worship be dedicated solely to the Wise Lord.  
  
Also at stake are questions concerning the dynamic of relationship between humans and god, or similarly, god and the physical world. Many traditions hold that the creator is also the sustainer active in the maintenance of the earth and human life through revelation and divine intervention, a position generally characteristic of classical [[theism]]. In contrast, others argue that their God created the world but is no longer involved in the world afterward, a position known as [[deism]].
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Although Ahura Mazda is the supreme power in the universe in Zoroastrianism, he is not considered completely all-powerful. Ahura Mazda is described as inherently good, just and moral, and as such creates only good things, a seeming limitation to his power considering the presence of evil in the world. Zoroastrians attribute the existence of evil to two subsidiary moral spirits who Ahura Mazda is said to have fathered: [[Spenta Manyu]], who is good, and Angra Manyu, who is evil. Although such a conception limits Ahura Mazda's power, he is consistently described to be triumphant over evil, which marks him as the supreme entity in the Zoroastrian cosmos. Later Zoroastrianism also includes angelic beings called the [[Amesha Spenta]], who are seen as emanations of Ahura Mazda, whose job it is to put in place his will in the physical world.
  
God is often considered the singular spiritual force in the universe. This conception is characteristic of [[monotheism]], but there is no universal definition of monotheism. The differences between monotheism and [[polytheism]] vary among traditions (see also [[trinity]], [[dualism]], and [[henotheism]]). Many believers in these monotheistic faiths allow for the existence of other, less powerful spiritual beings, and give them names such as [[angel]]s, [[saint]]s, [[Djinn]], [[demon]]s, and [[devas]]. In other cases, God is not considered the only entity in the univers. In some cases, God exists in relation to other other gods, rising to supremacy above the others (as in henotheism). Additionally, god may exist seperately from forces outside of his purview, such as evil. With that said, not all systems hold that God is necessarily [[morality|morally]] good (see [[summum bonum]]). Some hold that God is the very definition of moral goodness.  Others maintain that God is beyond morality. Not all combinations of attributes 'work', and this has been cause for much debate among theologians in many traditions. For example, if God is the Creator, Omnipotent, Omniscient, and the Ultimate Judge, then he created all people, including atheists and pagans, knowing exactly what he was doing and then sends them to Hell. This God cannot also be "good", from the point of view of all humans - just as all humans are not "good" from his point of view. In Zoroastrianism, for example, the supreme god Ahura Mazda is responsible for good as well as evil. In some cases, god is not the penultimate force in the universe, but is in a state of continual progress toward that supremacy, as in Process theology or Arthur C. Clark's post-human god.
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==God in the Abrahamic Religions==
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[[Image:Creation of the Sun and Moon face detail.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Michelangelo]]'s view of God in the painting ''Creation of the Sun and Moon'' in the [[Sistine Chapel]])]]
  
Despite all of these possible traits, some philosophers do not so readily attribute definitions and characteristics to God. [[Negative theology]], sometimes called [[apophatic]] theology, argues that no true statements about attributes of God can be made at all, instead speaking in terms of what ''cannot'' be said about God. [[Agnosticism|Agnostic]] positions argue that limited [[human]] understanding precludes any possibility for any conclusive statements about God whatsoever. Similarly, some mystical traditions ascribe limits to God's powers, arguing that God's supreme nature leaves no room for spontaneity.
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[[Judaism]], [[Christianity]], and [[Islam]] are together considered [[Abrahamic religions]] due to the fact they worship the God who first came into covenant with [[Abraham]]. Abraham's portion of the covenant was that he spread the teaching that only God alone is the true God, and all others are not. Therefore, each of the three [[religion]]s that trace their roots to Abraham strongly espouse [[monotheism]]. Further, no doubt due to the dialogical relationship between Abraham and God, the Abrahamic faiths conceive of God as deeply involved in human [[history]], rather than detached from it. God appears at various junctures in order to alter the fate of individuals and nations.  
  
There are definitions of god which actually deny his existence, such as Paul Tillich's theology which states that god is basically nothing. There are also [[atheism|atheistic]] explanations for the existence of the ''concept'' of God in the human imagination. These often explain God as a function of psychological and/or sociological factors. Thinkers such as Freud, Marx and Feuerbach claim that god is merely the "self writ large", that is, a psychological projection of what humans want themselves to be placed in the context of religion. Others, such as Durkheim claim that the purpose of a supreme being and its representative totem is to bond the group into communal worship of the totem, which actually represents the tribe. Therefore, God is the projection of the entire clan, which thereby bonds the clan.
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Considering this close relationship between God and human beings, it is not surprising that Jews, Christians, and Muslims often conceive of God in personal terms. The [[prophet]]s of the [[Bible]] and the [[Qur'an]] encountered God as a Being with an explicit will and personality. The Bible depicts God with [[anthropomorphism|anthropomorphic]] traits, as seen in [[Genesis]] 1:26: "God said, 'Let us make man in our image, after our likeness.'" However, from the viewpoint of [[faith]], it is rather human beings who are "theomorphic," made in the image of their Creator.
  
==Names of God==
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Later, medieval [[rationalism|rationalist]] [[philosophy|philosophers]] in each of these religions put forth the view that one should not conceive of God as personal in the literal sense, as such perceptions limit God’s transcendent majesty. Rather, they claimed that such personal descriptions of God should be understood as [[metaphor]]s. On the other hand, for many [[saint]]s and pious believers, relating to God in personalistic terms allows an intimacy and depth of sentiment surpassing the logic of the more refined and rationalist conceptions.
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===Judaism===
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The [[Hebrew Bible]] describes God as the Creator of the universe, the physical world, and all that lives upon it. Yet only a few chapters of the Bible are concerned with God's role in creation. Mainly, God in the Bible is understood relationally—as God in [[covenant]] with [[Israelites|Israel]] - and thus God is known through the covenant relationship.
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Biblical texts make evident that God cares about people, and that he also cares about whether or not people care about him. God is chiefly known by his mighty acts in history: liberating the Hebrews from [[slavery]] in [[Egypt]] and leading them across the desert to the Promised Land; rescuing faithful Israel from her enemies; and chastising disobedient Israel with invasions, pestilence and exile. God is also known by the laws he gives the people to live by—the laws of the [[Moses|Mosaic]] covenant, which require justice, charity to the poor and downtrodden, integrity in matters of [[morality]]. They also forbid [[idolatry]] and the worship of foreign gods. God's active mercy and protection, coupled with the obligations to follow his law, constitute the two sides of the covenant relationship. They make clear to the people that God holds them accountable for their actions, and that he has the power to reward or punish them accordingly.
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The God of the Hebrew Bible has the likeness of a king who governs his subjects and expects their loyalty and service. To this the Bible adds another dimension, characterizing God not only as the divine ruler but also as a divine father. God takes a compassionate, paternal interest towards the [[Israelites]]; he is not content to rule them, but would also educate them and raise them to meet his highest expectations. His attitude in [[Exodus, Book of|Exodus]] is a stern parent:
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<blockquote>The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin (...) will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children's children, to the third and the fourth generation. (Exodus 34:6-7)</blockquote>
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But it is in the prophets that God's fatherly and even motherly heart shines forth:
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<blockquote>When Israel was a child, I loved him,<BR>
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and out of Egypt I called my son.<BR>
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The more I called them,<BR>
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the more they went from me;<BR>
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they kept sacrificing to the Baals,<BR>
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and burning incense to idols.<BR>
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Yet it was I that taught Ephraim to walk,<BR>
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I took him up in my arms;<BR>
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but they did not know that I healed them.<BR>
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I led them with cords of compassion,<BR>
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with the bands of love,<BR>
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and I became to them as one<BR>
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who eases the yoke on their jaws,<BR>
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and I bent down to them and fed them. (Hosea 11.1-4)</blockquote>
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On the other hand, the Hebrew Bible deliberately avoids any rational apprehension of God's nature. This is in accord with its prohibition of images (Exod. 20:4): God is not to be depicted by any kind of form. God's traits transcend human comprehension to the extent that attempts to see him by form is downright dangerous! In [[Exodus, Book of|Exodus]], God is cited as saying: "you cannot see my face; for man shall not see me and live"; even Moses, who longs to see God, must cover his eyes when God passes by and is only granted a glimpse of his backside" (Exod. 33:20-23). The prophet [[Ezekiel]] deepens the mystery with his vision of God's throne, mounted on a chariot surrounded by wheels and strange living creatures, for now matter how he tries, he can only glimpse "the likeness of the glory of the Lord" enveloped in light (Ezek. 1:26-28). This vision implies that God's true existence is far beyond the physical world, even as his action within the world sustains and governs all things.
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Mainstream [[Orthodox Judaism]] teaches that although God is the creator of both [[matter]] and [[spirit]], God in fact is neither. This teaching has raised questions among some as to how can there be any interaction between the Creator and the created if the Creator is indeed so different from it. In response, early [[Kabbalah|Kabbalists]] (Jewish [[mysticism|mystics]]) envisioned two aspects of God: firstly, God's self, which ultimately is unknowable, and secondly, the revealed aspect of God who created and preserves the universe, interacting with mankind in a personal way. Kabbalists believe that these two aspects are not contradictory but rather complementary to one another.
  
[[Image:Tetragrammaton scripts.png|frame|right|[[YHWH]], the name of God or [[Tetragrammaton]], in [[Phoenician language|Phoenician]] (1100 B.C.E. to AD 300), [[Aramaic]] (10th Century B.C.E. to 0) and modern Hebrew scripts.]]{{see details|Names of God}}
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[[Kabbalah]] teaches that in order to create the universe, God "withdrew," and created the universe within the space from which "he" contracted. It is taught in the [[Zohar]] that God, at the beginning of creation, shattered ten ספירות ("sephiroth") or כלים ("kaylim" or "vessels"), scattering their fragments throughout the universe. The [[sephirot]] are comprised of different vessels embodying various emanations of God's being. The ten sephirot form the "tree of life" in the form of the human body; hence every person has the potential to unify the sefirot within the self and ascend towards God. The standing view in neo-Hasidism, currently, can be summed up as the ancient and popular Kabbalistic incantation, אין עוד מילבדו ("Ain od milvado"), which means: "There is nothing but God." This is not [[pantheism]], however, but rather a reality that can only be seen by supernatural sight. The mundane reality is defective, because the scattered fragments—sparks—of God's nature are covered by "husks" of evil. While humanity is endowed with an inherent godliness, people first must "raise the (divine) sparks" within themselves and in all creatures, an act called ''[[tikkun]]'' that repairs the rent fabric of creation.
  
The noun ''God'' is the proper English name used for the deity of [[Monotheism|monotheistic]] faiths. Names of God, however, are innumerable, varying with religious traditions. The [[Bible]] frequently uses the term [[Yahweh]], from the Hebrew: 'YHVH' (יהוה) to refer to God. YHVH, also known as the Tetragrammaton, provides an unpronouncable string of consonants, consistent with the Israelite belief that the true name of god should not be spoken. Other Biblical terms for god include [[Elohim]],  El Shaddai, Adonai, Amanuel, and Amen. When Moses asked God "What is your name?" he was given the answer ''Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh'', commonly translated "I am that I am", referring to His unconditional self-existence.  Yahweh is the most popular name for God in the Jewish tradition. When written or typed as a proper noun, some observant Jews will use the form "G-d" to prevent the written name of God from becoming desecrated later on. Some Orthodox Jews consider this unnecessary because English is not the [[Hebrew language|Holy Language]].)  God is of course the most common moniker in Christianity. However, other terms are used, such as The [[Trinity|Holy Trinity]] (meaning the Father, the Son ([[Jesus]] [[Christ]]), and the [[Holy Spirit]]/"[[Holy Ghost]]") which is used in almost all mainstream Christianity. Other churches use other definitions. God is called ''Igzi'abihier'' (lit. "Lord of the Universe") in the [[Tewahedo Church|Ethiopian Orthodox]] Church. Some churches such as the [[United Church of Canada]] and [[Religious Science]]) are using the term "the One" alongside "God" as a more gender-neutral way of referring to God (See also [[Oneness]]). [[Allah]] is the term most commonly used in ([[Islam]], although not exclusively so. "Allah" is Arabic for "the God", and is also used by non-Muslim Arabs.  
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===Islam===
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Muslims conceive of God as the supreme singular power in the universe called "[[Allah]]."  Just as in the other [[Abrahamic religion|Abrahamic faiths]], Muslims claim that monotheism is the only acceptable form of religious faith, and place Islam in direct opposition to [[polytheism|polytheists]] and [[idolatry|idolaters]]. Allah is all truth and the source of all creation; therefore Allah alone is worthy of worship, and no other gods are to be acknowledged or worshiped. Muslims reject the Christian notion of the [[Trinity]] as polytheistic. To attribute the traits of Allah upon any other god is considered by Muslims to be the only unforgivable sin.
  
In India, [[Ishvara]] is the term used for God among the Hindus. In [[Sanskrit]], it means the Supreme Lord. Most [[Hindu]]s worship the personal form of God or [[Saguna Brahman]], as [[Vishnu]], [[Shiva]], or directly as the Supreme Cosmic Spirit [[Brahman]]. A common prayer for Hindus is the [[Vishnu sahasranama]], which is a hymn describing the one thousand names of God. Ishvara should not be confused with the numerous deities of the Hindu pantheon. In modern Hindi, Ishvara is also called [[Bhagwan]]. [[Sikhs]] worship God with the name Akal (the Eternal) or Onkar (See [[Aum]]). Help of the [[guru]]s is essential to reach God. [[Buddhism]], in contrast can be described as atheistic or agnostic: When asked about a supreme God, [[Buddha]] remained silent on the subject. Buddha believed the more important issue was a way out of suffering. Enlightened beings are called [[Arhat]]s or Buddha. However, popular Buddhism of China has venerated the [[Bodhisattva]], an enlightened being that has chosen to forego entering into [[nirvana]] until all beings are enlightened. Buddhism also teaches about the [[deva (Buddhism)|deva]]s, or heavenly beings who temporarily dwell in states of great happiness. [[Jain]]s, meanwhile, do not recognize any Supreme Omnipotent creator God, though they commonly invoke the five paramethis: [[Siddha]], [[Arahant]], [[Acharya]], [[Upadhyaya]] and [[Sadhu]].
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[[Islam]] recognizes God's immanence as complementing his transcendence. God states in the Qur'an: "We indeed created man, and We know what his soul whispers within him, and we are nearer to him than the jugular vein" (50.16).  
 
   
 
   
[[Image:KJV Psalm 23 1 2.jpg|thumb|200px|[[KJV]] of [[1611]] ([[Psalms]] 23:1,2): Occurrence of "<font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font>" (and "God" in the heading)]]
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The [[Qur'an]] speaks of [[99 names of God]], namely the attributes of Allah. The text of the Qur'an itself lists even more than 99 "names," each an attribute that Allah embodies. Many of these names portray Allah in highly personalistic terms, giving Allah abilities to "see" and "hear." This has sparked controversy among Muslim theologians, some of whom claim that such passages insinuate God as having has a particular form limited by senses. This controversy is most often settled with the conclusion that if God ''does'' see and hear, he does so in no way similar to mere human sensations. With this concern about excessive [[anthropomorphism]], many Muslims do not approve of the Christian appellation "Father" for God. One name, ''Al Haqq'', meaning “The Truth,” equates Allah with absolute truth that cannot be negated and is universal in all time, past, present, and future. This and other traits put forth the idea that Allah is completely transcendent and therefore wholly separate from humanity. However, Allah is said to be immanent within the world as well.
  
The name of God is consistently capitalized in English writings. The development of English orthography was dominated by [[Christianity|Christian]] texts. In early English bibles, the [[Tetragrammaton]] was rendered in capitals: "IEHOUAH" in [[William Tyndale]]'s version of [[1525]]. The [[KJV|King James Version]] of [[1611]] renders ''[[YHWH]]'' as "The <font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font>", ''[[Elohim]]'' as "God", ''Adonay YHWH'' and ''Adonay Elohim'' as "<font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font> God", and ''kurios ho theos''  as "<font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font> God"  (in the [[New Testament]]). Capitalized "God" was first used to refer to the Judeo-Christian concept, and may now signify any monotheistic conception of God, including the translations of the [[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''[[Allah|Allāh]]'' and the African [[Masai]] ''[[Engai]]''. The use of capitalization, as for a proper noun, has persisted to disambiguate the concept of a singular ''God'' from [[pagan]] deities for which lowercase ''god'' has continued to be applied. Pronouns referring to God are also often capitalized and are traditionally in the masculine [[gender (grammar)|gender]], i.e. "He", "His" etc. However, in more recent times, some people have referred to God in feminine terms, such as "She" and "Her".
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===Christianity===
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The Christian view of God is perhaps best summed up the biblical statement: "God is love" (1 John 4:8). In the [[New Testament]], God is known through the person of [[Jesus of Nazareth|Jesus]], of whom the [[Gospel of John]] states: "He who has seen me has seen the Father... Believe that I am in the Father and the Father in me" (John 14:9-11). God becomes someone that can be seen and touched, and who may speak and act in a manner easily perceived by humans, while also remaining transcendent and invisible to the naked eye. In Jesus Christ, God revealed his unparalleled love for every [[human being]], who would [[sacrifice]] his own life—the life of his Son—for their sake: "Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends" (John 15:13). While the God of the [[Hebrew Bible]] demands and rewards faithfulness, in Jesus God demonstrated that he would sacrifice to save even the faithless sinner: "In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another" (1 John 4:10-11).  
  
==Classifications for Beliefs in God==
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Jesus also demonstrated how believers can come into an intimately personal relationship with God as their Father, which he demonstrated in his own prayers, where he called out: "Abba, Father!" ([[Gospel of Mark|Mark]] 14:36). The word "Abba" means "Daddy," what a child would call his father. Here Jesus discards the formality and respectful distance which the Hebrew Bible requires of a believer addressing God. The New Testament commends this intimacy for all believers: "All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God... When we cry, 'Abba! Father!' it is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God" ([[Epistle to the Romans|Romans]] 8:14-16).
Since the beginning of human religious thought, there have been virtually innumerable ways in which to explicate, express and experiene god. Therefore, religious scholars and theologians alike have created a number of classificatory terms in order to better describe the various types of belief in God. Some of the terms most applicable to the current discussion are given below.
 
  
* [[Theism]] describes the belief that God is both [[transcendent]] and [[immanent]]. Thus, God is simultaneously infinite and in some way also present in the affairs of the world. Catholic theology, for example, holds that God is [[divine simplicity|infinitely simple]] and is not involuntarily subject to time.  God's immanence may also be explained through revelations to humanity (for example, holy scriptures) or miracles whereby god takes initiative in contacting humanity. Even everyday human experiences such as those of "love", "goodness", or "truth" can be interpreted as affirmations of God's involvement in creation. Typically, God in theism is personalistic, having human form and emotionality. Most theists hold that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and benevolent, although this belief raises questions about God's responsibility for evil and suffering in the world. To remedy this difficulty, some theists ascribe to God a self-conscious or purposeful limiting of omnipotence, omniscience, or benevolence.  [[Open Theism]], by contrast, asserts that, due to the nature of time, God's omniscience does not mean he can predict the future.  "Theism" is sometimes used to refer in a more general sense to any belief in a god or gods such as monotheism or polytheism.
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The apprehension of God as a loving Father has remained central to Christian piety. At the same time, the New Testament's identification of God with Jesus Christ and the indwelling Holy Spirit were eventually developed into the doctrine of the [[trinity]].
  
* [[Deism]] holds that God is wholly transcendent, exists in direct counterpoint to theism. For deists, God exists as a First Cause, but does not intervene in the world beyond creation.  In this view, God is not [[anthropomorphic]], and does not literally answer prayers or cause [[miracle]]s to occur. Rather, god is simply the entity which created the universe, setting in motions all its physical laws and processes. After this, god steps out of the picture, allowing the universe to be operated by physical laws. In this way, deism is highly reconcilable with scientific thought. Common in deism is a belief that God has no interest, and even no awareness in humanity.
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The New Testament notion of God as love was replaced during the [[Middle Ages]] by a more [[philosophy|philosophical]] notion of God as the "Unmoved Mover" or "Pure Act" (''actus purus'') under the influence of [[Aristotle|Aristotelian]] philosophy. This medieval doctrine of God, which was formulated by [[Thomas Aquinas]] (c. 1225-1274) and his predecessors, is usually called "classical theism." It emphasized the transcendence of God to the considerable neglect of his immanence, by equating the God of the Bible with the God of [[Aristotle]] that was a completely actualized and immutable deity as the "Unmoved Mover" or "Pure Form." God is perfect in that God is completely immutable. God is in want of nothing because as "Pure Form," God is completely actualized. As the "Unmoved Mover," God cannot be acted upon by anything. So, God is impassible, i.e., incapable of passion or pathos. Divine omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence were explained in this context.
  
*[[Henotheism]] is the academic classification placed upon religious belief systems which have accepted or do accept the existence of many gods, but worship one particular deity as supreme. This may take the form of a system in which one god rises to supremacy over others in a process of mythological succession (as did Zeus among the Greeks). However, it may also refer to systems where various gods exist in order to illustrate aspects of a greater, supreme being or essence, such as in [[The Vedas|Vedic]] Hinduism. Henotheistic beliefs are very often the precursor to full-fledged monotheism, as gradually the inferior gods fall away and the supreme god or universal principle beyond the gods becomes recognized as the sole divinity.
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When classical theism discussed the love of God within this framework, it sometimes faced a dilemma. If our prayers or our situations of misery or happiness can make no difference to God who is immutable and impassible, then how can we say that God is a God of genuine love who cares for us? [[Protestantism|Protestant Christianity]] was basically freed from the Aristotelian framework and returned to the Bible as the main source of theology, but its primary emphasis upon the transcendence and immutability of God still continued to exist in its faith.
 
   
 
   
* [[Monotheism]] holds that there is only one God. This has led some traditions to espouse an exclusionist view, holding to one sole definition of God. Exclusionist monotheists of one religion can, and often do, consider the God or gods of a different religion to be false. For instance, many Christian fundamentalists consider the and that all gods of other religions are actually demons in disguise, including the monotheistic God of Islam ([[Allah]]). Others hold an inclusionist view, accepting the possibility of more than one definition of God to be true at the same time and/or that the one true God is worshipped in different religions under different names. Eastern religious believers and [[Liberal Christian]]s are more likely to assume those of other faiths worship the same God as they, albeit with different attributes due to cultural influences. Unlike other religious classifications, monotheism has been conceived of by many religions as an with an "ideal" for which all spiritual endeavour should strive, hence it is the classification which plays the most significant role in discussions of God such as this.
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Christian theologians describe God's dual attributes in several respects: transcendence and immanence, freedom and love, being and change. According to St. [[Augustine of Hippo]] (354-430), God is both high and humble at once. [[Martin Luther]] (1483-1546) described God both as the hidden God (''deus absconditus'') and the revealed God (''deus revalatus''). [[Karl Barth]] (1886-1968) recognized two aspects of God: essence (freedom) and [[revelation]] ([[love]]), maintaining that while God in his essence is absolutely free from anything, he freely chooses to create the world to reveal himself to stay in love with it.<ref>Karl Barth, "The Reality of God," in ''Church Dogmatics'', vol. 2, part 1, ed. G. W. Bromiley and T. F. Torrance (1957; Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2004, ISBN 0567051293), 257-677.</ref> Hendrikus Berkhof, a Dutch Reformed theologian (1914-1995), calls this polarity of God his "two-sidedness."<ref>Hendrikus Berkhof, ''Christian Faith: An Introduction to the Study of the Faith'', revised ed., trans. Sierd Woudstra (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1986, ISBN 0802836224), 114.</ref> Many Catholic theologians talk about of God in terms of the duality of "being" and "activity." [[Alfred North Whitehead]]'s (1861-1947) "dipolar theism" discusses God in terms of his transcendent "primordial" nature and immanent "consequent" nature, which are his "conceptual" and "physical" poles, respectively. According to this, while God in his conceptual pole envisages all possibilities for the world, he in his physical pole also incorporates data from the world in order to decide which of the possibilities are finally relevant to the world.<ref>Alfred North Whitehead, ''Process and Reality'', corrected ed., ed. David Ray Griffin and Donal W. Sherburne (New York: Free Press, 1979, ISBN 978-0029345702).</ref>
  
* [[Pantheism]] refers to the belief that God is the universe and the universe is God. In this system, god is fully immanent, rendering a spiritual basis to all reality, and typically not seen as transcendent. All of Natural law, existence, and the sum total of all that is, was, and ever will be, is represented in the theological principle of 'God.' This means that every object, as well as each individual human, is part of God. Most pantheists conceives of God in non-personalistic terms, instead conceiving it as the unconscious, non-sentient universe which is in own majesty holy and beautiful.
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Peter L. Berger's ''The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions'' refers to our experiences of God's transcendence and immanence generally as "confrontation" and "interiority," respectively, and reports that these two types of religious experiences can be found in all major religions including [[Hinduism]] and [[Buddhism]].<ref>Peter L. Berger (ed.), ''The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions'' (Garden City, NY: Anchor Press, 1981, ISBN 0385174233).</ref>
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====God as Trinity====
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{{Main|Trinity}}
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[[Image:Shield-Trinity-Scutum-Fidei-English.png|frame|170px|right|The "Shield of the Trinity" or "Scutum Fidei" diagram of traditional Western Christian symbolism]]
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The doctrine of the [[Trinity]] has its basis in the [[New Testament]], where the Father, Son, and [[Holy Spirit]] are associated in the Great Commission: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" ([[Gospel of Matthew|Matt.]] 28:19). The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit can be seen together also in the apostolic benediction: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all" (2 Corinthians 13:14). However, for the [[monotheism|monotheistic]] [[religion]] of [[Christianity]], the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not three gods, as there is only one God.
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This doctrine arose as Christians tried to hold together two seemingly contradictory teachings: On the one hand, there is one God who created the world and who sent his Son [[Jesus of Nazareth|Jesus Christ]] to save humankind. On the other hand, Jesus is fully divine, yet Jesus and God the Father are distinct beings. Are there, then, two gods? Likewise, the Holy Spirit is divine, with its own distinct reality. To deal with this paradox and safeguard monotheism, two theological movements sprang up within early Christianity. One view, called Modalistic Monarchianism or [[Sabellianism]], taught that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three different successive modes of one and the same God. That is, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are titles which describe how humanity has interacted with or had experiences with God. In the role of the Father, God is the provider and creator of all. In the mode of the Son, we experience God in the flesh, as a human, fully man and fully God. God manifests as the Holy Spirit by actions on earth and within the lives of Christians. This view presents problems, chiefly for seemingly denying Jesus' free will and active relationship with the Father: how could one modality of God pray to another, asking the Father, "Let this cup pass from me, not as I will but as thou wilt?" Hence it was rejected as heresy by the [[Ecumenical Council]]s, although it is still found among certain [[Pentecostalism|Pentecostal]] denominations. A second approach, Dynamic Monarchianism, defended the unity of the Godhead by saying that the Father alone is God, and that the Son and Holy Spirit are merely creatures. The Son as a created man received a power (''dynamis'' in Greek) from the Father at the time of his baptism to be adopted as the Son of God. This approach was rejected for seemingly denying Jesus his full divinity.
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The [[Roman Catholic Church]] sought a middle way between these extremes, which, as articulated by [[Tertullian]] (c. 155-230 C.E.), became the orthodox trinitarian position: The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are "one substance of three persons." In this formulation the three are distinct, yet they are not separate. The [[Latin]] word ''persona'' in the days of Tertullian never meant a self-conscious individual person, which is what is usually meant by the modern English word "person." It rather meant a mask used at the theater, where a single actor would wear different masks to signify the characters he played. In this sense the three "persons" are still of one [[substance]]. Since the fourth century <small>C.E.</small>, in both Eastern and Western Christianity, the mainstream doctrine of the trinity has been stated as "One substance in three persons." The vast majority of Christians today are trinitarian.
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Further explanations of the relationship of the three distinct divine persons of one and the same God include the "mutual indwelling" or interpenetration of the three, according to which one dwells as inevitably in the others as they do in the one. Following John 14:11, "I [Jesus] am in the Father and the Father in me," and 14:17, "The Spirit of truth... dwells with you, and will be in you," the persons of the Trinity "reciprocally contain one another, so that one permanently envelopes and is permanently enveloped by, the other whom he yet envelopes."<ref>Hilary of Poitiers, [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf209.ii.v.ii.iii.html ''Concerning the Trinity'' 3:1.] ''Christian Classics Ethereal Library''. Retrieved July 12, 2022.</ref> The relationship of the three persons is further explained by differentiation of functions: creation, [[redemption]], and [[sanctification]] are attributed primarily to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, respectively, even as all three persons are indivisibly involved in each.
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[[Islam|Muslims]], [[Judaism|Jews]], [[Unitarians]], and a small fraction of [[Christianity|Christians]] are ''unitarian monotheists'', referring to the fact that they believe in God as an undivided one and nothing else. They hold that God is only one "person" (so to speak), and often consider Trinitarian beliefs to be a form of polytheism (Christians counter that this point misunderstands the subtle and careful grasp of the one true God within trinitarian theology).
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Some non-Christian religions also incorporate multiplicity into their concept of the One God. The Jewish [[Kabbalah|Kabbalistic]] concept of the ten [[Sefirot]] (emanations) of God has been mentioned. Some sects of [[Hinduism]] recognize the [[Trimurti]], a conception by which the three major gods ([[Brahma]], [[Vishnu]] and [[Shiva]]) represent the three modes of the Supreme Deity as Creator, Sustainer and Destroyer (see below). [[Buddhism#Mahayana Buddhism|Mahayana Buddhism]] developed the doctrine of the ''Trikaya'', or three bodies of the Buddha: the Buddha's cosmic body, the eternal ''Dharmakaya'', which is the substance of Enlightenment and Truth itself; the ''Sambhogakaya'', the all-pervading compassion and wisdom of the Buddha which invites all people to salvation; and the incarnation of these principles in the historical Sakyamuni, called the ''Nirmanakaya''. These doctrines can be seen as ways of dealing with some of the same theological problems that are addressed by Christian trinitarian doctrine: specifically how to bridge the gap between the ineffable God and his/her/its concrete manifestations in the world.
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==Conceptions of God in Asian Religions==
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===Hinduism===
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In [[Hinduism]], the term '''''[[Ishvara]]''''' (ईश्वर in Devanagari script), is a generic name for God as well as a [[philosophy|philosophical]] concept denoting one supreme personal power who rules the cosmos. Other terms for God include ''Paramatman'' and ''Bhagavan''. In some Hindu schools, use of the term ''Ishvara'' affirms that God is a deeply personal and loving figure; other schools subordinate Ishvara to the impersonal [[Brahman]].
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Hinduism of the early [[Vedas]] was [[polytheism|polytheistic]], with elaborate [[ritual]]s and [[sacrifice]]s prescribed for the appeasement of the various gods. Various gods rise to supremacy at various times in Vedic myth, as well as in the execution of the ritual. Yet the Vedas tended towards [[henotheism]], with the supreme God depicted as sometimes the warrior-god [[Indra]]; cosmic forces such as [[Agni]], the god of [[fire]]; [[Varuna]], keeper of the celestial waters; or [[Vac]], speech. The interchangeable nature of the supreme god suggests that Vedic henotheism was merely a heuristic device for a greater, more nebulous reality, with gods and goddesses personalizing various aspects of the supreme divinity in order to render it more accessible. Rig Veda 1:164:46 is famous for insinuating the existence of some divinity beyond the numerous gods, stating that "Truth is One, though the sages know it as many." This statement may be interpreted as a vague indication of a deeper [[monism]] or even [[monotheism]], gauging from the later schools of Hinduism that were seemingly on a search to define god as ultimately one; even within these early texts, it seems clear that the Vedic seers were unsatisfied with the idea of their polytheistic pantheon fully expressing the wholeness of divinity. By the time of the [[Upanishad]]s, the notion of an ineffable, indescribable Supreme Cosmic Spirit called [[Brahman]], which served as ground for the entire universe, had been developed to better articulate this singular, supreme essence.
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The schools of [[Vedanta]] (or "end of the Vedas") are responsible for the further development of this notion of Brahman. [[Advaita]] ("non-dualistic") Vedanta, founded by the philosopher [[Shankara]] (c. 700-750 C.E.), became the dominant [[Monism|monistic]] conception of God. According to Shankara, [[Brahman]] is the only true reality in this world, and everything else is based in illusion (''[[maya]]''). ''Maya'' is that complex illusory power which causes the Brahman to be perceived as the material world. Shankara also differentiated between ''Nirguna Brahman'' (Brahman without qualities) and ''Saguna Brahman'' (Brahman with qualities). When human beings attempt to understand the attributeless Brahman with their worldly minds, ever under the influence of ''maya'', Brahman becomes God, or [[Ishvara]]. Therefore, God in the traditional form with positive attributes (''Saguna Brahman'') is Brahman conditioned by ''maya''. Ishvara is omniscient, omnipresent, incorporeal, independent, creator of the world, and also its destroyer, ruling the world with his ''maya''. However, while God is perceived in this conditioned state, humans by way of their ignorance are the servants of ''maya'', which is the cause of the widespread unhappiness experienced within the mortal world. The Advaita Vedanta philosophy concludes that once one comes to fully realize that the distinction between Brahman and all particular things, including the human soul (''[[Atman]]''), are merely an illusory, they will recognize their own inherent unity with Brahman and henceforth liberate themselves from the material realm.
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''Visistadvaita'' Vedanta ("qualified non-dualistic" Vedanta), founded by mystic saint [[Ramanuja]] (1017-1137 C.E.), is the second of the major Vedanta schools. It holds that while the self is still connected to Brahman, it is only an incomplete part and not the same as the whole. While God is infinite and represents the cause and effect of the universe, individual atman are limited and considered to be inferior to Brahman. Thus, simple realization of the soul's true identity will not suffice for attaining liberation, since Brahman and atman are not fully equivalent. Rather, Ramanuja prescribed that one should dedicate and surrender oneself to the personal God in a process called [[bhakti]] (or "loving devotion"). Ishvara, then, is typically perceived by Visistadvaitas as equally important in non-dual Brahman form. Belief in this deity was claimed by Ramanuja to be indispensable for purposes of devotion, the ultimate path to non-dual Brahman. The end result of devotion is not a complete merger of the soul with Brahman, as described by Shankara, but rather an opportunity for the liberated soul to share in the nature of God.
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''Dvaita'' (or "dualistic") Vedanta, established by [[Madhva]] (1238-1317 C.E.), denies any connection whatsoever between Brahman and atman. Instead, God is conceived of in wholly personal terms as Ishvara, a being totally separate from the universe and souls within it. This view displaying significant overlap with [[Abrahamic religion|Abrahamic theism]]. ''Nirguna Brahman'' is rarely acknowledged within this school, which considers the notion of a deity without characteristics to be an intellectual abstraction with no appeal in the context of religion as it occurs among laypersons.
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Many outside observers mistakenly interpret the practices of some modern Hindu sects to be polytheistic in nature. In fact, many of these sects teach that Ultimate Reality is made up of innumerable aspects, a consequence of its infinite nature. Therefore, like the Vedic deities, the numerous deities of Hinduism, which have been reported as numbering as high as 330 million, provide personalized emphasis upon particular traits of God. Some believe that it is only through conception of so many divine beings that humans come to realization of Brahman or Ishvara.
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One such example of multiplicity serving as a window to the primordial oneness is classical Hindu idea of the [[Trimurti]], which acknowledges three aspects of God in the personae of [[Brahma]] (the creator), [[Vishnu]] (the preserver), and [[Shiva]] (the destroyer). These three gods are simply different aspects of the one and the same Ishvara, who ultimately is inconceivable. In this manner, the Trimurti is similar to the [[Sabellian]] interpretation of the three persons of the Christian Trinity as three modalities of the one God.
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Worship of countless deities as manifestations of a single monistic principle is alive in contemporary Hindu traditions. The [[Smartism|Smarta]] school believes meditation upon icons ([[murti]]) representing an unlimited number of gods to be the optimum means by which connect with the greater power of Brahman, who transcends the iconic form. All gods, then, reduce to the same principle which does not exist as a plurality. These schools of Hinduism are best classified not as polytheism but rather as "emanational" monotheism. Emanational monotheism refers to religious traditions in which a singular monistic or pantheistic principle is perceived by humans as having many emanations or iterations, and is subsequently given worship through these forms.
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There are, however, varieties of Hinduism which are explicitly polytheistic. Notably, the [[Mimamsa]] school recognizes the devas (celestial spirits) as the rulers over the forces of nature, with no particular deva rising above the others as the supreme deity.
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Modern Hinduism has developed substantial monotheistic movements that acknowledge one personalized God as supreme. The two largest branches of Hinduism today are [[Vaishnavism]], which worships [[Vishnu]] and his [[avatar]]s, and [[Shaivism]], which worships [[Shiva]]. Both of these gods enjoyed some significance in the Vedas, Vishnu being declared the supreme god in several instances, and Shiva prominent in the form of his precursor, Rudra. Their mythologies burgeoned in popularity after the circulation of the [[Puranas]] and the [[Mahabarata]], which laid the foundation for their eventual veneration as monotheistic deities.
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In the movements associated with Shiva and Vishnu it is believed that Ishvara and Brahman are identical. Thus, these movements closely resemble traditional Western monotheism, in that each sect considers their chosen god to be the sole and supreme deity. However, unlike the Western traditions (as well as Hindu interpretations such as Dvaita Vedanta), the devotional sects generally do not interpret the relation between God and the universe as one of dualism. Rather, they maintain a monistic view which conceives their personalistic god as the supreme entity of the universe, embodying the indescribable and supreme power of the traditional Brahman without qualities as well as their anthropomorphic form. The personalistic attributes of Vishnu and Shiva are not perceived to be limitations upon their power. In fact, it is these very characteristics which are thought to render Vishnu or Shiva superior over ''Nirguna Brahman''.
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[[Ishvara]], whether in the form of [[Shiva]] or [[Vishnu]], is thought to be endowed with six major attributes—although individual attributes listed in any given account vary since the actual number of auspicious qualities of God are countless. One set of attributes (and their common interpretations) are: ''Jnana'', the power to know about all beings simultaneously; ''Bala'', the capacity to support everything without any fatigue; ''Virya'', the power to retain immateriality in spite of being the material cause of mutable creations; ''Tejas'', which expresses self-sufficiency and the capacity to overpower everything by way of spiritual effulgence; and ''Aishvarya'', unchallenged rule over the sixth attribute; ''Shakti'', the energy which renders the impossible possible. [[Shakti]] itself is the focus of worship in [[Shaktism]], another popular devotional school. Followers of Shaktism conceive of the divine power of the Ishvara as a female [[goddess]] called [[Devi]] or [[Durga]], who is worshiped as the Divine Mother.
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===Sikhism===
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[[Sikhism]] arose in the [[Punjab]] region of north-western India during the fifteenth century C.E. This vibrant religion embodied a theology of monotheism, asserting that God is essentially One (''Ek Onkar''). Numerous passages within the [[Guru Granth Sahib]] (the Sikh holy book) reiterate the importance of this idea, including the very first stanza, known as the Mool Mantra. It reads: "One Universal Creator God. The Name Is Truth (...) Self-Existent." The Sikhs reject any division of God, including the notion that God can produce [[avatar]]s or human incarnations.
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Generally, God is described by Sikhs as the creator of the universe, singular, supreme, timeless, omnipresent, and perfectly moral. Sikhs claim that God's very essence is unchanging Truth (''Sat Namm''). In addition, God is also described in seemingly anthropomorphic terms, such as in the aforementioned Mool Mantra, which describes God as "Creative Being Personified." Although Sikhs, like Muslims, bestow many names upon God in order to describe His various traits, they most commonly refer to God as ''Wahiguru''.
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Sikhism also features elements of [[pantheism]] or [[panentheism]]. Stories attributed to [[Guru Nanak]] suggest that he believed god to be everywhere in the physical world as in pantheism. Similarly, the Sikh tradition typically describes God as the preservative force within the physical world, present in all material forms. Each of these worldly forms was created as a manifestation of God. These ideas, taken together with the prevalent Sikh belief that God is the transcendent creator who exists independent of the world, could be interpreted to suggest that Sikhism is panentheistic.
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===Buddhism===
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[[Image:Buddha_image_-_white_stone.jpg|thumb|200px|right|A stone image of the Buddha]]
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[[Buddhism|Theravada Buddhism]] has been described as [[atheism|atheistic]] or [[agnosticism|agnostic]]: When asked about a supreme God, [[Buddha]] remained silent. Buddha believed the more important issue was a way out of suffering. Sakyamuni Buddha taught that speculation about the supernatural distracts us from the greater and more worthwhile devotion to breaking the cycle of rebirth. Buddha's silence has resulted in many even educated people believing that Buddhism is atheistic.<ref>While [[Theravada]] Buddhism relegated the Hindu [[devas]]/gods to an inferior position ''vis-a-vis'' humanity, they did not reject them altogether. Thus, it is incorrect to describe Buddhism as [[Atheism|atheistic]]; it is more accurate to label [[Theravada Buddhism]] as "non-theistic" (in the sense that it denies the existence of an eternal creator God and insists that all gods are subject to rebirth). Theravada Buddhism, however, does not deny the existence of smaller gods (gods with a small "g") but these gods are not seen as omnipotent, as in the typical monotheistic understanding.</ref>
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However, [[Mahayana Buddhism]] in [[China]] developed the notion of the Buddha's cosmic body, the eternal ''Dharmakaya'', which is the substance of Enlightenment and Truth itself; and the ''Sambhogakaya'', the all-pervading compassion and wisdom of the [[Buddha]], which invites all people to salvation. These cosmic manifestations of the Buddha precede the historical Sakyamuni, called the ''Nirmanakaya''. This doctrine of the ''Trikaya'', or three bodies of the Buddha, bears some resemblance to the Christian doctrine of [[trinity]]. By thus venerating the Buddha as the qualities of truth and mercy that pervade the cosmos, East Asian Buddhists have attributed to the Buddha the qualities of divinity. Mahayana Buddhism also venerates the [[Bodhisattva]]s, enlightened heavenly beings who have chosen to forgo entering into [[nirvana]] until all beings are enlightened.
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===Chinese religions===
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In East Asia, '''Heaven''' ('''''[[Tian]]''''') is the term most commonly used for God. The concept of [[Heaven]] as a power that was believed to judge both the world and its rulers came into currency in [[China]] during the [[Zhou dynasty]] (1122-255 B.C.E.). Heaven was conceived sometimes as a personal agent, sometimes as an impersonal force, or both. Evidence suggests that under the Zhou, Heaven was an all-powerful entity that guaranteed peace and justice within the kingdom so long as rulers maintained order and justice. If order and justice were not maintained, Heaven meted out punishment through natural and social disasters. The way in which the ruler was obligated to rule his empire in order to please Heaven was known as the [[Mandate of Heaven]] (''Tian-Ming''). Dealing with Heaven was principally the responsibility of the ruler. To maintain the mandate, the ruler (who came to be known as ''Tian-zi'', the "Son of Heaven") called upon Heaven with ritual and sacrifice.
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Reverence for Heaven increased during the [[Han dynasty]] (206 B.C.E.–220 C.E.) as one leg of a three-fold relationship between Heaven, [[human being|humans]] and [[Earth]]. The belief developed that the earthly bureaucracy mirrors the heavenly, with Heaven as the ''yang'' (masculine) aspect and earth as the ''yin'' (feminine) aspect. Human beings should maintain harmony and balance between the two spheres, as what happens on earth influences heaven, and vice-versa. Thus, at a very early period, the Chinese developed an empathetic relationship with both Heaven and the natural world. Heaven was thus not separate from nature, and later it would be conceived impersonally as the principle governing nature.
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Although the teachings of [[Confucius]] (551–479 B.C.E.) do not seem particularly [[theism|theistic]], he apparently believed in Heaven and believed himself to be guided by Heaven. Confucius delved into the practical questions of how one should live in order to implement the will of heaven and therefore uphold peace, harmony and justice within society. For purposes of implementing the will, he stressed the concept of ''li'' which had previously referred to ritual, but was nuanced under his influence, coming to be refer to "propriety." By bringing personal, familial and societal roles into harmony, one could achieve ''li'', the basis for putting the Mandate of Heaven into action. Heaven is the foundation for all of which is good, the ultimate aid in attaining a life of ''[[ren]]'' or "humanity." Therefore, the truly humanistic person always keeps Heaven in mind.
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[[Mozu]] (470-390 B.C.E.) expanded upon this idea, claiming Heaven to be the absolute source of goodness, and the principle which differentiates between what is right and what its wrong. Heaven brings what is recognized as beneficial and pleasing for all people in the world, particularly by way of people who seek its goodness through ritual activities such as sacrifice and prayer.
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[[Image:Yin yang.svg|right|thumb|200px|The "yang/yin" symbol of [[Daoism|Daoist]] metaphysical reality, depicting constant change within the unity of the Dao]]
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[[Laozi]], author of the [[Dao De Jing]] and acknowledged founder of [[Daoism]], provided a more pantheistic concept to describe the principle which creates and sustains the world, which he called the [[Dao]]. Simply put, the Dao is the way: the ultimate, ineffable principle which contains the entirety of the universe, yet also embodies nothingness as its nature. It is all things, but it is also no particular thing. Thus, the Dao, in its totality, represents the central unifying [[metaphysics|metaphysical]] and naturalistic principle pervading the entire universe. While the Dao is indescribable and incapable of full human understanding, it is not altogether indiscernible. That is, if one can look beyond the surface of things, they can potentially begin to see the Way of the universe, and come to a realization of their own place as a product of and participant within this Way. The Dao is also responsible for creation, oscillating between two contrasting creative energies which exist in diametric opposition, the yin and the yang. The yin and the yang put in place the dualities which persist in the physical world. Therefore, the Dao, while not personalistic by any means, embodies many of the definitive traits of God in other traditions.
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Later on, more personalistic conceptions of divinity would arise. In the Daoist tradition which followed, Laozi himself came to be viewed as the human incarnation of the Dao, and was venerated as a personal god. As well, numerous other people who followed the Dao were recognized as heavenly figures, or ''xians'' ("immortals"), and henceforth were acknowledged held a measure of supremacy in folk religious circles.
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The movement known as [[neo-Confucianism]] developed a more philosophical concept of God. Called the '''Supreme Ultimate''', it was originally a Daoist concept that was developed into a Confucian metaphysics by [[Zhou Dunyi]] (1017–1073). He incorporated the cosmology of the Book of Changes (''[[I Ching]]'') into [[Confucianism]] through his groundbreaking work, ''Taijitu Shuo'' (“Explanation of the Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate”). According to the ''I Ching'', the process of creation begins from the Great Ultimate, out of which originate the polarity of yin (tranquility) and yang (movement), which through their interaction give rise to the Five Elements ([[fire]], [[earth]], [[water]], [[metal]], and [[wood]]). The integration of these entities gives rise to male and female elements, which in turn generates the production and evolution of all things. Zhou taught that human beings receive all these qualities and forces in their “highest excellence,” and that when man reacts to the external phenomena thus created, the distinction between good and evil emerges in his thought and conduct.
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==Types of Belief about God==
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Given the vast number of concepts about God, [[religion|religious]] scholars and [[theology|theologians]] have created a number of classifications to describe them. These include:
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* '''[[Theism]]''' describes the belief that God is both transcendent and immanent. Thus, God is infinite and ineffable, yet also present in the affairs of the world. God's immanence is attributed to [[miracle]]s or [[revelation]]s given to humanity (for example, holy scriptures), whereby God takes initiative in contacting humanity. Even everyday human experiences such as those of "love," "goodness," or "truth" can be interpreted as affirmations of God's involvement in creation. Typically, God in theism is personal, having human form and dynamic emotionality. Most theists hold that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and unfailingly benevolent, although this belief raises questions about how God relates to [[evil]] and suffering in the world. To remedy this difficulty, some theists ascribe to God a self-consciousness or else purposefully place limits upon his omnipotence, omniscience, and/or benevolence. Theism is by far the most common idea about God among believers in the [[Abrahamic religion]]s.
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* '''[[Deism]]''' developed in response to the cruel wars of religion that ravaged [[Europe]] in the seventeenth century. It rejects God's involvement in worldly affairs—i.e., to set up religions and give special revelations in scriptures—because these revelations and religions are incommensurate with one another. Rather, what can be known about God must be universal and accessible by reason. Deists like [[Voltaire]] (1694-1778) in [[France]] compared God to a "watchmaker" who set the universe in motion but does not subsequently intervene in what transpires. All valid laws of [[morality]] and religion are expressions of the fundamental principle by which God created the universe, and not a special revelation to any particular church. Humans ought to be moral because the consequences of not doing so are built into the fabric of the universe just like the law of gravity. In this way, deism is highly reconcilable with scientific thought. On the other hand, there is no point in praying to God or asking for His help, for God has no interest in human beings aside from setting up a universe hospitable to them.
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* '''[[Henotheism]]''' is the academic classification placed upon religious belief systems which accept or have accepted the existence of many gods, but worship one particular deity as supreme. This may take the form of a system in which one god rises to supremacy over others in a process of [[mythology|mythological]] succession (as did [[Zeus]] among the Greeks). However, it may also refer to systems where various gods exist in order to illustrate aspects of a greater, Supreme Being or essence, such as in [[Vedas|Vedic]] Hinduism. Henotheistic beliefs are very often the precursor to full-fledged [[monotheism]], as the inferior gods gradually fall away and the supreme god or universal principle beyond the gods becomes recognized as the sole divinity.
 
   
 
   
*[[Panentheism]] holds that God contains the Universe but is not identical to, existing beyond it. Panentheism is often compared to pantheism, however, the panentheist God is both immanent ''and'' transcendent, as in Theism. Unlike theism, the panentheist conceptualization of God is less likely to be personalistic, since God is tantamount to the universe while also existing as more than it. Pantheistic sentiments are actually quite common in religious movements, such as the Jewish mystic sect [[Kabbalah]], the [[Liberal Catholic Church]], [[Theosophy]], and many branches of [[Hinduism]].
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* '''[[Monotheism]]''' holds that there is only one God. This has led some traditions to espouse an ''exclusionist'' view, holding that their definition of God is the sole correct one. Exclusionist monotheists of one religion can, and often do, consider the God or gods of religions other than their own to be false. For instance, some Christian [[fundamentalism|fundamentalists]] consider all the gods of other religions to be demons in disguise, including even the monotheistic God of [[Islam]]. Others maintain an ''inclusionist'' view, accepting the possibility of more than one definition of God to be true at the same time and/or claiming that the one true God is worshipped in different religions under different names. Eastern religious believers and [[Liberal Christianity|Liberal Christians]] are more likely to assume that adherents of other faiths worship the same God as they, albeit with different attributes due to cultural influences. More so than any other religious classification, monotheism has been conceived of as an "ideal" towards which all spiritual endeavors should strive; hence it is the classification which often plays the most significant role in discussions of God.
  
==Conceptions of God==
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* '''[[Pantheism]]''' refers to the belief that God is the universe and the universe is God. In this system, God is fully immanent, imbuing all of reality with a spiritual basis, while simultaneously retaining status as transcendent. All of natural law, existence, and the sum total of all that is, was, and ever will be, is represented in the theological principle of God. This means that every object, as well as each individual human, is part of God. Most pantheists do not describe God in personalistic terms, instead conceiving God to be the unconscious, non-sentient universe and the holy majesty its totality entails. [[Baruch Spinoza]] (1632-1677) was a typical pantheist. Interestingly, "death of God" theologian Thomas J.J. Altizer is a pantheist because he believes that the transcendent God as the Wholly Other now died and disappeared to become totally immanent in humanity.
===Ancient Conceptualizations===
 
Many of the earliest conceptualizations of God, it seems, were actually of goddesses. Archaelogical findings suggest that small female figures and cave paintings of females were the dominant modes for worship in the Paleolithic times (35000-10000 B.C.E.) and later. These depictions typically focus upon the reproductive parts, specifically emphasizing large breasts, the pregnant womb, and the vagina. These parts represented women's creative and preservative traits, such as the production of new life and provision of nourishment. Extrapolating upon these figures, it seems that the female was connected to teh earth as the source of the life cycle. The frequent appearance of these figures in archaeological finds, and the lack of comparable male forms, hs lead some archaeologists and religious scholars to suggest that earliest human conception of the deity was as a goddess with male as the subordinate partner. Some thinkers, such as Sjoo and Mor, brazenly cliam that God was conceived as female for the first 200 000 years of human life upon the earth as we know it, perhaps having been carried on from later Cro-Magnon beliefs.
 
 
   
 
   
Later findings from Catal Huyuk in what is now Turkey suggest that settlements existing between 6500 and 5500 B.C.E. also held the goddess in highest esteem. Certain rooms in living quarters exclusively show paintings of Goddess, suggesting the importance of women and fertility in providing sustenance for life. Some rooms even feature pictures of female vulture near headless bodies, perhaps suggesting that it is the female principle which takes life back into herself in order to create life new. Buildings and artifacts suggest that in the Indus Valley of modern day north India, a religious system that would wield some influence on later Hinduism, the goddess was also of particular importance. This civilization, which flourished from 2500-1800 C.E., seems to have placed the Goddess and Mother in primacy, evident from the number of female depictions found. They were no doubt revered due to their place as source of fertility and life. Many of these themes disappeared when the militaristic Aryans invaded the Indus Valley. The goddess virtually disappears in the Vedas, which were composed by the invading Aryans, suggesting the Goddess was supplanted by the god in this region. Marja Gimbutas has extended these findings to argue that there was once an agrarian culture centred in Europe in ancient times which worshipped the goddess. These peaceful people were, in theory, overtaken by patrilineal Russian invaders who assimilated the European goddess worshippers into their patriarchal culture. However, the reconstruction of such evidence is largely conjectural and in need of further evidence.
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* '''[[Panentheism]]''' holds that God contains the universe but is not identical to it; thus God exists beyond the universe as well as within it. Panentheism is often compared to pantheism; however, the panentheist God is both immanent ''and'' transcendent, as in theism. In contrast to theism, the panentheist God is less likely to be personalistic. Despite the fact that the term has only recently come into currency within religious circles, panentheistic sentiments are actually quite common in religious movements, such as the Jewish [[Kabbalah|Kabbalists]], the [[Liberal Catholic Church]], [[process theology]], and many branches of [[Hinduism]].
  
===Early monotheism===
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* '''[[Monism]]''' believes that the totality of things and phenomena in the world can be reduced to a single type of entity, whether it may be material, spiritual, substantial, or divine. The term "monism," derived from the Greek ''monos'' (meaning one), was introduced by [[Christian Wolff]] (1679-1754), and it is opposed to [[dualism]] and [[pluralism]]. Monists differ considerably in their choice of a reduced unifying entity. If it is a deity, they are pantheists like Spinoza. If it is a mind, they are idealists like [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]] (1770-1831). If it is a material thing, they are materialists ([[atheism|atheists]]) like some of the [[Pre-Socratic philosophy|Pre-Socratic philosophers]].
  
The religions that are monotheistic today are often thought of as having been of relatively recent historical origin — although  efforts at comparison are usually beset by claims of most religions to being very ancient or eternal. The worship of polytheistic gods, on the other hand, is seen by many to predate monotheism. Today, monotheistic religions are dominant, though other systems of belief still exist.
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* '''[[Atheism]]''' refers most generally to a lack of belief in God or gods. The term has a variety of meanings ranging from a disbelief in certain conceptions of God (e.g., a personal God) to full-fledge denial that God exists. Such ideas have been present since antiquity. The hedonistic Carvaka school, which flourished in India between 600 B.C.E. and 1400 C.E.., held that the only entities in existence were material, and that all the pleasures of life should be indulged since there was no possibility of god or [[afterlife]] to speak of. Similarly, in [[Ancient Greece|Greece]] during the fourth century B.C.E., philosopher [[Epicurus]] put forth the view that people should disavow faith in the gods and the notion of an afterlife in order to enjoy the immediate sensory pleasures. During the [[Age of Enlightenment]], atheism resurfaced as the philosophical position of a rapidly growing minority, led by the openly atheistic works of [[Paul Baron d'Holbach]] (1723-1789). In the nineteenth century, [[Ludwig Feuerbach]] (1804-1872) claimed God was a fictional projection fabricated by humanity. This idea greatly influenced [[Karl Marx]] (1818-1883), the founding father of communism. Atheism would become the official position of the various communist states such as the [[Soviet Union]] and the [[People's Republic of China]]. [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] (1844-1900) summed up the nineteenth-century popularity of atheism when he coined the aphorism "God is dead." "Death of God" theologian [[William Hamilton]], in fact, became an atheist. By the twentieth century atheism became common, as [[rationalism]] and [[humanism#secular humanism|secular humanism]] came in vogue.
 
====Ancient Egyptian====
 
The notion of one god, transcendent to the entire universe grew in several instances out of henotheism. One example comes from the iconoclastic cult of the Egyptian solar god [[Aten]], which was promoted by the [[pharoah]] [[Akhenaten]] (Amenophis IV), who ruled between 1358 and 1340 B.C.E. Upon inheriting the throne, Akhenaten brought Aten from relative obscurity among the other gods and made Him synonymous with the sun, which was viewed as the single most powerful entity among Egyptians. Furthermore, Aten came to represent a more personal conception of the divine than the other gods that had been primarily the focus of public ritual in temples. As these other gods in the pantheon came to be perceived as inferior to Aten, their idols were destroyed. Even though such works as  [[Akhenaten]]'s [[Great Hymn to the Aten|hymn to Aten]] offers strong evidence that Akhenaten considered Aten to be the sole, omnipotent creator, Akhenaten's program to enforce this monotheistic worldview ended with his death. The worship of gods other than Aten never fully ceased outside Akhenaten's court, and the older polytheistic cults soon regained precedence. However, the Aten cult could still be classified one of the earliest known examples of monotheism, and it is claimed by some scholars to have possibly been a formative influence on early Judaism, due to the presence of Israelite slaves in Egypt.
 
 
====Zoroastrianism====
 
[[Zoroastrianism]] provides another example of early monotheistic belief. Zarathushstra founded Zoroastrianism sometime between the eighteenth and sixteenth centuries B.C.E. as a reacion against Indo-Iranian polytheism and ritualism. He merged the various notions of divinity found within these faiths into one all-encompassing deity called Ahura Mazda ("Wise Lord"). Zarathushtra set his teachings apart from contemporary Iranian traditions by insisting that worship be dedicated solely to the Wise Lord. Although Ahura Mazda is the supreme power in the universe,  he cannot, however, be considered completely all-powerful. Ahura Mazda is described as inherently good, just and moral, and as such creates only good thing, a seeming limitation to His power. Zoroastrians attribute the existence of evil to two subsidiary moral spirits who Ahura Mazda is said to have fathered: Spenta Manyu is the good one, while Angra Manyu is evil. Although such a conception limitis Ahura Mazda's power, he is consistently portrayed as victorious over evil, which marks him as the supreme entity. Later Zoroastrianism also includes some other polytheistic elements, such as the existence of angelic beings called the Amesha Spentas, who are seen as emanations of Ahura Mazda which put in place the supreme god's will in the physical world.
 
  
===Greek definitions of God===
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==Names of God==
While Greek religion is known for its polytheisitic religion, the notion of God in more singular or unified form was entertained my numerous thinkers. Early thinkers suggested various natural elements which seemed to provide the pantheisitic essence for the universe such as Anaximenes (who claimed the essence to be air) or Thales (who thought the substance was water). Eventually these concepts came to be more abstract and beyond the physical world. Anaximander, for instance, proposed an uncreated and indestructible being which could not itself be considered a thing, yet was responsible for the existence of all things, ruling them all. For Pythagoreans, all things were ruled by mathematics and geometry. Xenophanes propounded the idea of a changeless, undestroyable and unity which possessed infinite intelligence as was present in all things, which he called the  "All-One" . He claimed this notion of unity and oneness to be the highest and most reasonable form of religious thought.
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[[Image:Tetragrammaton_scripts.svg|thumb|200px|right|[[YHWH]], the name of God or [[Tetragrammaton]], in [[Phoenician language|Phoenician]] (1100 B.C.E.. to 300 C.E.), [[Aramaic]] (tenth century B.C.E.. to 0) and modern Hebrew scripts]]
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The noun '''God''' is the proper English name used for the deity of [[Monotheism|monotheistic]] faiths. Names of God, however, are innumerable, varying with religious traditions and over time.  
  
These ruminations no doubt culminated in the later philosophical monotheism of Plato and Aristotle. Plato construed god as representative of the single good which existed in contrast to the physical world evil, which was in constant flux and therefore evil. This "Form of the Good" exists beyond specific instances of good in the world, because each of these particulars was also subject to mutability and therefore not eternal. The point of life was to rise up from all that is ugly, evil and fallacious and realize the true Good. Plato also believed their exists a demiurge who brings the transient appearances of the Form of the Good into existence. Likewise, Aristotle, the famous student of Plato, believed that truth can be found within a proper understanding of the natural world, which is attributable to its ultimate source. This source, also known as the First Mover  is immutable and indivisible, and represents the ultimate ground of truth as to why all things exist with the characteristics they do and how they came into being. In searching for truth, humans are therefore participating in god. Both Plato and Aristotle's conception of the highest entity in the universe would go on to wield massive influence on the conceptions of God in the Abrahamic faiths.
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'''[[Yahweh]]''' ('''יהוה''') <small>(ya•'we)</small> is the primary [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] name of [[God]] in the [[Hebrew Bible|Bible]]. [[Jew]]s normally do not pronounce this name, considering it too holy to verbalize. Instead, whenever they encounter this unpronounceable string of consonants, they speak the name ''Adonai''. In Christian Bibles, Yahweh is usually translated as "the L<small>ORD</small>," a rough equivalent to the Hebrew "Adonai." The Hebrew Bible indicates this reading by inserting the vowel pointing from the word ''Adonai'' on the consonants YHWH, rather than use the actual vowels. Based on a literal reading of this pointing ('''יְהוָֹה'''), many modern Protestant Christians read God's name as '''Jehovah'''. Orthodox Jews strenuously avoid mentioning or even writing the divine name, preferring such circumlocutions as "the Holy One," "the Name," or the defective writing "G-d."
  
===Abrahamic conceptions===
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'''[[Elohim]]''' is the generic term for God in the Hebrew Bible, translated "God." In the days of the Hebrew patriarchs, God was called by names such as ''El Shaddai'' (“God Almighty”), ''El Elyon'' (“God Most High”), and ''El Berit'' (“God of the Covenant”). These terms for God are based on the Hebrew word [[El]], which can mean a generic divine being ("god") or the [[Canaan|Canaanite]] god "El" who was head of the older Canaanite pantheon in the second millennium B.C.E.
[[Image:Creation of the Sun and Moon face detail.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Michelangelo]]'s view of God in the painting ''Creation of the Sun and Moon'' in the [[Sistine Chapel]])]]
 
  
[[Judaism]], [[Christianity]] and [[Islam]] conceive of God as a being who created the world and rules over the universe. God is usually held to have the properties of [[holiness]] (in that He is separate from sin and incorruptible), [[Justice|justness]] (being fair, right, and true in all His judgments),  [[sovereignty]] (unthwartable in His will), [[omnipotence]] (all-powerful), [[omniscience]] (all-knowing), [[omnibenevolence]] (all-loving), [[omnipresence]] (everywhere-present), and [[immortality]] (eternal and everlasting). Moreover, this god is seen as deeply involved in history rather than detached from it, often appearing at various junctures through time in order to alter the fate of the physical world. In this way, Jews, Christians and Muslims often conceive of God as a [[personal God]], possessing with an explicit will and personality. Even God's physiognomy is marked by anthropomorphic traits, as is evident in the Book of Genesis 1:27 where it is stated "God said let us make man in our image, after our likeness." Also, God is almost always referred to in the masculine sense. Many medieval [[rationalist]] philosophers in each of these religions put forth the view that one should not conceive of God as personal in the literal sense, as such perceptions limit His transcendent majesty. Rather, they claimed that such personal descriptions of God should only be intended as [[metaphor]]s. Some within these three faiths still accept such a view as valid, although the majority of the [[laity]] today do not have a wide awareness of them. Despite the Abrahamic God's similarity to these worldly forms of humans, each of these faiths are also highly dualistic, and God is wholly seperate from the world.  
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When [[Moses]] at the burning bush asked God, "What is your name?," he was given the answer, ''Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh'', commonly translated, "I am that I am," or "I am what I shall be," referring to his unconditional self-existence (Exod. 3:14).  
  
==== Biblical definition of God====
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Muslims refer to God as '''[[Allah]]'''. It is not God's personal name, but simply [[Arabic language|Arabic]] for "the God." The term ''Allah'' is by no means exclusive to Islam, and is commonly used by [[Arab Christians]], [[Mizrahi Jew|Arab Jews]], and Malteste Catholics (among others) in order to refer to the [[monotheism|monotheist]] [[deity]]. [[Linguistics|Linguists]] believe that the term ''Allāh'' is derived from a contraction of the Arabic words ''al'' (the) + ''ilah'' ("male deity")—the Arabic cognate of the Hebrew word ''El.''
The [[Hebrew Bible]] contains no systematic theology, in that no attempt is made to give a [[Philosophy|philosophical]] or rigorous definition of God.  In fact, God's nature seems to be left ambiguous in order to render His nature mysterious. This is exemplified by God's assertion in [[Exodus]] that "you cannot see my face; for man shall not see me and live". God's traits, therefore, are portrayed as existing beyond human comprehension. Furthermore, nowhere in the Hebrew Bible are the words [[omnipotence|omnipotent]], [[omniscience|omniscient]], or [[omnibenevolence|omnibenevolent]] used to define God in a systematic sense. Although Scripture does not describe God systematically, it does provide a poetic depiction of God and His relationship with people.  Biblical texts make evident that God that cares about people, and also that He cares about whether people care about Him.
 
 
God according to the Bible is characterized not just as Creator, but also as the "Heavenly Father". As this title would imply, in the [[Hebrew Bible]] ([[Old Testament]])  he is marked by a number of personalistic traits. Exodus 34:6-7 describes him suchly : "The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children's children, to the third and the fourth generation." Here was see god described as being capable of a wide variety of moods ranging from loving and gentle to irascible and vengeful.
 
 
Like the Old Testament, the [[New Testament]] contains little systematic theology. No philosophical or rigorous definition of God is given, nor of how God acts in the world; however the first of John's letters states: "''God is [[light]]''" ([[1 John]] 1:5), before he states: "''God is [[love]]''" ([[1 John]] 4:8). This seems to insinuate god's existence beyond the world yet his action within it to sustain it. The New Testament also seems to provide an implicit theology as it teaches that God interacted and connected directly with people, in the person of [[Jesus]], and that he subsequently sent the [[Holy Spirit]] to maintain this link. Through the person of Jesus, God becomes someone that can be seen and touched, and may speak and act in a manner easily perceived by humans, while also remaining transcendent and invisible to the naked eye. This appears to be a radical departure from the concepts of God found in Hebrew Bible. The New Testament's statements regarding the nature of God were eventually developed into the doctrine of the [[Trinity]].
 
  
==== God as Trinity ====
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"God" is the common name for the supreme deity in Christianity. Other terms include the [[Trinity]], which denotes the "three-in-one" constituent parts of the penultimate God. Churches such as the [[United Church of Canada]] and [[Religious Science]] currently use the term "the One" alongside "God" as a more gender-neutral cognomen for God. In the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, God is called ''Igzi'abihier'' ("Lord of the Universe").  
In 325, the Council of Nicaea declared that Jesus Christ, as the son of God, is consisted of the same substance as the Father. This was extended with the addition of the Holy Spirit, the worldly manifestation of God within human beings, into the formulation that god was three persons composed of one substance. God, therefore, is a single Being who consists, simultaneously and eternally, of three persons. Since the 4th Century AD, in both Eastern and Western Christianity, this doctrine has been stated as "One God in Three Persons," all three of whom share a single Divine essence. Supporting the doctrine of the Trinity is known as Trinitarianism. Trinitarians hold that the three persons have the same purpose, holiness, and sovereignty, and therefore each can be worshipped as God, without violating the idea that there is only one God to which worship belongs. Christianity readily adopted the doctrine of the trinity as a mainstream belief, and other views of god were considered heretical. As such, the majority of Christians today are still trinitarian.
 
  
Some alternative views have been provided, however, such as Arianism, founded by the early Christian theologian Arius (256-336 C.E.),who claimed that the Son, while still divine, was subordinate to the Father. A similar view is held by the contemporary Jehovah's Witnesses. [[Sabellianism|Sabellius]], a third century theologian, claimed that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are actually different modalities of one God as perceived by humans, rather than three distinct persons spawned from the essence of the one God. [[Mormon]]s believe that the three personas are in reality three separate divine personages.  One of these personages is a spirit without a body referred to as the [[Holy Ghost]]. The other two personages, [[Heavenly Father]] and his son, Jesus Christ, are resurrected beings with ''perfected'' or ''celestial'' bodies . Mormons hold that God is a ''Holy Man'' who advanced to his divine status through a repeatable process of progression. They believe that by following their religion's teachings, humans can literally become gods at some point after their own death and [[resurrection]], a process called [[Exaltation]].
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Among [[Hinduism|Hindus]], there are thousands of names for the supreme divinity, including '''[[Brahman]]''' and '''[[Ishvara]]'''. Brahman is that infinite, omnipresent, omnipotent, incorporeal, transcendent and immanent Reality that is the ground of all being. ''Ishvara'' (Supreme Lord) is the term used for the personalistic God; it is the more popular form of God in Hinduism. Most Hindus worship one or another personal form of ''Ishvara'' in its various roles of preserver [[Vishnu]], destroyer [[Shiva]], or creator [[Brahma]]. A common prayer is the [[Vishnu sahasranama]], a hymn describing the one thousand names of God. ''Ishvara'' is a monotheistic concept; it should not be confused with the numerous deities of the Hindu pantheon.
  
[[Islam|Muslims]], [[Judaism|Jews]], and a small fraction of [[Christianity|Christians]] are ''unitarian monotheists'', referring to the fact that they believe in god as an undivided one and nothing else. [[Unitarian]] monotheists hold that there is only one "person" (so to speak), and often consider Trinitarian beliefs to reflect a form of polytheism. As well, not all non-Christian religions disavow multiplicities consisted from a supreme god. [[Hasidic Judaism|Hasidic Jews]] holds that there are ten [[Sephirah|Sefirot]] (emanations) of God, each of which is more distinct than a mere characteristic of god, but less distinct than a separate personage. Some sects of Hinduism also recognize the Trimurti, a conception of three major gods (see below).
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[[Sikhs]] worship God with the name ''Akal'' (the eternal) or ''Sat'' (truth). Help of the [[guru]]s is essential to reach God, who is conceived as the ultimate guru. Hence, Sikhs most frequently refer to God by the title ''Wahiguru'' (or "wonderful guru").  
  
==== Binitarianism ====
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The name of God is consistently capitalized in English writings. The development of English orthography was dominated by [[Christianity|Christian]] texts. In early English bibles, the [[Tetragrammaton]] was rendered in capitals: "IEHOUAH" in [[William Tyndale]]'s version of 1525. The [[King James Version]] of 1611 renders ''[[YHWH]]'' as "The <font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font>," ''[[Elohim]]'' as "God," ''Adonay YHWH'' and ''Adonay Elohim'' as "<font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font> God," and ''kurios ho theos'' as "<font style="font-variant:small-caps">Lord</font> God" (in the [[New Testament]]). Capitalized "God" was first used to refer to the Judeo-Christian concept, and may now signify any monotheistic conception of God, including the translations of the [[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''[[Allah|Allāh]]'' and the African [[Masai]] ''[[Engai]]''. The use of capitalization, as for a proper noun, has usually persisted to disambiguate the concept of a singular ''God'' from [[pagan]] deities for which lowercase ''god'' has continued to be applied. Pronouns referring to God are also often capitalized and are traditionally in the masculine [[gender (grammar)|gender]], i.e., "He," "His," etc. However, in more recent times, God has sometimes been referred to in feminine terms, such as "She" and "Her."
[[Binitarianism]] is an alternative view within Christianity that there were originally two beings in the Godhead. These two are most commonly held to be the Father and the Word that became the Son (Jesus the Christ). Binitarians normally believe that God is a family, currently consisting and the Son and the Father to whom he is subordinate. Some binitarians believe that others will ultimately be born into that divine family. Binitarians, claim their views were held by the original New Testament Church, and consider the trinity to be a fabrication of later Christian hegemony. Scholars of early Christian theology suggest that binitarianism developed out of circles existing during the Apostolic era which worshipped (Jesus) in a manner that in Judaism would be reserved for God alone, while still affirming the Judaic notion that God is one.  
 
  
In modern times, this view is most commonly associated with some branches of the Worldwide Church of God. Unlike most [[unitarians]] and [[trinitarians]] who tend to identify themselves by the given terms applied to them, binitarians normally do not refer to their belief in the duality of the Godhead, with the Son subordinate to the Father, as binitarianism, and the term is commonly bestowed upon them by scholars and theologians to place them in contrast to trinitarian theology. Although some critics prefer to use the term ditheist or dualist instead of binitarian, those terms suggests that God is not one, rather than representing the more accurate binitarians belief that God is one family. For early Christian binatarians, Jesus remained consistently subordinate to the Father, seeminlgy in order to avoid ditheism of two entities.
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==Images of God==
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[[Image:God2-Sistine Chapel.png|thumb|350px|''The Creation of Adam'' by [[Michelangelo]], from the ceiling of the [[Sistine Chapel]]]]
  
==== Kabbalistic and Hasidic definitions of God ====
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Religious attitudes towards images can be divided into two groups. Some religions reject images of the deity, believing that the creation and veneration of icons is tantamount to [[idolatry]]. Other religions accept images as helpful aids to focus devotions and as a conduit between the worshiper and the ineffable God.  
Mainstream Orthodox [[Judaism]] teaches that although God is the creator of both [[matter]] nor [[spirit]], he is himself neither. This teaching has raised questions among some as to how can there be any interaction between the Creator and the created if God is so different from it. In response, early [[Kabbalah|Kabbalists]] ([[Judaism|Jewish]] [[mysticism|mystics]]) envisioned two aspects of God, firstly, God himself, who in the end is unknowable, and secondly, the revealed aspect of God who created and preserves the universe, interacts with mankind in a personal way. Kabbalists believe that these two aspects are not contradictory but complement one another.
 
  
This view has been developed further in [[Hasidism|Hasidic]] and anti-nomian circles, however. [[Kabbalah]] teaches that in order to create the universe, God "withdrew," and created the universe within the space from which "He" contracted. It is taught in the [[Zohar]] that God, at the beginning of creation, shattered ten ספירות ("sephiroth") or כלים ("kaylim" or "vessels") scattering their fragments throughout the universe. The [[Sephirah (Kabbalah)|sephiroth]] &#0151; represented by the so-called עץ חיים ("Etz Hayim" or "[[Tree of life (Kabbalah)|Tree of Life]]") &#0151; are comprised of different vessels embodying various emanations of God's being. Each of these sephiroth is more distinct than a mere characteristic of god, but less distinct than a separate personage, thereby precluding the perception that such a doctrine is polytheistic. Over time, this view evolved into the belief that all of existence was in fact God itself, and that humanity is imbued with an inherent Godliness which we must grapple to come to terms with it. The standing view in neo-Hasidism, currently, is that there is nothing in existence other than God, as is stated in the ancient Kabbalistic incantation, אין עוד מילבדו ("Ain od milvado") &#0151; "There is nothing but God." Thus, it has become understood that God used God's self to form the universe.  
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Viewing images as idolatrous misrepresentations of the true God has led in various historical periods to [[iconoclasm]], the destruction of images. One very early example of iconoclasm occurred in [[Egypt]] during the fourteenth century B.C.E.. when pharaoh [[Akhenaten]] declared the solar God [[Aten]] to be solely supreme, and then ordered that images of gods other than Aten be destroyed.  
  
====Quranic definitions of God====
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Archaeological evidence indicates that the ancient [[Israelites]] rejected the worship of images, which were common enough in neighboring [[Canaan]]ite culture. Israelite shrines typically have only one or more smooth standing stones, called a ''Massebah'', near to the altar. The Second Commandment in the [[Hebrew Bible]] explicitly states: "Thou shalt not make unto me any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above" (Exod. 20:4-5). With this in mind, contemporary [[Jew]]s scrupulously avoid any paintings, sculptures or drawings of God.  
''Allah'' ([[Arabic language|Arabic]] ''allāhu'' الله) is traditionally used by [[Muslim]]s as the Arabic word for "[[God]]", not as "God's personal [[name]]", but the equivalent of the Hebrew word [[El]] as opposed to [[YHWH]]. The word ''Allah'' is not specific to [[Islam]]; [[Arab Christians]] and [[Mizrahi Jew|Arab Jews]] also use it to refer to the [[monotheist]] [[deity]]. Arabic translations of the [[Bible]] also employ it, as do the [[Catholics]] of [[Malta]] who pronounce it as "Alla" in [[Maltese language|Maltese]], a language derived from  Arabic. As well [[Christians]] in [[Indonesia]], use the term, pronouncing it "Allah Bapa" (Allah the Father). Many [[Linguistics|linguists]] believe that the term ''Allāh'' is derived from a contraction of the Arabic words ''al'' (the) + ''ilah'' ("male deity"). In addition, one of the main pagan goddesses of pre-Islamic Arabia, [[Allat|Allāt]] (''al'' + ''ilāh'' + ''at'', or 'the female deity'), is cited as being [[Etymology|etymologically]] (though not synchronically) the feminine linguistic counterpart to the grammatically masculine Allah. If so, the word ''Allāh'' is an abbreviated title, meaning 'the deity', rather than a name. For this reason, both Muslim and non-Muslim scholars often translate Allāh directly into English as 'God' especially the [[Quran Alone]] Muslims. However, some Muslim scholars feel that "Allāh" should not be translated, because it expresses the supreme divinity's unique traits more accurately than "God", which can take a plural as "gods", whereas "Allāh" cannot.  This is a significant issue in [[translation of the Qur'an]].  This also explains why Arabic-speaking Jews and Christians freely refer to God as Allāh.
 
  
Muslims conceive God as One, with monotheism forming the cornerstone to their faith. Just as in the other Abrahamic faiths, Muslims claimed the worship of one god to be the only acceptable form of religious faith, and place themselves in direct opposition to polytheists and idolators. Allah is all truth and the source of all creation, therefore Allah alone is the sole entity for worship, and no other gods are to be acknowledged or worshipped without exceptions. With this in place, Muslims deny all forms of polytheism, as well as the Christian notion of the Trinity, which they also claim to be polytheistic. There is no existence or supernatural powers to be worshipped other than Allah. To attribute the traits of Allah upon any other god is considered by Muslims to be the only unforgiveable sin.
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[[Image:Allah.svg|thumb|right|150px|Islam does not allow pictorial representations of God; this image is Arabic calligraphy of the name ''Allah'']]
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Likewise, [[Islam]] strictly forbids any image of God. The manufacture of [[idol]]s falls under the scope the mortal sin termed ''shirk'', which in the [[Qur'an]] refers to any action or belief which does service to some force or entity other than the one God Allah. The second category of ''shirk'' is called ''Shirk in al-Asma was-Sifat'' (the Names and Attributes of Allah) and refers to the practice of confounding Allah with the attributes of his creation. By portraying Allah in the form and qualities of either human beings, animals, or other objects, one does not actually create an image of the divine, but rather creates a false idol, since Allah is irreconcilably beyond form. Thus, images of God are banned outright in most sects of Islam in order to reinforce absolute [[monotheism]] and to eliminate potential for idolatry.
The Qu'ran speaks  [[99 names of God]] in order to describe Allah. Most of these "names" found in the Qur'an are not actually epithets, but rather attributes which Allah embodies. Many of these names portray Allah in highly personalistic terms, often claiming Allah as having the abilities to "see" and "hear", which has sparked controversy among Muslim theologians scholarship, some of whom claim that such passages insinuate God has a particular form, limited by senses. In general, the conclusion has been reached that if God does see and hear, he does so in a manner unworth of comparison  to human sensations as they are known. One, however, Al Haq, meaning The Truth, seems to equate to Allah absolute truth as that which cannot be negated. Al Haq is more than a reflection of faith in the existence of The God, and links the concept of God to all creation forever. Thus Allah transcends the prophetic origins of Islam and is thus universal in all time and applies to all existence in the past, present, and future. These traits speak to the the fact that Allah is completely transcendent and therefore wholly separate from humanity.  However, he is said to immanent within the world, as well, a process which is carried out through the revelation given to prophets, the most important of which is Mohammed.  
 
  
====Negative theology====
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Christianity in the Apostolic era maintained the thorough denunciation of images of God taught by the Jews. However, Saint [[John of Damascus]] (676-749 C.E.) would later claim that images of God in the form of [[Jesus of Nazareth|Jesus]] should be permitted, as the person Jesus marks a shift in God's nature from invisible to visible. In the present day, depictions of God are common in [[Christianity]], particularly in the form of Christ and sometimes even as the Heavenly Father. Both the [[Roman Catholic Church|Catholic]] and [[Greek Orthodoxy|Orthodox]] churches have traditionally venerated images and icons of Christ (whom Christians believe to be the second person of the Godhead), as well as those of [[angel]]s and [[saint]]s. During the [[Protestant Reformation]], many reformers condemned such use of images as [[idolatry|idolatrous]]. Some took drastic measures to suppress the use of images of the divine in worship, such as [[John Calvin]] (1509-1564), who commonly ordered that church walls be white-washed. Contemporary Protestant groups have softened their position toward the use of images; they display the [[Cross]] prominently as a symbol in worship, and accept all manner of images of God and Jesus for purposes of education.
Some Jewish, Christian and Muslim [[medieval]] philosophers developed what is termed as [[negative theology]] (sometimes called [[apophatic]] theology), the idea of approaching knowledge of God through negative attributes rather than positive statements. In negative theology, it is assumed that human language can never truly express the purview of God. Instead, that person who wishes to understand god must go beyond words. In this sense, negative theology is not a denial of what god is, but rather an exploration of what the Divine might be.  For example, a negative theologian might claim that we should not say that God exists in the usual sense of the term. Rather, we would be better off claiming that God is not nonexistent. We should not say that God is wise, but we can say that God is not ignorant. We should not say that God is One, but we can state that there is [[divine simplicity|no multiplicity in God's being]]. Rather than asserting what god is, negative theologians discuss what God is not. This kind of theology is often allied with or expressed in tandem with mystical traditions, which commonly focuses on a spontaneous or cultivated individual experience of the divine reality beyond the realm of ordinary perception, an experience often unmediated by the structures of traditional organized religion. As well, mystical experiences are described as exceeding the boundaries of human language, therefore, only statements about mystical experience of god may be better suited for such a theology of negation.
 
  
===Conceptions of God in Hinduism===
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[[Hinduism]] employs of images and icons to depict the divine. Many Hindus regard icons to be necessary for human religious activity, since human experience is mediated by the senses. Statues of the deity are often at the center of religious devotion, which may include ritual bathing, decorating and feeding the image. In schools of Mahayana [[Buddhism]], statues of the Buddha as well as of other venerated or enlightened beings are a focus for meditation and devotion. That said, some Hindu and Buddhist schools are critical of images of the divine, believing that such depictions detract from true spiritual awareness, which transcends all sensory forms.
  
Although the vast varieties of traditions labelled labelled under the heading of Hinduism feature numerous conceptions of the divine, god in Hinduism can be conceived of most simply in two forms. Firstly as Brahman,  which is (at best) described as that infinite, omnipresent, omnipotent, incorporeal, transcedent and immanent Reality that is the diving ground of all Being in this universe, as well as non-being itself. Secondly, God can be conceived of as Ishvara, the personalistic manifestation of god. The [[Sanskrit]] and [[Hindi]] word for God, that is used most commonly, is [[Ishvara]], lit., the Supreme Lord, pronounced as "îshvərə". Hindus generally believe that '''Ishvara''' is only One. This must not be confused with the numerous deities or demi-gods of the Hindus known as [[Deva]]s, which have been reported as numbering as high as 330 million.  
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==Experiencing God==
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===Through faith===
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For many people, the experience of God is something that happens ''to'' them, not something they seek after. Many children are said to have a natural relationship with God. "God needs no pointing out to a child," states an [[Akan]] proverb, and Muhammad once said, "Every child is born of the nature of purity and submission to God" (''Bukhari''). As an adult, God may intrude dramatically into a person's life like an unwelcome guest. [[Paul of Tarsus|Saint Paul]] had such an experience on the road to [[Damascus]], which blinded him for a time and forced him to confront his [[prejudice]] against [[Christianity|Christians]].  
  
====Vedic Henotheism====
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The attitude of faith is said to invite God's presence in one's life. It requires trusting that God exists and is watching over the faithful, as in the [[Qur'an]]: "Put your trust in the Exalted in Might, the Merciful, Who sees you standing forth in prayer... for He hears and sees all things" (Q 26:18-20). Thus, theologian [[Karl Barth]] suggested the ''analogia fidei'': an attitude of humility, self-denial and repentance to make room for God's [[revelation]], the source of authentic information on the living God. Faith requires intellectual humility, as in the proverb: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight" ([[Book of Proverbs|Prov.]] 3:5). Thus Saint [[Augustine of Hippo]], followed by Saint [[Anselm of Canterbury]], proposed the formula "faith seeking understanding" (''fides quaerens intellectum''), according to which faith is the foundation for all knowledge about God. In these ways have ordinary believers always been encouraged to live a life of faith and humility in order to be connected with God. That this way of life is so often successful becomes a reason to believe that God is indeed alive and is the One who "makes straight your paths" (Prov. 3:6).
  
Hinduism of the early Vedas in largely characterized by polytheism or henotheism, with elaborate ritualism and sacrifice prescribed for appeasing various gods. However, these various gods seem to serve the purpose of honouring a greater, more pantheistic or monistic essence underlying the entire universe. These various gods rise to supremacy at various times in Vedic myth, as well as in ritual. Often this supreme God was called Indra, cosmic forces such as Agni, god of fire, Varuna, keeper of the celestial waters, and Vac, speech, each enjoyed places at the top of the Vedic pantheon. The interchangable nature of the supreme god suggests that Vedic henotheism was merely a heuristic activity for a greater, more nebulous reality, with gods and goddesses personalizing various aspects of the supreme divinity in order to render it more accessible. Rig Veda 1:164:46 is famous for making the existence of some divinity beyond the numerous gods explicit, stating that "Truth is One, though the sages know it as many." Such a statement may be interpreted a suggestion of deeper monism or even monotheism, guaging from the later schools of Hinduism that were seemingly on a search to define god as ultimately one; even within these early texts, it seems clear that the Vedic seers were unsatisfied with the idea of their polytheistic pantheon serving as the sole conception of divinity. Although the various gods were invoked in their various departments during ritual and sacrifice, it was evident the seers recognized them as manifestation which underlies all perceived multiplicities. By the time of the Upanishads, early commentaries upon the Vedas, the notion of an ineffable, indescribable Supreme Cosmic Spirit which served as grounds for the entire universe called [[Brahman]] had been developed.
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===In the heart===
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In the West, the [[conscience]] refers to a faculty whereby human beings come to know basic moral truths. This faculty has been described as “the voice of God,” because it represents God's universal law. For example, at Romans 2:14-15, [[Saint Paul]] describes conscience as “bearing witness” to the law of God “inscribed” on the hearts of [[Gentile]]s. In the [[Sufism|Sufi]] traditions of [[Islam]], God is said to dwell "in the heart of My faithful servant" ([[Hadith]] of Suhrawardi). In the Hebrew Bible, the prophet [[Elijah]] encounters God not in the earthquake, but rather in a "still small voice." (1 Kings 19:12) This conception of conscience, as a faculty by which God’s laws and teachings are made known to human beings, is continued in the writings of the church fathers such as [[Jerome|Saint Jerome]] and [[Augustine of Hippo|Saint Augustine]]. In the same vein, philosopher [[Immanuel Kant]] (1724-1804), who denied the possibility of rational proof of God (see below), based his moral proof for the existence of God on the operation of conscience, which he called "practical reason."
  
====Vedanta Schools====
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The Eastern conception of this inward, divine self is variously called the "''Atman''," "original mind" or "Buddha nature." Thus the [[Upanishad]]s: "In the golden city of the heart dwells / The Lord of Love, without parts, without stain" (Mundaka Upanishad 2.2.10). It is not necessarily easy to access this [[Atman]] or “original mind,” which is often covered by the selfish desires of the ego. It requires effort at meditation to strip away those delusions. In the words of the Sixth Patriarch of [[Zen]] Buddhism, [[Hui Neng]]:
The schools of [[Vedanta|Vedantic]] (or "end of the Vedas) are responsible for the further development of this a notion of  Brahman. [[Advaita]] (or "non-dualistic") Vedanta, founded by mystic philosopher Shankara  (700-750 C.E.) , served as the fertile grounds from which one of the first [[Monism|monistic]] philosophies of God was developed. According to [[Shankara]], '''Brahman''' is the only true reality in this world, and everything else is based in illusion (or maya). Maya is that complex illusionary power which causes the Brahman to be perceived as the distinct material world. Also, Shankara differentiated between Nirguna Brahman (Brahman without qualities) and Saguna Brahman (Brahman with qualities). When human beings attempt to understand the attributeless Brahman with their minds, ever under the influence of Maya, Brahman becomes God, or [[Ishvara]] as described as above. Therefore, God in the traditional form with positive attributes (Saguna Brahman) is Brahman conditioned by Maya. He is omniscient, omnipresent, incorporeal, independent, Creator of the world, and also its destroyer, ruling the world with his Maya. However, while God is the Lord of Maya and she (ie, Maya) is always under his control, living beings (jîva, in the sense of humans) are the servants of Maya, in the form of their ignorance, which is the cause of the widespread unhappiness in the mortal world. The Advaita Vedanta philosophy continues with the view that once one comes to fully realize that the distinction between Brahman and all particular things, including the human soul ([[Atman]]), are merely an illusory, they will recognize their own inherent unity with the Brahman and thereby liberate themselves from the material realm.
 
  
Visistadvaita (or "qualified non-dualistic"), the second of the major Vedanta schools founded by mystic saint [[Ramanuja]] (1017-1137 C.E.) , holds that while the self is still connected to Brahman, it is only an incomplete part and not the same as the whole. While god is infinite and represents the cause and effect of the universe, individual atman are limited and  considered to be inferior to Brahman. Brahman, while still remaining ultimately non-dual, is typically perceived by Visistadvaitas as almost or equally important in personalistic Ishvara form. Belief in this deity was claimed by Ramanuja to be of indispensible for purposes of reaching the non-dual Brahman. Individual atman form the body of God, while God forms their soul. Simple realization of the soul's true identity will not suffice for attaining libertion, then, since Brahman and atman are not fully equivalent. Rather, Ramanuja prescribed that one should dedicate and surrender themsevles to Ishvara in a process called [[bhakti]] (or loving devotion). The end result of successful devotion is not a complete merger of the soul with Brahman, but similarly an oppurtunity to share in the nature of God. Madhva's (1238-1317 C.E.) Dvaita (or "dualism") Vedanta, in contrast, denies any connection between brahman and atman. Instead, God is conceived of in wholly personal terms as Ishvara, and is considered totally seperate from the universe and souls within it, displaying significant overlap with Western notions of theism. Nirguna Brahman is rarely acknowledged within this school, which considers the notion of a deity without characteristics to be an intellectual abstraction with no appeal to everyday practices of religion among the laypeople.
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<blockquote>Because the mind labors under delusions, he knows not his own inner nature; and the result is that he ignores the ''Trikaya'' within himself, erroneously believing that they are to be sought from without. Within yourself you will find the ''Trikaya'' which, being the manifestation of the Essence of Mind, are not to be sought from without. (Platform Sutra 6)</blockquote>
  
====Emanational Monotheism====
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Yet to a person dwelling in enlightenment, "This very mind is the Buddha" (Mumonkan 30); or in the inspired mysticism of the Upanishads: "That is Reality. That is the (universal) Self. ''That'' art ''thou''" (Chandogya Upanishad 6.8.7).
Just as with the Vedic tradition, many outside observers interpret the practices of some Hindu sects to be polytheistic in nature. However, just as in the Vedic tradition, describing these Hindus as polytheistic is ultimately an innacurate portrayal of the traditions. Many members of the Hindu faith take the view that it is only through conception of a multiplicity of divine beings that humans can find for themselves what this transcendent, indescribeable force really is. God is made up of innumerable aspects, a consequence of its infinite nature. Therefore, like the Vedic deities, the numerous deities of Hinduism, which have been, reported as numbering as high as 330 million, are necessary to provide personalized emphasis upon certain traits of god. The acknowledgement of many many gods seems to be a heuristic device for probing the nature of one, supreme god which is ultimately inexplicable. One such example is the Hindu [[Trimurti]], which acknowledges three aspects of God in the personae of Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the preserver), and Shiva (the destroyer). These three gods are simply different aspects of the one and the same Ishvara, who is ultimately inconceivable. In this manner, such beliefs are similar to the Sabellian interpretations of the Christian Trinity. Such forms of worship are very much alive in many contemporary Hindu traditions, such as the Smarta school, which believes worship through meditation upon icons ([[murti]]) representing an unlimited number of gods in order to connect with the greater power Brahman which transcends the iconic form. All gods, then, reduce to the same principle which does not exist as a plurality. Such schools of Hinduism are better described as emanational monotheism, where the one monistic principle is perceived as having many emanations or iterations and is given worship through these forms, rather than polytheism proper. Other forms of Hinduism are more explicitly polytheistic. For example, the Mimamsa school recognizes the devas (celestial spirits) as the rulers over the forces of nature, with no particular deva rising above the others as the supreme deity.  
 
  
* In the two largest branches of Hinduism, [[Shaivism]] and [[Vaishnavism]], it is believed that '''Ishvara''' and Brahman are identical, and God is in turn anthromorphically identified with [[Shiva]] or [[Vishnu]]. God, whether in the form of [[Shiva]] or [[Vishnu]] has six attributes. However, the actual number of auspicious qualities of God, are '''countless''', with the following six qualities being the ''most important''.
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===Through reason: arguments for the existence of God===
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{{main|God, Arguments for the Existence of}}
  
* The number six is invariably given, but the individual attributes listed vary. One set of attributes (and their common interpretations) are:
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Rational [[God, Arguments for the Existence of|arguments for the existence of God]] have been developed especially in [[Christianity]]. The three most notable are the [[ontological argument|ontological]], [[cosmological argument|cosmological]], and [[teleological argument]]s. The ontological argument, originally developed by [[Anselm of Canterbury]] (c. 1034-1109), claims that God must exist based on the simple fact that the human intellect can conceive of such a supreme power. In this proof, God is "that than which no greater can be conceived." This position was later reiterated with some modifications by [[René Descartes]] (1596-1650) and [[Gottfried Leibniz]] (1646-1716).  
**''Jnana'' ([[Omniscience]]), defined as the power to know about all beings simultaneously;
 
**''Aishvarya'' ([[Sovereignty]], derived from the word Ishvara), which consists in unchallenged rule over all;
 
**''Shakti'' ([[Energy]]), or power, which is the capacity to make the impossible possible;
 
**''Bala'' ([[Strength]]), which is the capacity to support everything by will and without any fatigue;
 
**''Virya'' ([[Vigour]]), or valour which indicates the power to retain immateriality as the supreme being in spite of being the material cause of mutable creations; and  
 
**''Tejas'' ([[Splendour]]), which expresses his self-sufficiency and the capacity to overpower everything by his spiritual effulgence.; cited from ''Bhakti Schools of Vedanta'', by Swami Tapasyananda.
 
  
* A second set of six characteristics are
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The cosmological argument was first suggested by [[Aristotle]], who claimed that all being and movement cannot originate from nothing and therefore must have an original cause or impulse. There must exist an "Unmoved Mover" who sets in motion the causal sequences of matter and being found within the world. Thirteenth-century theologian Saint [[Thomas Aquinas]] insisted that this First Cause must be God.  
**''Jnana'' ([[Omniscience]]),
 
**''Vairagya'' ([[Detachment]]),
 
**''Yashas'' ([[Fame]]),
 
**''Aishvarya'' ([[Sovereignty]], derived from the word Ishvara),
 
**''Sri'' ([[Glory]]) and
 
**''Dharma'' ([[Righteousness]]).  
 
  
*Other important qualities attributed to God are ''Gambhirya'' (grandeur), ''Audarya'' (generosity), and ''Karunya'' (compassion).
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Aquinas also provided the foundations for the teleological argument or the "argument from design," which contends that the instances of order and purpose which can be witnessed within the natural world suggests it has been [[Intelligent design|designed]]. There can be no such cosmic design without a Designer, who is God. This position was elaborated by modern [[philosophy|philosophers]] Frederick R. Tennant and [[Richard Swinburne]], who claimed that the harmony observable within nature, as well as the breadth of the human mind which is capable of understanding and appreciating this harmony, proves the existence of a purposeful Creator.  
  
* Chanted prayers, or [[mantra]]s, are central to Hindu worship. Among the most chanted mantras in Hinduism are the [[Vishnu sahasranama]] (a prayer to [[Vishnu]] that dates from the time of the [[Mahabharata]] and describes him as the ''Universal [[Brahman]]''), [[Shri Rudram]] (a Vedic hymn to Rudra, an earlier aspect of Shiva that also describes Him as Brahman) and the [[Gayatri]] mantra, (another Vedic hymn that initially was meant as a prayer to the Sun, an aspect of Brahman but has other interpretations. It is now interpreted as a prayer to the impersonal absolute Brahman).  
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[[Atheism|Atheists]] who reject these arguments complain that they would only be accepted by people who already believe in God. To answer this objection, Swinburne developed the hypothetical method, which begins by positing the existence of God as a hypothesis, which then can be verified by observing the world. If the hypothesis is verified, the existence of God as its Designer becomes more probable than improbable.<ref>Richard Swinburne, ''The Existence of God'', 2nd ed. (Clarendon Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0199271689).</ref>
  
* The followers of [[Shaktism]] like to concieve the divine power of the [[Ishvara]] as a female goddess, the divine mother called [[Devi]] or [[Durga]]. Another famous hymn, [[Lalitha Sahasranama]], describes the 1000 names of [[Devi]], worshipped as God the Divine Mother.
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===The ''via negativa''===
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The ''via negativa'' (negative way) or ''apophatic'' theology is to seek knowledge of God through negating categories, rather than through positive statements and affirmations. It assumes that human language can never truly express the complete purview of God. Instead, anyone who wishes to understand God must go beyond words. Rather than asserting what God is, then, negative theologians discuss what God is not. This kind of theology is often allied with [[mysticism|mystical]] traditions, which focus on a spontaneous or cultivated individual experience of the divine reality beyond the realm of ordinary perception, experience unmediated by the structures of traditional organized religion. Mystical experiences are often described as exceeding the boundaries of human language; therefore, statements about mystical experience of God may be best suited for such a theology of negation.
  
* It is important to add that in Hinduism (''Sanatana Dharama'') God is considered the Supreme Being, and many views of God range from panentheism to dualism to [[monism]].  His appearance, in its entirety, cannot be comprehended by the common man. His appearance with form is only a manifestation of certain characteristics. The various forms of God or deities which apparently give [[Smarta]] Hinduism a character of polytheism, are regarded as mundane manifestations of One Brahman or Ishvara, only to facilitate his devotional worship.
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The ''via negativa'' is akin to the spirituality found in Eastern religions such as Hinduism and [[Buddhism]]. The [[Upanishad]]s state: The Self is "not this, not that (''neti, neti'')"; it is beyond comprehension. Or as the [[Dao De Jing]] states, "The way that can be spoken of is not the eternal Way; the name that can be named is not the eternal name" (Dao De Jing 1). In other words, it is fruitless to attempt to describe Ultimate Reality by limited human categories. In Buddhism, as soon as one is led through ''anatta'' (no-self) to the realm of enlightenment in [[Nirvana]] as Fullness, the Fullness of Nirvana is immediately negated as Nothingness, its antithesis, because it is beyond description. [[Zen]] Buddhism provides various expedients, such as the ''[[Koan]]'', which when meditated over lead adherents into such logical contradictions in order that they may break through the intellect entirely and reach [[Enlightenment (Buddhism)|Enlightenment]].
  
* [[Ayyavazhi]] propagates almost a similar theory to Advaita Vedanta. However, [[Kashmir Shaivism]], one notable [[Saivite]] branch disagrees and focuses on [[panentheism]]. Furthermore, it rejects the [[maya]] illusion theory by stating that if God is real, then His creation must be real and not illusory.
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===Through devotional practice===
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Devotional practice is deemed helpful in preparing individuals for experiences of God, based on the common understanding that people can hardly recognize God's presence when daily life is so fully occupied with work and social life, and when their thoughts are dominated by self-centered desires. By quieting the mind and stopping the desires of the body, and by focusing one's attention and action towards transcendental things, a person becomes receptive to the finer vibrations of the divine Spirit.
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*'''Asceticism'''
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As most people are dominated by the needs of the body for [[food]], [[clothing]], [[sleep]], and [[human sexuality|sex]], [[asceticism]] teaches abstinence from worldly pleasures and denying the body's desires in order to prepare a foundation for God to dwell within the self. [[Fasting]] is a very common ascetic practice. [[Islam]], for example, practices ''sawm'', which is fasting during the month of [[Ramadan]]. Hermetic solitariness and renunciation of possessions are also quite common amongst ascetics in various religions. [[Celibacy]] is practiced by the clergy and ascetics in some segments of [[Christianity]], [[Hinduism]], [[Jainism]], and [[Buddhism]]. Jainism has practices such as [[meditation]] in difficult postures and/or atop hills and [[mountain]]s. Hindu ascetics do some extreme forms of devotion such as non-use of one leg or the other and the holding of an arm in the air for a very long period of time.
  
In Hinduism there are two methods of worship:
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Perhaps extremely harsh asceticism can be questioned because it can lead to destruction of the self rather than helping the self to accomplish the goal. But the fact is that many an ascetic has experienced spiritual bliss, accompanied by a renewed and reorganized self.  
#To worship God through meditation on an icon ([[murti]]).
 
#To worship God without icon worship.(eg. non-anthromorphic symbols such as [[linga]], [[saligrama]], [[Ayyavazhi]], or through meditation)
 
  
In the early [[Upanishads]] the conception of the Divine Teacher [[guru]] on earth first manifested from its early [[Brahmin]] associations. Indeed, there is an understanding in some Hindu sects that if the devotee were presented with the guru and God, first he would pay respects to the guru since the guru had been instrumental in leading him to God.
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*'''Prayer, meditation, and contemplation'''
* '''[[Hari Bhakti Vilasa]]''' ( 4.344)
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Various religious traditions teach that [[prayer]] enables a person praying to experience the divine. Prayer involves praising and honoring the divine, confessing sins, sharing one's thoughts and feelings, and requesting guidance and assistance. Prayer is verbal [[communication]] to the divine. Often it is a form of supplication, with the expectation of a response. Better than praying out of one's own need is to pray for others in need: "He who prays for his fellowman, while he himself has the same need, will be answered first" ([[Talmud]], Baba Kamma 92a). Best of all are prayers of determination and pledge, made not from need, but from strength and the desire to serve God's will, and accompanied by action.  
::Prathamam tu gurum pujya tatas caiva mamarcanam
 
::Kuran siddhim avapnoti hy anyatha nisphalam bhavet
 
::''One does not directly worship one's God. One must begin by the worship of the Guru.  Only by pleasing the Guru and gaining his mercy, can one offer anything to God.  Thus, before worshiping God, one must always worship the Guru.''
 
  
See also [[Guru]].
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[[Meditation]] is about one-pointed concentration without involving any word or image. Its purpose is first to clear the mind of surface thoughts and feelings, then to attain higher spiritual states on the path to enlightenment. Meditative techniques are widespread both in Eastern religions and in the mystical traditions of the Western religions.
  
=== The Ultimate ===
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Contemplation is to focus the mind on a text, an image, or an idea. For example, in [[Kabbalah]], a frequent practice is to contemplate the four-letter holy name of God [[Yahweh|YHWH]] (יהוה) and all the permutations of those four letters. In [[Roman Catholic Church|Catholicism]], contemplation of episodes in the life of [[Jesus of Nazareth|Christ]] prepares the believer to make that life his or her own. Mystics and philosophers may contemplate the various attributes of God, such as his omnipresence or compassion, in search of a more profound understanding of the divine.  
Arguably, Eastern conceptions of [[The Ultimate]] (this, too, has many different names), except for [[Shaivism]] and [[Vaishnavism]], which do focus on a personal God, are not conceptions of a ''personal'' divinity, though certain Western conceptions of what is at least ''called'' "God" (e.g., [[Baruch Spinoza|Spinoza's]] pantheistic conception and various kinds of [[mysticism]]) resemble Eastern conceptions of The Ultimate.
 
  
=== Aristotelian definition of God ===
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*'''Worship and rituals'''
''Main article: [[Aristotelian view of God]].''
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[[Worship]] is to honor and praise the divine, sometimes done by an individual person and more often by a group or congregation. It may involve prayer, singing, dancing, chanting, scripture reading, exhortations, use of images (except in Islam), rituals, and sometimes [[sacrifice]]s. [[Ritual]]s, whether they are done as a part of worship or not, are often of symbolic nature; among them are the Christian sacraments and the [[Shinto]]ist rite of ''misogi'', geared towards purification and reconciliation with the divine.
  
In his [[Metaphysics]], [[Aristotle]] discusses  meaning of "being as being". Aristotle holds that "being" primarily refers to the [[Unmoved Mover]]s, and assigned one of these to each movement in the heavens. Each Unmoved Mover continuously contemplates its own contemplation, and everything that fits the second meaning of "being" by having its source of motion in itself, moves because the knowledge of its Mover causes it to emulate this Mover (or should).
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*'''Service and charity'''
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Many religions encourage their adherents to care for the needs of the poor, the sick and disabled, widows and orphans. This service is called [[charity]] (from the Latin word ''caritas'') in Christianity, ''tzedakah'' (from the [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] verb for doing "justice" or "fairness") in Judaism, ''sadaqah'' ("voluntary charity") and ''zakat'' ("prescribed charity") in Islam, and ''dana'' ("giving") in Buddhism.
  
=== Modern views ===
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The efficacy of service and charity is based upon the common understanding amongst various religions that the divine reality is benevolent, compassionate, and giving; hence by serving the needy one will be connected with the divine. In Judaism, ''tzedakah'', which is often done anonymously, is one of the three acts by which people can receive forgiveness of sin (the others are prayer and repentance). According to Buddhism, ''dana'' in the form of charity to support homeless monks leads to rebirth in happier states.
==== Process philosophy and Open Theism definition of God ====
 
* [[Process theology]] is a school of thought influenced by the metaphysical [[process philosophy]] of [[Alfred North Whitehead]] ([[1861]]&ndash;[[1947]]).
 
* [[Open theism]], a theological movement that began in the 1990s, is similar, but not identical, to Process theology.
 
  
In both views, God is not omnipotent in the classical sense of a coercive being. Reality is not made up of material substances that endure through time, but serially-ordered events, which are experiential in nature. The universe is characterized by process and change carried out by the agents of free will. Self-determination characterizes everything in the universe, not just human beings. God and creatures co-create.  God cannot force anything to happen, but rather only influence the exercise of this universal free will by offering possibilities. See the entries on [[Process theology]], [[Panentheism]], and [[Open theism]].
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===Other approaches to God===
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*'''Nature'''
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The immanence of God and His glory as reflected in the creation is the chief theme of [[nature]] mysticism, as represented by [[Francis of Assisi|Saint Francis of Assisi]] (1181-1226), whose famous "Canticle of the Sun" praises God's glory in all things. [[Shinto]]ism sees divinity everywhere: "Even in a single leaf of a tree, or a tender blade of grass, the awe-inspiring Deity manifests itself" (Urabe-no-Kanekuni).<ref>Andrew Wilson (ed.), ''World Scripture'' (New York: Paragon House, 1991, ISBN 0892261293), 204.</ref><ref>Selwyn Gurney Champion and Dorothy Short, ''Readings from World Religions'' (Fawcett Columbine, 1951, 1951).</ref> [[Native American]] and [[Africa]]n primal religions revere Mother Earth and all Her creatures as sacred. Poets of all traditions have written of the sacred within the natural world, notably the Americans [[William Wordsworth]] (1770-1850); and [[Henry David Thoreau]] (1827-1862).  
  
====Posthuman God====
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Experiences in [[nature]] provide a likeness of God's harmony and peace, in contrast to the grasping rat-race of [[city]] life. Groves of [[tree]]s inspire reverence as surely as any [[cathedral]], and their unwavering fruitfulness season after season is seen as reflecting God's unchanging provision for humanity. The way trees attract birds and animals to their shade teaches lessons about magnanimity. Beautiful flowers and singing birds display God's love. Gazing at the starry night sky prompts religious emotions of awe and mystery.  
Similar to this theory is the belief or aspiration that humans will create a God entity, emerging from an [[artificial intelligence]].
 
[[Arthur C. Clarke]], a [[science fiction]] writer, said in an interview,
 
"It may be that our role on this planet is not to worship God, but to create him."  Clarke's friend and colleague, the late [[Isaac Asimov]], postulated in his story "[[The Last Question]]" a merger between humanity and machine intelligence that ultimately produces a deity capable of reversing [[entropy]] and subsequently initiates a new [[Creation]] trillions of years from the present era when the Universe is in the last stage of [[heat death]].
 
  
Another variant on this hypothesis is that humanity or a segment of humanity will  create  or [[evolution|evolve]] into a [[posthuman]] God by itself; for some examples, see [[cosmotheism]], [[transhumanism]], [[technological singularity]].
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According to Christian "natural theology," all people can have an indirect understanding of God through the created world of nature, which is God's "general revelation" to humanity. Thus the Book of Nature stands alongside the Bible as testimony to God's works.
  
====Extraterrestrials====
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*'''History'''
Some comparatively new belief systems and books portray God as  [[Extraterrestrial life]].  Many of these theories hold that intelligent beings from another world have been visiting Earth for many thousands of years, and have influenced the development of our religions. Some of these books posit that prophets or [[messiah]]s were sent to the human race in order to teach [[morality]] and encourage the development of [[civilization]]. (See e.g. [[Rael]]). One famous espouser of such views was the late [[Francis Crick]], one of the discoverers of the structure of DNA. Confronted with the statistical improbability of the origin of self replicating and purposeful life in the allegedly miniscule timeframe physicists allot for the creation of planet earth, Crick suggested life on earth originated far away.  (See Mark Steyn's obituary for the scientist: http://www.steynonline.com/index2.cfm?edit_id=29 )
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The [[Jew]]ish people encountered God in the events of their history, notably the [[Exodus]] from [[Egypt]]. The Christian Bible testifies to the historical manifestation of God in [[Jesus of Nazareth]]. Belief in divine [[providence]] among the [[Puritans]] and American colonists meant that they saw God's hand in the discovery of the [[New World]] as a haven for dissenting believers who faced persecution in [[Europe]]. The same belief in providence lay behind [[Abraham Lincoln]]'s remarks in his Second Inaugural Address, which saw the hand of God's judgment in the blood spilled in the [[American Civil War|Civil War]]:  
  
====Phenomenological definition====
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<blockquote>Yet, if God wills that [the war] continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid with another drawn by the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, “The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether."</blockquote>
  
The philosopher [[Michel Henry]] defines God in a phenomenological point of view. He says : "God is Life, he is the essence of [[Philosophy of the life|Life]], or, if we prefer, the essence of Life is God.  Saying this we already know what is God, we know it not by the effect of a learning or of some knowledge, we don’t know it by the thought, on the background of the truth of the world ; we know it and we can know it only in and by the Life itself. We can know it only in God." (''I Am the [[Truth of Life|Truth]]. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity'').
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*'''Art'''
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People have created religious [[art]] and awe-inspiring [[architecture]] as expressions of the divine. The great [[cathedral]]s of Europe with their soaring arches lift the spirit heavenward. [[Icon]]ic religions such as Hinduism, Greek Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and later Buddhism use images both to express divinity itself and to tell stories of the saints.  
  
This Life is not biological life defined by objective and exterior properties, nor an abstract and empty philosophical concept, but the absolute [[phenomenological life]], a radically immanent life which possesses in it the power of showing itself in itself without distance, a life which reveals permanently itself.
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[[Music]] is another medium that inspires religious emotions. Composers like [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] wrote to glorify God, and in appreciating his music one can be moved to feel God's presence. [[Hymn]]s and songs praising God are, of course, a time-honored form of devotion.
  
==== The Rosicrucian conception of God and the scheme of evolution ====
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==The Gender of God==
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Recently there have been a number of [[religion|religious]] movements which have attempted to restore the role of the feminine in conceiving of God. [[Wicca]], for example, has focused upon the use of powers derived from numerous gods, particularly the [[goddess]], in order to execute magical procedures. Wiccans base this esteem for the feminine principle on the idea that such worship practices were prevalent in the world including Europe during the [[Middle Ages]], but were repressed by patriarchal religious traditions which attempted to limit the balance of power allowed to women. Wicca, then, is seen as the current iteration of a long-standing tradition of religious beliefs which acknowledge the goddess as supreme. This line follows from an ancient shamanistic European tradition which worships the Mother Goddess in three aspects: Maiden, Mother, and Crone. Goddess, then, becomes the focus of worship and liturgy in the Wiccan tradition.
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The urge to reinvigorate the sense of God as woman has found its way into mainstream religion as well. Women in [[Christianity]] have begun to reconfigure the traditionally male conception of God, attempting to make it more feminine, both linguistically and theologically. Ruminations upon the feminine aspects of God have been dubbed ''theaology'', based on the Greek root ''thea'', or feminine conception of God as opposed to the masculine ''theos''. Other depictions of a female [[Jesus of Nazareth|Christ]], often referred to as Christa, have also been produced. These terms have not necessarily been coined to change the conception of God and Christ to exclusively female in gender, but rather to illustrate the fact that male vocabulary has dominated conceptions of God throughout [[history]], and that ideally the divine should transcend all statements of gender. Other Christian women have made similar assertions by associating [[Mary (mother of Jesus)|Mary]] with the female nature of the divine, though Mary's unquestioning obedience to God as well as her [[virgin]]ity have been critiqued by some feminists as reinforcing the subordinate status of women.
  
According to [[Max Heindel]]'s [[Rosicrucian]] writings {{ref|Cosmos}} about the scheme of evolution, and in [[Esoteric Christianity]], in the beginning of a ''Day of Manifestation'' a certain collective Great Being, God, limits Himself to a certain portion of space, in which He elects to create a [[Solar System]] for the evolution of added [[self]]-[[consciousness]].
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The gender of God has been an issue also in other religions. The goddess [[Asherah]] was worshiped in ancient Israel and Judah as the consort of [[Yahweh]], although it was never an approved practice. Also, while the [[Hebrew Bible]] officially actually refers to God as male, it sometimes depicts God with images of a mother who wraps her child in swaddling clothes and bends down to feed it (Hosea 11). In [[Hinduism]], [[Vishnu]] and [[Shakti]], male and female deities, compose [[Ardhanarisvara]], an androgynous God. According to the ''I Ching'' in [[Confucianism]], the world is an expression of the Great Ultimate (''tai-chi'') with the duality of yang and yin.
[[Image:THE ANCIENT OF DAYS.JPG|right|thumb|210px|'''THE ANCIENT OF DAYS''', illustrated by [[William Blake]] (1794)]]
 
<!---"Both poet and artist, Blake illustrated his own poetic work. He also labored to create his own cosmology and mythology, based upon his readings of the Bible, the teachings of Swedenborg, and his own besetting visions. This illustration suggests a gnostic approach to the Creator as a lesser, fallible God, though the visual suggestion of compasses, which Blake associated with materialism and a constricted, Newtonian view of reality."--->
 
In God there are contained hosts of glorious Hierarchies and lesser beings of every grade of intelligence and stage of [[consciousness]], from [[omniscience]] to an [[unconsciousness]] deeper than that of the deepest [[trance]] condition.
 
During the current period of manifestation these various grades of beings are working to acquire more experience than they possessed at the beginning of this period of existence. Those who, in previous manifestations, have attained to the highest degree of development work on those who have not yet evolved any consciousness.  
 
  
The period of time devoted to the attainment of self-consciousness and to the building of the [[Subtle body|vehicles]] through which the spirit in man manifests, is called "[[Involution (philosophy)|Involution]]". The succeeding period of existence, during which the individual human being develops ''[[self]]-[[consciousness]]'' into ''[[divine]] [[omniscience]]'', is called "[[Spiritual evolution|Evolution]]". Every evolving being has within him a "force" which makes evolution not to be a mere enfoldment of latent germinal possibilities but a process where each individual differ from that of every other. This force, called "[[epigenesis (creative intelligences)|Epigenesis]]", provides the element of [[originality]] and gives scope to the creative ability which the evolving being is to cultivate that he may become a God.
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Again in Christianity, [[Religious feminism|feminist theologians]] such as [[Rosemary Radford Reuther]] have incorporated androgynous features to God in order to balance traditionally "male" and "female" virtues in the divine. Ruether refers to the Supreme Being by the gender-neutral term “God/ess,” and claims that this being must be that conceived of as both male and female, yet also neither male nor female. Androgyny may very well be the future of godly conceptions in the context of gender. As John Bowker has suggested, "Maybe the next step would be to abandon both theo- and thea- and speak instead of Deology; Latin is also gender specific (deus, dea), but both can be abandoned in speaking of Deo-."<ref>John Bowker, ''God: A Brief History'' (New York: DK Publishing, 2002, ISBN 0789480506), 314.</ref>
  
Heindel states that in the [[Solar system]], God's Habitation, there are [[Rosicrucian_Fellowship#The_Seven_Worlds_.26_the_Seven_Cosmic_Planes|seven Worlds]] differentiated by God, within Himself, one after another {{ref|diagram_2}}. These Worlds have each a different "[[measure]]" and rate of [[vibration]] and are not separated by [[space]] or [[distance]], as is the earth from the other planets. They are states of [[matter]], of varying [[density]] and [[vibration]] (as are the [[solids]], [[liquids]] and [[gases]] of the physical [[Earth]]). These Worlds are not instantaneously created at the beginning of a day of Manifestation, nor do they last until the end. The evolutionary scheme is carried through five of these Worlds in seven great Periods of manifestation, during which the evolving virgin [[spirit]] becomes first [[human]] and, then, a God.
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==The Heart of God==
The highest Worlds are created first, and as [[Involution (philosophy)|involution]] is to slowly carry the life into denser and denser matter for the building of forms, the finer Worlds gradually [[condense]] and new Worlds are differentiated within God to furnish the necessary links between Himself and the Worlds which have consolidated. In due time the point of greatest density, the [[nadir]] of materiality, is reached. From that point the life begins to ascend into higher Worlds, as [[Spiritual evolution|evolution]] proceeds. That leaves the denser Worlds depopulated, one by one. When the purpose has been served for which a particular World was created, God ends its existence, which has become superfluous, by ceasing within Himself the particular activity which brought into being and sustained that World {{ref|diagram_8}}.
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===God's longing===
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In those traditions that understand God as a being of [[love]], his everlasting love is not only "in general" but for each and every being, and for "me." All that exists both in the physical and in the spiritual realms exist in the purpose and "habitat" of love for "me." This focus on love is central to [[Christianity]] for example, as Christians understand through life-changing personal experience ("rebirth") that God not only "so loved the world," but so loved ''me'' "that He gave his only begotten Son" to perish for ''my'' sake (John 3:16). [[Mysticism|Mystic]]s and [[saint]]s who live to plumb the depths of such love—and in so doing who recreate their own lives as similarly loving and [[Sacrifice|sacrificial]]—have produced a wealth of literature and poetry that seek to capture and communicate divine love. One reads in their devotions and transcendent rapture the overwhelming quality of even the most fleeting encounter with the true love of God. These writings are found among Christian saints such as [[Teresa of Avila]] (1515-1582) and Islamic [[Sufism|Sufi]] saints such as [[Rabi'a Al-Basri]] (717-801).
  
Rosicrucians teach that the, above referred, seven Worlds belong to the lowest of the seven "Cosmic Planes". The Worlds and Cosmic Planes are not one above another in space, but the seven Cosmic Planes inter-penetrate each other and all the seven Worlds. They are states of [[spirit]]-[[matter]], permeating one another, so that God and the other great Beings pervade every part of their own realms and realms of greater density than their own, including our world: "''in Him we live and move and have our being''". Proceeding from the [[physical plane|physical world]] to the [[Plane (cosmology)|inner worlds]] and up through the Cosmic Planes, [[God]] - the "Architect of the Solar System", the Source and goal of human existence - is found in the highest division of the seventh Cosmic Plane: this is His World. In order to trace the origin of the Architect of the Solar System, one must pass to the highest of the seven Cosmic Planes: the "Realm of the '''Supreme Being'''", Who emanated from the "Absolute". The '''Absolute''' is beyond comprehension and, as [[manifestation]] implies [[limitation]], He may be best described as "Boundless Being": the "Root of Existence".
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Some mystics and [[theology|theologians]], however, redefine this true love of God in terms of his longing for human beings. God loves us because he longs for us with his desire for fellowship with us. Such a desire, which can be called God's ''heart'', may transcend what has traditionally been called the absolute "freedom" or "omnipotence" of God especially in the [[monotheism|monotheistic]] tradition. It may not be able to be explained through a one-way street from the omnipotent God to us, but rather through a two-way street that involves the reciprocity of love between God and us. In this scenario, God is even more blissful when we love him after being inspired by his love. This understanding of God's desire can be found in mystics such as [[Julian of Norwich]] (1342-c. 1416) and [[Nicolas Berdyaev]] (1874-1948). Jürgen Moltmann defines this desire of God as "God's longing for 'his Other' and for that Other's free response to the divine love."<ref>Jürgen Moltmann, ''The Trinity and the Kingdom: The Doctrine of God'', trans. Margaret Kohl (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1993, ISBN 080062825X), 106.</ref> [[Alfred North Whitehead]] calls it God's "Eros," referring to it as "the living urge towards all possibilities, claiming the goodness of their realization."<ref>Alfred North Whitehead, ''Adventures of Ideas'' (The Free Press, 1967, ISBN 978-0029351703), 381.</ref>
  
From the Absolute proceeds the Supreme Being, at the dawn of manifestation: this is ''The One'', the "Great Architect of the Universe". The first aspect of the Supreme Being may be characterized as ''Power'', from this proceeds the second aspect, ''the Word'', and from both of these proceeds the third, aspect, ''Motion''. From this threefold Supreme Being proceed the "seven Great [[Logos|Logoi]]". They contain within Themselves all the great Hierarchies which differentiate more and more as they diffuse through the various Cosmic Planes {{ref|diagram_6}}. In the Highest World of the seventh Cosmic Plane dwells the God of the [[Planetary system|Solar Systems]] in the [[Universe]]. These great Beings are also threefold in manifestation, like The Supreme Being. Their three aspects are ''Will'', ''Wisdom'' and ''Activity''.
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===God's suffering===
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God's [[suffering]] has recently become an issue of interest to many, although in the monotheistic tradition God was regarded normally as the most perfect Being who is immutable and impassible, and who is therefore incapable of suffering. The key to divine suffering seems to be God's longing or desire for fellowship with us, for if his desire is not fulfilled, he suffers. The [[Hebrew Bible]] actually talks about God's suffering because of the wickedness of humans: "And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart" (Genesis 6:6). [[Jeremiah]] among other Hebrew prophets seems to have embodied God's painful suffering when he deplored the unacceptable condition of Israel.  
  
== Notes and references ==
+
[[Hasidic Judaism]] has long held that God himself went into exile with Israel, and for two thousand years has suffered with his people in their exile. Thus [[Baal Shem Tov]] wrote:
  
# {{note|Cosmos}} [[Max Heindel|Heindel, Max]], <cite>[[The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception]]</cite>, ISBN 0-911274-34-0, 1st ed 1909; Part II: Chapters [http://www.rosicrucian.com/rcc/rcceng05.htm V], [http://www.rosicrucian.com/rcc/rcceng06.htm VI].
+
<blockquote>Do not pray for a thing that you lack, for your prayer will not be accepted. Rather when you wish to pray, pray for the heaviness that is in the Head of the world. For the want of the thing that you lack is [a want] in the indwelling Glory. For man is a part of God, and the want that is in the part is in the whole, and the whole suffers the same want as the part. Therefore let your
# {{note|diagram_2}} Heindel, Max, ''Idem''; Diagram 2: [http://www.rosicrucian.com/images/rccen002.gif The Seven Worlds].
+
prayer be directed to the want of the whole... Pray continually for God’s glory that it may be redeemed from its exile.<ref>Martin Buber, ''Hasidism and Modern Man'' (Princeton University Press, 2015, ISBN 978-0691165417).</ref></blockquote>
# {{note|diagram_8}} Heindel, Max, ''Idem''; Diagram 8: [http://www.rosicrucian.com/images/rccen008.gif The 777 Incarnations].
 
# {{note|diagram_6}} Heindel, Max, ''Idem''; Diagram 6:  [http://www.rosicrucian.com/images/rccen006.gif The Supreme Being, the Cosmic Planes and God].
 
  
----
+
Christian theologians, saddled with classical [[theism]]s doctrine of divine impassibility, have attempted to deal with divine suffering but without much success.<ref>For example, Huw Parri Owen, ''Concepts of Deity'' (Herder and Herder, 1971, ISBN 978-0333013427); Richard E. Creel, ''Divine Imapassiblity: An Essay in Philosophical Theology'' (Wipf and Stock, 2005, ISBN 978-1597522731); and Jung Young Lee, ''God Suffers for Us: A Systematic Inquiry into a Concept of Divine Passibility'' (Springer, 2011, ISBN 978-9401020497).</ref> The "theology of the cross" (''theologia crucis''), to which prominent theologians such as [[Martin Luther]], [[Karl Barth]], Eberhart Jüngel, Kazoh Kitamori, and [[Hans Urs von Balthasar]] loosely belong, took a step in this direction by positing the polarity of God, where one side of God is transcendent and impassible and the other immanent and somewhat passible—as regards to love.
  
* [[Cliff Pickover|Pickover, Cliff]], <cite>The Paradox of God and the Science of Omniscience</cite>, Palgrave/St Martin's Press, 2001.
+
A more reasonable account of God's suffering has been suggested by [[Alfred North Whitehead]] and [[Jürgen Moltmann]] with their notions of God's longing and desire in love. Moltmann's ''The Crucified God'' has been widely read on this topic. According to Whitehead, understanding God's suffering makes us feel that God is close to us: "God is the greatest companion—the fellow-sufferer who understands."<ref>Alfred North Whitehead, ''Process and Reality'', corrected ed., ed. David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne (New York: Free Press, 1978, ISBN  978-0029345702), 351.</ref>
* [[Jack Miles|Miles, Jack]], <cite>God : A Biography</cite>, Knopf, 1995;  [http://www.jackmiles.com/default.asp?ID=15 Book description].
 
* [[Karen Armstrong|Armstrong, Karen]], <cite>A History of God: The 4,000-Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam</cite>, Ballantine Books, 1994.
 
* [[Fr. Mike Rotch|Rotch, Mike]], <cite>God, the Sheep, and Me... And Other Stories of Godly En(tendre)counters</cite>, Modern Christian Press, 2003.
 
  
 
==See also==  
 
==See also==  
 
* [[Atheism]]
 
* [[Atheism]]
 
* [[Agnosticism]]
 
* [[Agnosticism]]
* [[Arguments for the existence of God]]
 
* [[Arguments against the existence of God]]
 
 
* [[Deism]]
 
* [[Deism]]
* [[Existence of God]]
+
* [[God, Arguments for the Existence of]]
* [[God and gender]]
+
* [[Monotheism]]
* [[God complex]]
 
* [[God in Buddhism]]
 
* [[God realm]]
 
* [[List of appearances of God in fiction]]
 
* [[Natural theology]]
 
* [[Nontheism]]
 
 
* [[Pantheism]]  
 
* [[Pantheism]]  
 
* [[Polytheism]]
 
* [[Polytheism]]
* [[Higgs boson|The Higgs boson, ''the God particle'']]
 
 
* [[Theism]]
 
* [[Theism]]
* [[Transtheism]]
+
 
* [[Plane (cosmology)|Planes of existence]]
+
==Notes==
 +
{{reflist|2}}
 +
 
 +
== References ==
 +
* Arrington, Robert L. (ed.). ''A Companion to the Philosophers''. John Wiley & Sons, 1991. ISBN 978-0631229674
 +
* Armstrong, K. ''A History of God.'' London: Vintage, 1999. ISBN 0099273677
 +
* Bromiley, G. W., and T. F. Torrance. ''Church Dogmatics'', vol. 2, part 1. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2004. ISBN 0567051293
 +
* Berger, Peter L. (ed.). ''The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions''. Garden City, NY: Anchor Press, 1981. ISBN 0385174233
 +
* Berkhof, Hendrikus. ''Christian Faith: An Introduction to the Study of the Faith'', revised edition. Translated by Sierd Woudstra. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1986. ISBN 978-0802805485
 +
* Berman, D. ''A History of Atheism in Britain: from Hobbes to Russell''. London: Routledge, 1990. ISBN 0415047277
 +
* Bowker, John. ''God: A Brief History''. New York: DK Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0789480506
 +
* Buber, Martin. ''Hasidism and Modern Man''. Princeton University Press, 2015 (original 1958). ISBN 978-0691165417
 +
* Champion, Selwyn Gurney, and Dorothy Short. ''Readings from World Religions''. Fawcett Columbine, 1951. {{ASIN|B000S50IWM}}
 +
* Church, F. Forrester (ed.). ''The Essential Tillich''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999. ISBN 0226803430
 +
* Creel, Richard E. ''Divine Imapassiblity: An Essay in Philosophical Theology''. Wipf and Stock, 2005. ISBN 978-1597522731
 +
* Eliade, Mircea (ed.). ''Encyclopedia of Religion''. Macmillan Library Reference, 2005 (original 1993). ISBN 978-0028971261
 +
* Gimbutas, Marija. ''The Living Goddesses''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1999. ISBN 0520213939
 +
* Hurtado, Larry W. ''Lord Jesus Christ: Devotion to Jesus in Earliest Christianity''. Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0802860702
 +
* Lee, Jung Y. ''God Suffers for Us: A Systematic Inquiry into a Concept of Divine Passibility''. Springer, 2011. ISBN 978-9401020497
 +
* Miles, Jack. ''God: A Biography''. New York: Vintage Books, 1995. ISBN 0679743685
 +
* Moltmann, Jürgen. ''The Trinity and the Kingdom: The Doctrine of God''. Trans. by Margaret Kohl. Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1993. ISBN 080062825X
 +
* Myers, Michael W. ''Brahman: A Comparative Theology''. Richmond, UK: Curzon, 2001. ISBN 0700712577
 +
* Owen, Huw P. ''Concepts of Deity''. Herder and Herder, 1971. ISBN 978-0333013427
 +
* Pickover, Cliff. ''The Paradox of God and the Science of Omniscience''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan/St Martin's Press, 2001. ISBN 1403964572
 +
* Ruether, Rosemary R. ''Sexism and God-talk''. Boston: Beacon Press, 1983. ISBN 0807011045
 +
* Rohi, Rajinder K. ''Semitic and Sikh Monotheism: A Comparative Study''. Patiala, India: Punjabi University Publication Bureau, 1999. ISBN 8173805504
 +
* Sjoo, M. and B. Mor. ''The Great Cosmic Mother: Rediscovering the Religion of the Earth''. San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1991 (original 1987). ISBN 0062507914
 +
* Swinburne, Richard. ''The Existence of God'', 2nd ed. Clarendon Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0199271689
 +
* Tapasyananda, Swami. ''Bhakti Schools of Vedanta''. Hollywood, CA: Vedanta Press and Catalog, 1991. ISBN 8171202268
 +
* Thrower, James. ''A Short History of Western Atheism''. London: Pemberton, 1971. ISBN 978-0301711010
 +
* Whitehead, Alfred N. ''Adventures of Ideas''. The Free Press, 1967 (original 1933). ISBN 978-0029351703
 +
* Whitehead, Alfred N. ''Process and Reality''. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1979. ISBN 978-0029345702
 +
* Wilson, Andrew (ed.). ''World Scripture''. New York: Paragon House, 1998 (original 1991). ISBN 0892261293
  
 
== External links==
 
== External links==
{{wikiquote}}
+
All links retrieved July 12, 2022.
*Dwyer, Francis (2005). [http://mypage.iu.edu/~fdwyer/god.html "Theologian Elections"]
+
 
*Draye, Hani (2004). [http://sultan.org/articles/god.html Concept of God in Islam]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
+
* [https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moral-arguments-god/ Moral Arguments for the Existence of God] ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''
*Aish HaTorah (2003).
+
* [https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/god-necessary-being/ God and Other Necessary Beings] ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''
*[http://www.cogwriter.com/two.htm Binitarian View: One God, Two Beings from Before the Beginning] Updated 10/05
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* [https://www.cogwriter.com/two.htm Binitarian View: One God, Two Beings Before the Beginning] ''COGwriter''
*[http://www.aish.com/literacy/concepts/Understanding_God.asp Jewish Literacy]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
+
 
*Preston, Gregory (2005). [http://www.lulu.com/GregoryPreston Seeking Divine Guidance & Concepts of God].
+
;Christianity
*Nicholls, David (2004). [http://web.archive.org/web/20041013082021/http://www.atheistfoundation.org.au/doesgodexist.htm DOES GOD EXIST?]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
+
* [https://christianity.org.uk/article/what-is-god-like What is God like?] ''Christianity''
*Salgia, Amar (1997)[http://www.dd-b.net/~raphael/jain-list/msg01332.html Creator-God and Jainism] Retrieved [[October 18]] [[2005]].
+
 
*shaivam.org (2004). [http://www.shaivam.org/hipgodco.htm Hindu Concept of God]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
+
;Hinduism
*Schlecht, Joel (2004). [http://www.freewebs.com/thegodparticle/ The God Particle]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
+
* [https://www.hinduamerican.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/HinduConceptsAboutGod2.0_2.pdf Hindu Concepts about God] ''Hindu American Foundation''
*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2004). [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moral-arguments-god/ Moral Arguments for the Existence of God]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
 
*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2005). [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/god-necessary-being/ God and Other Necessary Beings]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
 
*Students of Shari'ah (2005). [http://www.studentsofshariah.com/proof_of_creator.php Proof Of Creator]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
 
*The Freethought Zone (2000). [http://freethought.freeservers.com/reason/rationalview.html Arguments for Atheism]. Retrieved [[June 26]] [[2005]].
 
*All About God (2002). [http://www.allaboutgod.com God] - [http://www.allaboutgod.com Scientific & Philosophical Arguments for God]. Retrieved [[September 9]] [[2005]].
 
*Journal of Religion and Society (2005). [http://moses.creighton.edu/JRS/2005/2005-11.html Cross-National Correlations of Quantifiable Societal Health with Popular Religiosity and Secularism in the Prosperous Democracies: A First Look]
 
  
[[Category:Bahá'í]]
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;Islam
[[Category:Christianity]]
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* [https://www.sultan.org/articles/god.html Concept of God in Islam] by Hani Draye, ''Sultan.org''
[[Category:Deities]]
 
[[Category:Islam]]
 
[[Category:jainism]]
 
[[Category:Judaism]]
 
[[Category:Spirituality]]
 
[[Category:Singular God]]
 
[[Category:Gods]]
 
  
[[af:God]]
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;Judaism
[[bg:Бог]]
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*[http://www.ajcarchives.org/ajc_data/files/913.pdf Jewish Beliefs About God] ''AJC Archives''
[[bn:ঈশ্বর]]
 
[[br:Doue]]
 
[[ca:Déu]]
 
[[cs:Bůh]]
 
[[da:Gud]]
 
[[de:Gott]]
 
[[et:Jumal]]
 
[[es:Dios]]
 
[[eo:Dio]]
 
[[fr:Dieu]]
 
[[ko:하느님]]
 
[[id:Tuhan]]
 
[[ia:Deo]]
 
[[is:Guð]]
 
[[it:Dio]]
 
[[he:אל]]
 
[[lv:Dievs]]
 
[[hu:Isten]]
 
[[ms:Tuhan]]
 
[[nl:God]]
 
[[ja:神]]
 
[[no:Gud]]
 
[[nn:Gud]]
 
[[pl:Bóg]]
 
[[pt:Deus]]
 
[[ro:Zeu]]
 
[[ru:Бог]]
 
[[simple:God]]
 
[[sk:Boh]]
 
[[sl:Bog]]
 
[[sr:Бог]]
 
[[fi:Jumala]]
 
[[sv:Gud]]
 
[[tl:Diyos]]
 
[[vi:Thiên Chúa]]
 
[[uk:Боги]]
 
[[zh:神]]
 
[[ig:Chineke]]
 
  
 
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[[category:philosophy and religion]]
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[[Category: Philosophy]]
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[[Category: Religion]]

Latest revision as of 19:54, 31 December 2023

An abstract representation of Isvara (a Hindu word for God) painted by Antti Silvekoski (copyright 2007)

Few concepts in human history have generated as much fascination, intense longing, rapturous devotion, somber contemplation, and endless debate as the topic of God. In the English language, the term God, when capitalized and singular (as a proper noun), is typically used to refer to the sole Divine Being in monotheistic religions, and more broadly to Ultimate Reality in many other faiths. An uncapitalized spelling (both singular and plural) has generally been used to refer to an individual deity found in a polytheistic or henotheistic pantheon (such as in ancient Vedic and Greco-Roman religion).

Throughout history, the vast majority of people in the world have believed in a God.[1] Yet, although notions of an absolute divine power are found in virtually all of the world's religions, the precise definition of what God is (and "is for us") varies greatly among the religions, within specific sects, and even from person to person. Typically, monotheistic theology describes God as omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent (and in most theologies, immutable), as well as both the creator and sustainer of the universe. God may be understood as male, as female, as both male and female, or as beyond gender (such as an impersonal abstract power or energy).

Frequently, God is conceived of as a personal being that can relate with all aspects of human experience, and has attributes of goodness, justice, love, etc. In most religions, God is recognized to have the disposition of a parent, who watches over human beings—God’s children, protecting, educating and disciplining them in an effort to raise them well. In addition to the conception of God as a divine Father, other depictions of God include Mother, friend, healer, child, a judge, and even a lover. As such, some theologians speak of God's heart (see below) that longs for fellowship with human beings, and even suffers to see them in misery.

Etymology

The word God comes from the Old English/Germanic terms god (guþ, gudis in Gothic, gud in modern Scandinavian and Gott in modern German). The original meaning and etymology of the Germanic word god has been widely disputed, though most agree it takes root in the reconstructed Proto-Indo-European word *khutóm. *Khutóm is a passive perfect participle from the root *khu-, which likely meant "libation" or "sacrifice." Evidence for this theory is provided by comparisons of the Sanskrit hu- ("to sacrifice"), the Greek khu-, kheu- ("to pour") as well as the Common Germanic strong verb *geutan (Anglo-Saxon gēotan) "to pour," and the English in-got. The connection between these terms likely derives from the meaning "pour a libation." The word God was first used in the Gothic translation of the New Testament by Ulfilas to represent the Greek term Theos, (Latin Deus) in translations of the Bible.

Early Conceptions of God

Main article: Polytheism

Both polytheism and henotheism seem to have been the predominant conceptions of divinity throughout most of the ancient world. Although their expressions varied considerably from culture to culture, some common characteristics of these conceptions can be identified. The gods of polytheistic and henotheistic belief systems have independent and individual personalities with specific skills, needs and desires. Although often lacking material form, they could (on occasion) assume physical bodies. They are seen to possess a high level of relevance to human life, as they can intervene in human affairs. They can do so by their own volition, or worshipers can encourage them by way of rituals and sacrifices.

The gods are generally conceived to be immortal. They are often portrayed as similar to humans in their personality traits, failings and vices, but with additional supernatural powers and abilities. Some have jurisdiction or governance over a large area, as the "patron god(s)" of a geographical region, town, mountain or clan. In many civilizations, the pantheons grew over time as the patron gods of various cities and places were collected together as empires extended over larger territories. In others cases, the various gods may have arisen due to a perceived "division of labor," with each having dominion or authority over specified elements in the human and natural worlds.

Many of the earliest conceptualizations of divinity were actually goddesses. Both carved figures and paintings of pregnant women were the dominant foci of worship during the Paleolithic times (35,000-10,000 B.C.E.). These depictions typically emphasized the reproductive parts of the female anatomy, such as large breasts, the pregnant womb, and the vulva, which presumably represented women's creative, maternal, nourishing, and embracing traits. The female was symbolically linked to the earth, maintaining the life cycle, representing fertility and the creation of new life. Excavations from Catal Huyuk in what is now Turkey suggest that settlements existing between 6500 and 5500 B.C.E. also held the goddess in highest esteem, and artifacts recovered form the Indus Valley Civilization suggest that goddess worship was also the earliest form of religious practice in India.

The Athena Giustiniani, a Roman copy of a Greek statue of Pallas Athena (Vatican Museums)

The ancient Greek gods provide the best example of henotheism that is most familiar to Western scholarship. Their extensive mythological tales (preserved in plays, visual art, and epic poems) show that the ancient Greeks believed in independent, highly personified deities who were not aspects of a greater divinity. Rather, they were seen to stand on their own, representing certain aspects of the cosmos or human experience. The first gods were largely tied to natural or primordial processes, such as Uranus, the father god of the sky; Gaia, the mother goddess of Earth; and Chronos, the godly personification of time. Later gods, such as the Olympians, became identified with more specific aspects of experience. For instance, Apollo was the god of light, dance, reason, music, archery and medicine, while also exemplifying the difficulties of human relationships through the stories of his many failed loves. Athena was heralded as the goddess of wisdom, artistry, education and inner beauty, as well as war. Zeus represented the god of weather. While each of these gods and goddesses evidently had dominion over a certain portion of reality, they also were members of a celestial pantheon and were, at various junctures, ruled over by Chronos, Uranus, and finally Zeus.[2] Their belief in a father/ruler God meant that the Greek polytheism was perhaps best described as a henotheism.

Greek definitions of God

Developments in Greek philosophy shifted from polytheism/ henotheism to a monistic theism. This trend began with the Pre-Socratic philosophers, who suggested that this pantheisitic essence for the universe perhaps took root in a natural element—such as Anaximenes (who claimed the essence to be air), or Thales (who thought it was water). Eventually these elements came to be more abstract, reaching beyond the physical world. Anaximander (c.609-547 B.C.E.), for instance, proposed an uncreated and indestructible being which could not itself be considered a thing, yet was responsible for the existence of all things and ruling them all. For Pythagoras (c. 570-496 B.C.E.) and his followers, all things were ruled by mathematics and geometry. Xenophanes (c. 570-c. 478 B.C.E.) propounded the idea of a changeless, indestructible and unified entity which possessed infinite intelligence and was present in all things, which he called the "All-One." He claimed this notion of unity and oneness to be the highest and most reasonable form of religious thought.

These ruminations as to the singular essence behind the universe culminated in the later philosophical monotheism espoused by both Plato (c. 428-c. 348 B.C.E.) and Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.). Plato construed God as representative of the single good which existed in contrast to the physical world, which was in constant flux and therefore evil. This so-called "Form of the Good" was held by Plato to exist beyond specific instances of good in the world, because each of these particulars was subject to mutability and therefore not eternal. Plato claimed these transient appearances of the Form of the Good were created by a Demiurge. The point of life was to rise up from all that is ugly, evil and fallacious and realize the true, permanent Good.

Likewise, Aristotle, the famous student of Plato, believed that truth can be found within a proper understanding of the natural world, which is attributable to its ultimate source. This source, also known as the "First Mover" or "Pure Form," is a completely actualized, immutable, and indivisible entity, which represents the ultimate ground of truth and singularly provides the explanation as to why all things exist with the characteristics they do, as well as how they came into being. Aristotle propounded the idea that all people must seek to understand truth, as the search for truth is ultimately a form of participation in God. Both Plato and Aristotle's conception of the highest entity in the universe would go on to wield massive influence on the conceptions of God in the Abrahamic faiths, especially Christianity.

Early monotheism in Egypt

Another example of a conception of the one transcendent God growing out of polytheism occurred in the iconoclastic cult of the Egyptian solar god, Aten, which was promoted by the pharaoh Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV), who ruled between 1358 and 1340 B.C.E. Upon inheriting the throne, Akhenaten brought Aten from relative obscurity among the other gods and made him synonymous with the Sun, which Egyptians of that time period thought to be the single most powerful entity. Furthermore, Aten came to represent a more personal conception of the divine than the other gods, all of whom had been the primary focus of public ritual in temples. As these other gods in the pantheon came to be perceived as inferior to Aten, their idols were destroyed.

Even though such works as Akhenaten's hymn to Aten offers strong evidence that Akhenaten considered Aten to be the sole, omnipotent creator, Akhenaten's program to enforce this monotheistic worldview was promptly put to a halt upon his death. The worship of gods other than Aten never fully ceased outside Akhenaten's court, and the older polytheistic cults soon regained prominence. However, the Aten cult could still be classified one of the earliest known examples of monotheism, and it is claimed by some scholars to have possibly been a formative influence on early Judaism's eschewal of polytheism, due to the presence of Israelite slaves in Egypt.

Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism provides another example of early monotheistic belief. Zarathustra founded Zoroastrianism at best estimation sometime during the tenth century B.C.E. perhaps under inspiration to elevate divine-human relations above the Indo-Iranian polytheism of his time, a tradition steeped in an elaborate ritualism. Under Zarathustra the various notions of divinity found within these assorted faiths were recognized as attributes of one all-encompassing deity called Ahura Mazda (or "Wise Lord"). Zarathustra set his teachings apart from his rivals by insisting that worship be dedicated solely to the Wise Lord.

Although Ahura Mazda is the supreme power in the universe in Zoroastrianism, he is not considered completely all-powerful. Ahura Mazda is described as inherently good, just and moral, and as such creates only good things, a seeming limitation to his power considering the presence of evil in the world. Zoroastrians attribute the existence of evil to two subsidiary moral spirits who Ahura Mazda is said to have fathered: Spenta Manyu, who is good, and Angra Manyu, who is evil. Although such a conception limits Ahura Mazda's power, he is consistently described to be triumphant over evil, which marks him as the supreme entity in the Zoroastrian cosmos. Later Zoroastrianism also includes angelic beings called the Amesha Spenta, who are seen as emanations of Ahura Mazda, whose job it is to put in place his will in the physical world.

God in the Abrahamic Religions

Michelangelo's view of God in the painting Creation of the Sun and Moon in the Sistine Chapel)

Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are together considered Abrahamic religions due to the fact they worship the God who first came into covenant with Abraham. Abraham's portion of the covenant was that he spread the teaching that only God alone is the true God, and all others are not. Therefore, each of the three religions that trace their roots to Abraham strongly espouse monotheism. Further, no doubt due to the dialogical relationship between Abraham and God, the Abrahamic faiths conceive of God as deeply involved in human history, rather than detached from it. God appears at various junctures in order to alter the fate of individuals and nations.

Considering this close relationship between God and human beings, it is not surprising that Jews, Christians, and Muslims often conceive of God in personal terms. The prophets of the Bible and the Qur'an encountered God as a Being with an explicit will and personality. The Bible depicts God with anthropomorphic traits, as seen in Genesis 1:26: "God said, 'Let us make man in our image, after our likeness.'" However, from the viewpoint of faith, it is rather human beings who are "theomorphic," made in the image of their Creator.

Later, medieval rationalist philosophers in each of these religions put forth the view that one should not conceive of God as personal in the literal sense, as such perceptions limit God’s transcendent majesty. Rather, they claimed that such personal descriptions of God should be understood as metaphors. On the other hand, for many saints and pious believers, relating to God in personalistic terms allows an intimacy and depth of sentiment surpassing the logic of the more refined and rationalist conceptions.

Judaism

The Hebrew Bible describes God as the Creator of the universe, the physical world, and all that lives upon it. Yet only a few chapters of the Bible are concerned with God's role in creation. Mainly, God in the Bible is understood relationally—as God in covenant with Israel - and thus God is known through the covenant relationship.

Biblical texts make evident that God cares about people, and that he also cares about whether or not people care about him. God is chiefly known by his mighty acts in history: liberating the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt and leading them across the desert to the Promised Land; rescuing faithful Israel from her enemies; and chastising disobedient Israel with invasions, pestilence and exile. God is also known by the laws he gives the people to live by—the laws of the Mosaic covenant, which require justice, charity to the poor and downtrodden, integrity in matters of morality. They also forbid idolatry and the worship of foreign gods. God's active mercy and protection, coupled with the obligations to follow his law, constitute the two sides of the covenant relationship. They make clear to the people that God holds them accountable for their actions, and that he has the power to reward or punish them accordingly.

The God of the Hebrew Bible has the likeness of a king who governs his subjects and expects their loyalty and service. To this the Bible adds another dimension, characterizing God not only as the divine ruler but also as a divine father. God takes a compassionate, paternal interest towards the Israelites; he is not content to rule them, but would also educate them and raise them to meet his highest expectations. His attitude in Exodus is a stern parent:

The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin (...) will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children and the children's children, to the third and the fourth generation. (Exodus 34:6-7)

But it is in the prophets that God's fatherly and even motherly heart shines forth:

When Israel was a child, I loved him,

and out of Egypt I called my son.
The more I called them,
the more they went from me;
they kept sacrificing to the Baals,
and burning incense to idols.
Yet it was I that taught Ephraim to walk,
I took him up in my arms;
but they did not know that I healed them.
I led them with cords of compassion,
with the bands of love,
and I became to them as one
who eases the yoke on their jaws,

and I bent down to them and fed them. (Hosea 11.1-4)

On the other hand, the Hebrew Bible deliberately avoids any rational apprehension of God's nature. This is in accord with its prohibition of images (Exod. 20:4): God is not to be depicted by any kind of form. God's traits transcend human comprehension to the extent that attempts to see him by form is downright dangerous! In Exodus, God is cited as saying: "you cannot see my face; for man shall not see me and live"; even Moses, who longs to see God, must cover his eyes when God passes by and is only granted a glimpse of his backside" (Exod. 33:20-23). The prophet Ezekiel deepens the mystery with his vision of God's throne, mounted on a chariot surrounded by wheels and strange living creatures, for now matter how he tries, he can only glimpse "the likeness of the glory of the Lord" enveloped in light (Ezek. 1:26-28). This vision implies that God's true existence is far beyond the physical world, even as his action within the world sustains and governs all things.

Mainstream Orthodox Judaism teaches that although God is the creator of both matter and spirit, God in fact is neither. This teaching has raised questions among some as to how can there be any interaction between the Creator and the created if the Creator is indeed so different from it. In response, early Kabbalists (Jewish mystics) envisioned two aspects of God: firstly, God's self, which ultimately is unknowable, and secondly, the revealed aspect of God who created and preserves the universe, interacting with mankind in a personal way. Kabbalists believe that these two aspects are not contradictory but rather complementary to one another.

Kabbalah teaches that in order to create the universe, God "withdrew," and created the universe within the space from which "he" contracted. It is taught in the Zohar that God, at the beginning of creation, shattered ten ספירות ("sephiroth") or כלים ("kaylim" or "vessels"), scattering their fragments throughout the universe. The sephirot are comprised of different vessels embodying various emanations of God's being. The ten sephirot form the "tree of life" in the form of the human body; hence every person has the potential to unify the sefirot within the self and ascend towards God. The standing view in neo-Hasidism, currently, can be summed up as the ancient and popular Kabbalistic incantation, אין עוד מילבדו ("Ain od milvado"), which means: "There is nothing but God." This is not pantheism, however, but rather a reality that can only be seen by supernatural sight. The mundane reality is defective, because the scattered fragments—sparks—of God's nature are covered by "husks" of evil. While humanity is endowed with an inherent godliness, people first must "raise the (divine) sparks" within themselves and in all creatures, an act called tikkun that repairs the rent fabric of creation.

Islam

Muslims conceive of God as the supreme singular power in the universe called "Allah." Just as in the other Abrahamic faiths, Muslims claim that monotheism is the only acceptable form of religious faith, and place Islam in direct opposition to polytheists and idolaters. Allah is all truth and the source of all creation; therefore Allah alone is worthy of worship, and no other gods are to be acknowledged or worshiped. Muslims reject the Christian notion of the Trinity as polytheistic. To attribute the traits of Allah upon any other god is considered by Muslims to be the only unforgivable sin.

Islam recognizes God's immanence as complementing his transcendence. God states in the Qur'an: "We indeed created man, and We know what his soul whispers within him, and we are nearer to him than the jugular vein" (50.16).

The Qur'an speaks of 99 names of God, namely the attributes of Allah. The text of the Qur'an itself lists even more than 99 "names," each an attribute that Allah embodies. Many of these names portray Allah in highly personalistic terms, giving Allah abilities to "see" and "hear." This has sparked controversy among Muslim theologians, some of whom claim that such passages insinuate God as having has a particular form limited by senses. This controversy is most often settled with the conclusion that if God does see and hear, he does so in no way similar to mere human sensations. With this concern about excessive anthropomorphism, many Muslims do not approve of the Christian appellation "Father" for God. One name, Al Haqq, meaning “The Truth,” equates Allah with absolute truth that cannot be negated and is universal in all time, past, present, and future. This and other traits put forth the idea that Allah is completely transcendent and therefore wholly separate from humanity. However, Allah is said to be immanent within the world as well.

Christianity

The Christian view of God is perhaps best summed up the biblical statement: "God is love" (1 John 4:8). In the New Testament, God is known through the person of Jesus, of whom the Gospel of John states: "He who has seen me has seen the Father... Believe that I am in the Father and the Father in me" (John 14:9-11). God becomes someone that can be seen and touched, and who may speak and act in a manner easily perceived by humans, while also remaining transcendent and invisible to the naked eye. In Jesus Christ, God revealed his unparalleled love for every human being, who would sacrifice his own life—the life of his Son—for their sake: "Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends" (John 15:13). While the God of the Hebrew Bible demands and rewards faithfulness, in Jesus God demonstrated that he would sacrifice to save even the faithless sinner: "In this is love, not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins. Beloved, if God so loved us, we also ought to love one another" (1 John 4:10-11).

Jesus also demonstrated how believers can come into an intimately personal relationship with God as their Father, which he demonstrated in his own prayers, where he called out: "Abba, Father!" (Mark 14:36). The word "Abba" means "Daddy," what a child would call his father. Here Jesus discards the formality and respectful distance which the Hebrew Bible requires of a believer addressing God. The New Testament commends this intimacy for all believers: "All who are led by the Spirit of God are sons of God... When we cry, 'Abba! Father!' it is the Spirit himself bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God" (Romans 8:14-16).

The apprehension of God as a loving Father has remained central to Christian piety. At the same time, the New Testament's identification of God with Jesus Christ and the indwelling Holy Spirit were eventually developed into the doctrine of the trinity.

The New Testament notion of God as love was replaced during the Middle Ages by a more philosophical notion of God as the "Unmoved Mover" or "Pure Act" (actus purus) under the influence of Aristotelian philosophy. This medieval doctrine of God, which was formulated by Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225-1274) and his predecessors, is usually called "classical theism." It emphasized the transcendence of God to the considerable neglect of his immanence, by equating the God of the Bible with the God of Aristotle that was a completely actualized and immutable deity as the "Unmoved Mover" or "Pure Form." God is perfect in that God is completely immutable. God is in want of nothing because as "Pure Form," God is completely actualized. As the "Unmoved Mover," God cannot be acted upon by anything. So, God is impassible, i.e., incapable of passion or pathos. Divine omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence were explained in this context.

When classical theism discussed the love of God within this framework, it sometimes faced a dilemma. If our prayers or our situations of misery or happiness can make no difference to God who is immutable and impassible, then how can we say that God is a God of genuine love who cares for us? Protestant Christianity was basically freed from the Aristotelian framework and returned to the Bible as the main source of theology, but its primary emphasis upon the transcendence and immutability of God still continued to exist in its faith.

Christian theologians describe God's dual attributes in several respects: transcendence and immanence, freedom and love, being and change. According to St. Augustine of Hippo (354-430), God is both high and humble at once. Martin Luther (1483-1546) described God both as the hidden God (deus absconditus) and the revealed God (deus revalatus). Karl Barth (1886-1968) recognized two aspects of God: essence (freedom) and revelation (love), maintaining that while God in his essence is absolutely free from anything, he freely chooses to create the world to reveal himself to stay in love with it.[3] Hendrikus Berkhof, a Dutch Reformed theologian (1914-1995), calls this polarity of God his "two-sidedness."[4] Many Catholic theologians talk about of God in terms of the duality of "being" and "activity." Alfred North Whitehead's (1861-1947) "dipolar theism" discusses God in terms of his transcendent "primordial" nature and immanent "consequent" nature, which are his "conceptual" and "physical" poles, respectively. According to this, while God in his conceptual pole envisages all possibilities for the world, he in his physical pole also incorporates data from the world in order to decide which of the possibilities are finally relevant to the world.[5]

Peter L. Berger's The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions refers to our experiences of God's transcendence and immanence generally as "confrontation" and "interiority," respectively, and reports that these two types of religious experiences can be found in all major religions including Hinduism and Buddhism.[6]

God as Trinity

Main article: Trinity
The "Shield of the Trinity" or "Scutum Fidei" diagram of traditional Western Christian symbolism

The doctrine of the Trinity has its basis in the New Testament, where the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are associated in the Great Commission: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit" (Matt. 28:19). The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit can be seen together also in the apostolic benediction: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all" (2 Corinthians 13:14). However, for the monotheistic religion of Christianity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are not three gods, as there is only one God.

This doctrine arose as Christians tried to hold together two seemingly contradictory teachings: On the one hand, there is one God who created the world and who sent his Son Jesus Christ to save humankind. On the other hand, Jesus is fully divine, yet Jesus and God the Father are distinct beings. Are there, then, two gods? Likewise, the Holy Spirit is divine, with its own distinct reality. To deal with this paradox and safeguard monotheism, two theological movements sprang up within early Christianity. One view, called Modalistic Monarchianism or Sabellianism, taught that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are three different successive modes of one and the same God. That is, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are titles which describe how humanity has interacted with or had experiences with God. In the role of the Father, God is the provider and creator of all. In the mode of the Son, we experience God in the flesh, as a human, fully man and fully God. God manifests as the Holy Spirit by actions on earth and within the lives of Christians. This view presents problems, chiefly for seemingly denying Jesus' free will and active relationship with the Father: how could one modality of God pray to another, asking the Father, "Let this cup pass from me, not as I will but as thou wilt?" Hence it was rejected as heresy by the Ecumenical Councils, although it is still found among certain Pentecostal denominations. A second approach, Dynamic Monarchianism, defended the unity of the Godhead by saying that the Father alone is God, and that the Son and Holy Spirit are merely creatures. The Son as a created man received a power (dynamis in Greek) from the Father at the time of his baptism to be adopted as the Son of God. This approach was rejected for seemingly denying Jesus his full divinity.

The Roman Catholic Church sought a middle way between these extremes, which, as articulated by Tertullian (c. 155-230 C.E.), became the orthodox trinitarian position: The Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are "one substance of three persons." In this formulation the three are distinct, yet they are not separate. The Latin word persona in the days of Tertullian never meant a self-conscious individual person, which is what is usually meant by the modern English word "person." It rather meant a mask used at the theater, where a single actor would wear different masks to signify the characters he played. In this sense the three "persons" are still of one substance. Since the fourth century C.E., in both Eastern and Western Christianity, the mainstream doctrine of the trinity has been stated as "One substance in three persons." The vast majority of Christians today are trinitarian.

Further explanations of the relationship of the three distinct divine persons of one and the same God include the "mutual indwelling" or interpenetration of the three, according to which one dwells as inevitably in the others as they do in the one. Following John 14:11, "I [Jesus] am in the Father and the Father in me," and 14:17, "The Spirit of truth... dwells with you, and will be in you," the persons of the Trinity "reciprocally contain one another, so that one permanently envelopes and is permanently enveloped by, the other whom he yet envelopes."[7] The relationship of the three persons is further explained by differentiation of functions: creation, redemption, and sanctification are attributed primarily to the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, respectively, even as all three persons are indivisibly involved in each.

Muslims, Jews, Unitarians, and a small fraction of Christians are unitarian monotheists, referring to the fact that they believe in God as an undivided one and nothing else. They hold that God is only one "person" (so to speak), and often consider Trinitarian beliefs to be a form of polytheism (Christians counter that this point misunderstands the subtle and careful grasp of the one true God within trinitarian theology).

Some non-Christian religions also incorporate multiplicity into their concept of the One God. The Jewish Kabbalistic concept of the ten Sefirot (emanations) of God has been mentioned. Some sects of Hinduism recognize the Trimurti, a conception by which the three major gods (Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva) represent the three modes of the Supreme Deity as Creator, Sustainer and Destroyer (see below). Mahayana Buddhism developed the doctrine of the Trikaya, or three bodies of the Buddha: the Buddha's cosmic body, the eternal Dharmakaya, which is the substance of Enlightenment and Truth itself; the Sambhogakaya, the all-pervading compassion and wisdom of the Buddha which invites all people to salvation; and the incarnation of these principles in the historical Sakyamuni, called the Nirmanakaya. These doctrines can be seen as ways of dealing with some of the same theological problems that are addressed by Christian trinitarian doctrine: specifically how to bridge the gap between the ineffable God and his/her/its concrete manifestations in the world.

Conceptions of God in Asian Religions

Hinduism

In Hinduism, the term Ishvara (ईश्वर in Devanagari script), is a generic name for God as well as a philosophical concept denoting one supreme personal power who rules the cosmos. Other terms for God include Paramatman and Bhagavan. In some Hindu schools, use of the term Ishvara affirms that God is a deeply personal and loving figure; other schools subordinate Ishvara to the impersonal Brahman.

Hinduism of the early Vedas was polytheistic, with elaborate rituals and sacrifices prescribed for the appeasement of the various gods. Various gods rise to supremacy at various times in Vedic myth, as well as in the execution of the ritual. Yet the Vedas tended towards henotheism, with the supreme God depicted as sometimes the warrior-god Indra; cosmic forces such as Agni, the god of fire; Varuna, keeper of the celestial waters; or Vac, speech. The interchangeable nature of the supreme god suggests that Vedic henotheism was merely a heuristic device for a greater, more nebulous reality, with gods and goddesses personalizing various aspects of the supreme divinity in order to render it more accessible. Rig Veda 1:164:46 is famous for insinuating the existence of some divinity beyond the numerous gods, stating that "Truth is One, though the sages know it as many." This statement may be interpreted as a vague indication of a deeper monism or even monotheism, gauging from the later schools of Hinduism that were seemingly on a search to define god as ultimately one; even within these early texts, it seems clear that the Vedic seers were unsatisfied with the idea of their polytheistic pantheon fully expressing the wholeness of divinity. By the time of the Upanishads, the notion of an ineffable, indescribable Supreme Cosmic Spirit called Brahman, which served as ground for the entire universe, had been developed to better articulate this singular, supreme essence.

The schools of Vedanta (or "end of the Vedas") are responsible for the further development of this notion of Brahman. Advaita ("non-dualistic") Vedanta, founded by the philosopher Shankara (c. 700-750 C.E.), became the dominant monistic conception of God. According to Shankara, Brahman is the only true reality in this world, and everything else is based in illusion (maya). Maya is that complex illusory power which causes the Brahman to be perceived as the material world. Shankara also differentiated between Nirguna Brahman (Brahman without qualities) and Saguna Brahman (Brahman with qualities). When human beings attempt to understand the attributeless Brahman with their worldly minds, ever under the influence of maya, Brahman becomes God, or Ishvara. Therefore, God in the traditional form with positive attributes (Saguna Brahman) is Brahman conditioned by maya. Ishvara is omniscient, omnipresent, incorporeal, independent, creator of the world, and also its destroyer, ruling the world with his maya. However, while God is perceived in this conditioned state, humans by way of their ignorance are the servants of maya, which is the cause of the widespread unhappiness experienced within the mortal world. The Advaita Vedanta philosophy concludes that once one comes to fully realize that the distinction between Brahman and all particular things, including the human soul (Atman), are merely an illusory, they will recognize their own inherent unity with Brahman and henceforth liberate themselves from the material realm.

Visistadvaita Vedanta ("qualified non-dualistic" Vedanta), founded by mystic saint Ramanuja (1017-1137 C.E.), is the second of the major Vedanta schools. It holds that while the self is still connected to Brahman, it is only an incomplete part and not the same as the whole. While God is infinite and represents the cause and effect of the universe, individual atman are limited and considered to be inferior to Brahman. Thus, simple realization of the soul's true identity will not suffice for attaining liberation, since Brahman and atman are not fully equivalent. Rather, Ramanuja prescribed that one should dedicate and surrender oneself to the personal God in a process called bhakti (or "loving devotion"). Ishvara, then, is typically perceived by Visistadvaitas as equally important in non-dual Brahman form. Belief in this deity was claimed by Ramanuja to be indispensable for purposes of devotion, the ultimate path to non-dual Brahman. The end result of devotion is not a complete merger of the soul with Brahman, as described by Shankara, but rather an opportunity for the liberated soul to share in the nature of God.

Dvaita (or "dualistic") Vedanta, established by Madhva (1238-1317 C.E.), denies any connection whatsoever between Brahman and atman. Instead, God is conceived of in wholly personal terms as Ishvara, a being totally separate from the universe and souls within it. This view displaying significant overlap with Abrahamic theism. Nirguna Brahman is rarely acknowledged within this school, which considers the notion of a deity without characteristics to be an intellectual abstraction with no appeal in the context of religion as it occurs among laypersons.

Many outside observers mistakenly interpret the practices of some modern Hindu sects to be polytheistic in nature. In fact, many of these sects teach that Ultimate Reality is made up of innumerable aspects, a consequence of its infinite nature. Therefore, like the Vedic deities, the numerous deities of Hinduism, which have been reported as numbering as high as 330 million, provide personalized emphasis upon particular traits of God. Some believe that it is only through conception of so many divine beings that humans come to realization of Brahman or Ishvara.

One such example of multiplicity serving as a window to the primordial oneness is classical Hindu idea of the Trimurti, which acknowledges three aspects of God in the personae of Brahma (the creator), Vishnu (the preserver), and Shiva (the destroyer). These three gods are simply different aspects of the one and the same Ishvara, who ultimately is inconceivable. In this manner, the Trimurti is similar to the Sabellian interpretation of the three persons of the Christian Trinity as three modalities of the one God.

Worship of countless deities as manifestations of a single monistic principle is alive in contemporary Hindu traditions. The Smarta school believes meditation upon icons (murti) representing an unlimited number of gods to be the optimum means by which connect with the greater power of Brahman, who transcends the iconic form. All gods, then, reduce to the same principle which does not exist as a plurality. These schools of Hinduism are best classified not as polytheism but rather as "emanational" monotheism. Emanational monotheism refers to religious traditions in which a singular monistic or pantheistic principle is perceived by humans as having many emanations or iterations, and is subsequently given worship through these forms.

There are, however, varieties of Hinduism which are explicitly polytheistic. Notably, the Mimamsa school recognizes the devas (celestial spirits) as the rulers over the forces of nature, with no particular deva rising above the others as the supreme deity.

Modern Hinduism has developed substantial monotheistic movements that acknowledge one personalized God as supreme. The two largest branches of Hinduism today are Vaishnavism, which worships Vishnu and his avatars, and Shaivism, which worships Shiva. Both of these gods enjoyed some significance in the Vedas, Vishnu being declared the supreme god in several instances, and Shiva prominent in the form of his precursor, Rudra. Their mythologies burgeoned in popularity after the circulation of the Puranas and the Mahabarata, which laid the foundation for their eventual veneration as monotheistic deities.

In the movements associated with Shiva and Vishnu it is believed that Ishvara and Brahman are identical. Thus, these movements closely resemble traditional Western monotheism, in that each sect considers their chosen god to be the sole and supreme deity. However, unlike the Western traditions (as well as Hindu interpretations such as Dvaita Vedanta), the devotional sects generally do not interpret the relation between God and the universe as one of dualism. Rather, they maintain a monistic view which conceives their personalistic god as the supreme entity of the universe, embodying the indescribable and supreme power of the traditional Brahman without qualities as well as their anthropomorphic form. The personalistic attributes of Vishnu and Shiva are not perceived to be limitations upon their power. In fact, it is these very characteristics which are thought to render Vishnu or Shiva superior over Nirguna Brahman.

Ishvara, whether in the form of Shiva or Vishnu, is thought to be endowed with six major attributes—although individual attributes listed in any given account vary since the actual number of auspicious qualities of God are countless. One set of attributes (and their common interpretations) are: Jnana, the power to know about all beings simultaneously; Bala, the capacity to support everything without any fatigue; Virya, the power to retain immateriality in spite of being the material cause of mutable creations; Tejas, which expresses self-sufficiency and the capacity to overpower everything by way of spiritual effulgence; and Aishvarya, unchallenged rule over the sixth attribute; Shakti, the energy which renders the impossible possible. Shakti itself is the focus of worship in Shaktism, another popular devotional school. Followers of Shaktism conceive of the divine power of the Ishvara as a female goddess called Devi or Durga, who is worshiped as the Divine Mother.

Sikhism

Sikhism arose in the Punjab region of north-western India during the fifteenth century C.E. This vibrant religion embodied a theology of monotheism, asserting that God is essentially One (Ek Onkar). Numerous passages within the Guru Granth Sahib (the Sikh holy book) reiterate the importance of this idea, including the very first stanza, known as the Mool Mantra. It reads: "One Universal Creator God. The Name Is Truth (...) Self-Existent." The Sikhs reject any division of God, including the notion that God can produce avatars or human incarnations.

Generally, God is described by Sikhs as the creator of the universe, singular, supreme, timeless, omnipresent, and perfectly moral. Sikhs claim that God's very essence is unchanging Truth (Sat Namm). In addition, God is also described in seemingly anthropomorphic terms, such as in the aforementioned Mool Mantra, which describes God as "Creative Being Personified." Although Sikhs, like Muslims, bestow many names upon God in order to describe His various traits, they most commonly refer to God as Wahiguru.

Sikhism also features elements of pantheism or panentheism. Stories attributed to Guru Nanak suggest that he believed god to be everywhere in the physical world as in pantheism. Similarly, the Sikh tradition typically describes God as the preservative force within the physical world, present in all material forms. Each of these worldly forms was created as a manifestation of God. These ideas, taken together with the prevalent Sikh belief that God is the transcendent creator who exists independent of the world, could be interpreted to suggest that Sikhism is panentheistic.

Buddhism

A stone image of the Buddha

Theravada Buddhism has been described as atheistic or agnostic: When asked about a supreme God, Buddha remained silent. Buddha believed the more important issue was a way out of suffering. Sakyamuni Buddha taught that speculation about the supernatural distracts us from the greater and more worthwhile devotion to breaking the cycle of rebirth. Buddha's silence has resulted in many even educated people believing that Buddhism is atheistic.[8]

However, Mahayana Buddhism in China developed the notion of the Buddha's cosmic body, the eternal Dharmakaya, which is the substance of Enlightenment and Truth itself; and the Sambhogakaya, the all-pervading compassion and wisdom of the Buddha, which invites all people to salvation. These cosmic manifestations of the Buddha precede the historical Sakyamuni, called the Nirmanakaya. This doctrine of the Trikaya, or three bodies of the Buddha, bears some resemblance to the Christian doctrine of trinity. By thus venerating the Buddha as the qualities of truth and mercy that pervade the cosmos, East Asian Buddhists have attributed to the Buddha the qualities of divinity. Mahayana Buddhism also venerates the Bodhisattvas, enlightened heavenly beings who have chosen to forgo entering into nirvana until all beings are enlightened.

Chinese religions

In East Asia, Heaven (Tian) is the term most commonly used for God. The concept of Heaven as a power that was believed to judge both the world and its rulers came into currency in China during the Zhou dynasty (1122-255 B.C.E.). Heaven was conceived sometimes as a personal agent, sometimes as an impersonal force, or both. Evidence suggests that under the Zhou, Heaven was an all-powerful entity that guaranteed peace and justice within the kingdom so long as rulers maintained order and justice. If order and justice were not maintained, Heaven meted out punishment through natural and social disasters. The way in which the ruler was obligated to rule his empire in order to please Heaven was known as the Mandate of Heaven (Tian-Ming). Dealing with Heaven was principally the responsibility of the ruler. To maintain the mandate, the ruler (who came to be known as Tian-zi, the "Son of Heaven") called upon Heaven with ritual and sacrifice.

Reverence for Heaven increased during the Han dynasty (206 B.C.E.–220 C.E.) as one leg of a three-fold relationship between Heaven, humans and Earth. The belief developed that the earthly bureaucracy mirrors the heavenly, with Heaven as the yang (masculine) aspect and earth as the yin (feminine) aspect. Human beings should maintain harmony and balance between the two spheres, as what happens on earth influences heaven, and vice-versa. Thus, at a very early period, the Chinese developed an empathetic relationship with both Heaven and the natural world. Heaven was thus not separate from nature, and later it would be conceived impersonally as the principle governing nature.

Although the teachings of Confucius (551–479 B.C.E.) do not seem particularly theistic, he apparently believed in Heaven and believed himself to be guided by Heaven. Confucius delved into the practical questions of how one should live in order to implement the will of heaven and therefore uphold peace, harmony and justice within society. For purposes of implementing the will, he stressed the concept of li which had previously referred to ritual, but was nuanced under his influence, coming to be refer to "propriety." By bringing personal, familial and societal roles into harmony, one could achieve li, the basis for putting the Mandate of Heaven into action. Heaven is the foundation for all of which is good, the ultimate aid in attaining a life of ren or "humanity." Therefore, the truly humanistic person always keeps Heaven in mind.

Mozu (470-390 B.C.E.) expanded upon this idea, claiming Heaven to be the absolute source of goodness, and the principle which differentiates between what is right and what its wrong. Heaven brings what is recognized as beneficial and pleasing for all people in the world, particularly by way of people who seek its goodness through ritual activities such as sacrifice and prayer.

The "yang/yin" symbol of Daoist metaphysical reality, depicting constant change within the unity of the Dao

Laozi, author of the Dao De Jing and acknowledged founder of Daoism, provided a more pantheistic concept to describe the principle which creates and sustains the world, which he called the Dao. Simply put, the Dao is the way: the ultimate, ineffable principle which contains the entirety of the universe, yet also embodies nothingness as its nature. It is all things, but it is also no particular thing. Thus, the Dao, in its totality, represents the central unifying metaphysical and naturalistic principle pervading the entire universe. While the Dao is indescribable and incapable of full human understanding, it is not altogether indiscernible. That is, if one can look beyond the surface of things, they can potentially begin to see the Way of the universe, and come to a realization of their own place as a product of and participant within this Way. The Dao is also responsible for creation, oscillating between two contrasting creative energies which exist in diametric opposition, the yin and the yang. The yin and the yang put in place the dualities which persist in the physical world. Therefore, the Dao, while not personalistic by any means, embodies many of the definitive traits of God in other traditions.

Later on, more personalistic conceptions of divinity would arise. In the Daoist tradition which followed, Laozi himself came to be viewed as the human incarnation of the Dao, and was venerated as a personal god. As well, numerous other people who followed the Dao were recognized as heavenly figures, or xians ("immortals"), and henceforth were acknowledged held a measure of supremacy in folk religious circles.

The movement known as neo-Confucianism developed a more philosophical concept of God. Called the Supreme Ultimate, it was originally a Daoist concept that was developed into a Confucian metaphysics by Zhou Dunyi (1017–1073). He incorporated the cosmology of the Book of Changes (I Ching) into Confucianism through his groundbreaking work, Taijitu Shuo (“Explanation of the Diagram of the Supreme Ultimate”). According to the I Ching, the process of creation begins from the Great Ultimate, out of which originate the polarity of yin (tranquility) and yang (movement), which through their interaction give rise to the Five Elements (fire, earth, water, metal, and wood). The integration of these entities gives rise to male and female elements, which in turn generates the production and evolution of all things. Zhou taught that human beings receive all these qualities and forces in their “highest excellence,” and that when man reacts to the external phenomena thus created, the distinction between good and evil emerges in his thought and conduct.

Types of Belief about God

Given the vast number of concepts about God, religious scholars and theologians have created a number of classifications to describe them. These include:

  • Theism describes the belief that God is both transcendent and immanent. Thus, God is infinite and ineffable, yet also present in the affairs of the world. God's immanence is attributed to miracles or revelations given to humanity (for example, holy scriptures), whereby God takes initiative in contacting humanity. Even everyday human experiences such as those of "love," "goodness," or "truth" can be interpreted as affirmations of God's involvement in creation. Typically, God in theism is personal, having human form and dynamic emotionality. Most theists hold that God is omnipotent, omniscient, and unfailingly benevolent, although this belief raises questions about how God relates to evil and suffering in the world. To remedy this difficulty, some theists ascribe to God a self-consciousness or else purposefully place limits upon his omnipotence, omniscience, and/or benevolence. Theism is by far the most common idea about God among believers in the Abrahamic religions.
  • Deism developed in response to the cruel wars of religion that ravaged Europe in the seventeenth century. It rejects God's involvement in worldly affairs—i.e., to set up religions and give special revelations in scriptures—because these revelations and religions are incommensurate with one another. Rather, what can be known about God must be universal and accessible by reason. Deists like Voltaire (1694-1778) in France compared God to a "watchmaker" who set the universe in motion but does not subsequently intervene in what transpires. All valid laws of morality and religion are expressions of the fundamental principle by which God created the universe, and not a special revelation to any particular church. Humans ought to be moral because the consequences of not doing so are built into the fabric of the universe just like the law of gravity. In this way, deism is highly reconcilable with scientific thought. On the other hand, there is no point in praying to God or asking for His help, for God has no interest in human beings aside from setting up a universe hospitable to them.
  • Henotheism is the academic classification placed upon religious belief systems which accept or have accepted the existence of many gods, but worship one particular deity as supreme. This may take the form of a system in which one god rises to supremacy over others in a process of mythological succession (as did Zeus among the Greeks). However, it may also refer to systems where various gods exist in order to illustrate aspects of a greater, Supreme Being or essence, such as in Vedic Hinduism. Henotheistic beliefs are very often the precursor to full-fledged monotheism, as the inferior gods gradually fall away and the supreme god or universal principle beyond the gods becomes recognized as the sole divinity.
  • Monotheism holds that there is only one God. This has led some traditions to espouse an exclusionist view, holding that their definition of God is the sole correct one. Exclusionist monotheists of one religion can, and often do, consider the God or gods of religions other than their own to be false. For instance, some Christian fundamentalists consider all the gods of other religions to be demons in disguise, including even the monotheistic God of Islam. Others maintain an inclusionist view, accepting the possibility of more than one definition of God to be true at the same time and/or claiming that the one true God is worshipped in different religions under different names. Eastern religious believers and Liberal Christians are more likely to assume that adherents of other faiths worship the same God as they, albeit with different attributes due to cultural influences. More so than any other religious classification, monotheism has been conceived of as an "ideal" towards which all spiritual endeavors should strive; hence it is the classification which often plays the most significant role in discussions of God.
  • Pantheism refers to the belief that God is the universe and the universe is God. In this system, God is fully immanent, imbuing all of reality with a spiritual basis, while simultaneously retaining status as transcendent. All of natural law, existence, and the sum total of all that is, was, and ever will be, is represented in the theological principle of God. This means that every object, as well as each individual human, is part of God. Most pantheists do not describe God in personalistic terms, instead conceiving God to be the unconscious, non-sentient universe and the holy majesty its totality entails. Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677) was a typical pantheist. Interestingly, "death of God" theologian Thomas J.J. Altizer is a pantheist because he believes that the transcendent God as the Wholly Other now died and disappeared to become totally immanent in humanity.
  • Panentheism holds that God contains the universe but is not identical to it; thus God exists beyond the universe as well as within it. Panentheism is often compared to pantheism; however, the panentheist God is both immanent and transcendent, as in theism. In contrast to theism, the panentheist God is less likely to be personalistic. Despite the fact that the term has only recently come into currency within religious circles, panentheistic sentiments are actually quite common in religious movements, such as the Jewish Kabbalists, the Liberal Catholic Church, process theology, and many branches of Hinduism.
  • Monism believes that the totality of things and phenomena in the world can be reduced to a single type of entity, whether it may be material, spiritual, substantial, or divine. The term "monism," derived from the Greek monos (meaning one), was introduced by Christian Wolff (1679-1754), and it is opposed to dualism and pluralism. Monists differ considerably in their choice of a reduced unifying entity. If it is a deity, they are pantheists like Spinoza. If it is a mind, they are idealists like Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831). If it is a material thing, they are materialists (atheists) like some of the Pre-Socratic philosophers.
  • Atheism refers most generally to a lack of belief in God or gods. The term has a variety of meanings ranging from a disbelief in certain conceptions of God (e.g., a personal God) to full-fledge denial that God exists. Such ideas have been present since antiquity. The hedonistic Carvaka school, which flourished in India between 600 B.C.E. and 1400 C.E., held that the only entities in existence were material, and that all the pleasures of life should be indulged since there was no possibility of god or afterlife to speak of. Similarly, in Greece during the fourth century B.C.E., philosopher Epicurus put forth the view that people should disavow faith in the gods and the notion of an afterlife in order to enjoy the immediate sensory pleasures. During the Age of Enlightenment, atheism resurfaced as the philosophical position of a rapidly growing minority, led by the openly atheistic works of Paul Baron d'Holbach (1723-1789). In the nineteenth century, Ludwig Feuerbach (1804-1872) claimed God was a fictional projection fabricated by humanity. This idea greatly influenced Karl Marx (1818-1883), the founding father of communism. Atheism would become the official position of the various communist states such as the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900) summed up the nineteenth-century popularity of atheism when he coined the aphorism "God is dead." "Death of God" theologian William Hamilton, in fact, became an atheist. By the twentieth century atheism became common, as rationalism and secular humanism came in vogue.

Names of God

YHWH, the name of God or Tetragrammaton, in Phoenician (1100 B.C.E. to 300 C.E.), Aramaic (tenth century B.C.E. to 0) and modern Hebrew scripts

The noun God is the proper English name used for the deity of monotheistic faiths. Names of God, however, are innumerable, varying with religious traditions and over time.

Yahweh (יהוה) (ya•'we) is the primary Hebrew name of God in the Bible. Jews normally do not pronounce this name, considering it too holy to verbalize. Instead, whenever they encounter this unpronounceable string of consonants, they speak the name Adonai. In Christian Bibles, Yahweh is usually translated as "the LORD," a rough equivalent to the Hebrew "Adonai." The Hebrew Bible indicates this reading by inserting the vowel pointing from the word Adonai on the consonants YHWH, rather than use the actual vowels. Based on a literal reading of this pointing (יְהוָֹה), many modern Protestant Christians read God's name as Jehovah. Orthodox Jews strenuously avoid mentioning or even writing the divine name, preferring such circumlocutions as "the Holy One," "the Name," or the defective writing "G-d."

Elohim is the generic term for God in the Hebrew Bible, translated "God." In the days of the Hebrew patriarchs, God was called by names such as El Shaddai (“God Almighty”), El Elyon (“God Most High”), and El Berit (“God of the Covenant”). These terms for God are based on the Hebrew word El, which can mean a generic divine being ("god") or the Canaanite god "El" who was head of the older Canaanite pantheon in the second millennium B.C.E.

When Moses at the burning bush asked God, "What is your name?," he was given the answer, Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh, commonly translated, "I am that I am," or "I am what I shall be," referring to his unconditional self-existence (Exod. 3:14).

Muslims refer to God as Allah. It is not God's personal name, but simply Arabic for "the God." The term Allah is by no means exclusive to Islam, and is commonly used by Arab Christians, Arab Jews, and Malteste Catholics (among others) in order to refer to the monotheist deity. Linguists believe that the term Allāh is derived from a contraction of the Arabic words al (the) + ilah ("male deity")—the Arabic cognate of the Hebrew word El.

"God" is the common name for the supreme deity in Christianity. Other terms include the Trinity, which denotes the "three-in-one" constituent parts of the penultimate God. Churches such as the United Church of Canada and Religious Science currently use the term "the One" alongside "God" as a more gender-neutral cognomen for God. In the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, God is called Igzi'abihier ("Lord of the Universe").

Among Hindus, there are thousands of names for the supreme divinity, including Brahman and Ishvara. Brahman is that infinite, omnipresent, omnipotent, incorporeal, transcendent and immanent Reality that is the ground of all being. Ishvara (Supreme Lord) is the term used for the personalistic God; it is the more popular form of God in Hinduism. Most Hindus worship one or another personal form of Ishvara in its various roles of preserver Vishnu, destroyer Shiva, or creator Brahma. A common prayer is the Vishnu sahasranama, a hymn describing the one thousand names of God. Ishvara is a monotheistic concept; it should not be confused with the numerous deities of the Hindu pantheon.

Sikhs worship God with the name Akal (the eternal) or Sat (truth). Help of the gurus is essential to reach God, who is conceived as the ultimate guru. Hence, Sikhs most frequently refer to God by the title Wahiguru (or "wonderful guru").

The name of God is consistently capitalized in English writings. The development of English orthography was dominated by Christian texts. In early English bibles, the Tetragrammaton was rendered in capitals: "IEHOUAH" in William Tyndale's version of 1525. The King James Version of 1611 renders YHWH as "The Lord," Elohim as "God," Adonay YHWH and Adonay Elohim as "Lord God," and kurios ho theos as "Lord God" (in the New Testament). Capitalized "God" was first used to refer to the Judeo-Christian concept, and may now signify any monotheistic conception of God, including the translations of the Arabic Allāh and the African Masai Engai. The use of capitalization, as for a proper noun, has usually persisted to disambiguate the concept of a singular God from pagan deities for which lowercase god has continued to be applied. Pronouns referring to God are also often capitalized and are traditionally in the masculine gender, i.e., "He," "His," etc. However, in more recent times, God has sometimes been referred to in feminine terms, such as "She" and "Her."

Images of God

The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, from the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

Religious attitudes towards images can be divided into two groups. Some religions reject images of the deity, believing that the creation and veneration of icons is tantamount to idolatry. Other religions accept images as helpful aids to focus devotions and as a conduit between the worshiper and the ineffable God.

Viewing images as idolatrous misrepresentations of the true God has led in various historical periods to iconoclasm, the destruction of images. One very early example of iconoclasm occurred in Egypt during the fourteenth century B.C.E. when pharaoh Akhenaten declared the solar God Aten to be solely supreme, and then ordered that images of gods other than Aten be destroyed.

Archaeological evidence indicates that the ancient Israelites rejected the worship of images, which were common enough in neighboring Canaanite culture. Israelite shrines typically have only one or more smooth standing stones, called a Massebah, near to the altar. The Second Commandment in the Hebrew Bible explicitly states: "Thou shalt not make unto me any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above" (Exod. 20:4-5). With this in mind, contemporary Jews scrupulously avoid any paintings, sculptures or drawings of God.

Islam does not allow pictorial representations of God; this image is Arabic calligraphy of the name Allah

Likewise, Islam strictly forbids any image of God. The manufacture of idols falls under the scope the mortal sin termed shirk, which in the Qur'an refers to any action or belief which does service to some force or entity other than the one God Allah. The second category of shirk is called Shirk in al-Asma was-Sifat (the Names and Attributes of Allah) and refers to the practice of confounding Allah with the attributes of his creation. By portraying Allah in the form and qualities of either human beings, animals, or other objects, one does not actually create an image of the divine, but rather creates a false idol, since Allah is irreconcilably beyond form. Thus, images of God are banned outright in most sects of Islam in order to reinforce absolute monotheism and to eliminate potential for idolatry.

Christianity in the Apostolic era maintained the thorough denunciation of images of God taught by the Jews. However, Saint John of Damascus (676-749 C.E.) would later claim that images of God in the form of Jesus should be permitted, as the person Jesus marks a shift in God's nature from invisible to visible. In the present day, depictions of God are common in Christianity, particularly in the form of Christ and sometimes even as the Heavenly Father. Both the Catholic and Orthodox churches have traditionally venerated images and icons of Christ (whom Christians believe to be the second person of the Godhead), as well as those of angels and saints. During the Protestant Reformation, many reformers condemned such use of images as idolatrous. Some took drastic measures to suppress the use of images of the divine in worship, such as John Calvin (1509-1564), who commonly ordered that church walls be white-washed. Contemporary Protestant groups have softened their position toward the use of images; they display the Cross prominently as a symbol in worship, and accept all manner of images of God and Jesus for purposes of education.

Hinduism employs of images and icons to depict the divine. Many Hindus regard icons to be necessary for human religious activity, since human experience is mediated by the senses. Statues of the deity are often at the center of religious devotion, which may include ritual bathing, decorating and feeding the image. In schools of Mahayana Buddhism, statues of the Buddha as well as of other venerated or enlightened beings are a focus for meditation and devotion. That said, some Hindu and Buddhist schools are critical of images of the divine, believing that such depictions detract from true spiritual awareness, which transcends all sensory forms.

Experiencing God

Through faith

For many people, the experience of God is something that happens to them, not something they seek after. Many children are said to have a natural relationship with God. "God needs no pointing out to a child," states an Akan proverb, and Muhammad once said, "Every child is born of the nature of purity and submission to God" (Bukhari). As an adult, God may intrude dramatically into a person's life like an unwelcome guest. Saint Paul had such an experience on the road to Damascus, which blinded him for a time and forced him to confront his prejudice against Christians.

The attitude of faith is said to invite God's presence in one's life. It requires trusting that God exists and is watching over the faithful, as in the Qur'an: "Put your trust in the Exalted in Might, the Merciful, Who sees you standing forth in prayer... for He hears and sees all things" (Q 26:18-20). Thus, theologian Karl Barth suggested the analogia fidei: an attitude of humility, self-denial and repentance to make room for God's revelation, the source of authentic information on the living God. Faith requires intellectual humility, as in the proverb: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight" (Prov. 3:5). Thus Saint Augustine of Hippo, followed by Saint Anselm of Canterbury, proposed the formula "faith seeking understanding" (fides quaerens intellectum), according to which faith is the foundation for all knowledge about God. In these ways have ordinary believers always been encouraged to live a life of faith and humility in order to be connected with God. That this way of life is so often successful becomes a reason to believe that God is indeed alive and is the One who "makes straight your paths" (Prov. 3:6).

In the heart

In the West, the conscience refers to a faculty whereby human beings come to know basic moral truths. This faculty has been described as “the voice of God,” because it represents God's universal law. For example, at Romans 2:14-15, Saint Paul describes conscience as “bearing witness” to the law of God “inscribed” on the hearts of Gentiles. In the Sufi traditions of Islam, God is said to dwell "in the heart of My faithful servant" (Hadith of Suhrawardi). In the Hebrew Bible, the prophet Elijah encounters God not in the earthquake, but rather in a "still small voice." (1 Kings 19:12) This conception of conscience, as a faculty by which God’s laws and teachings are made known to human beings, is continued in the writings of the church fathers such as Saint Jerome and Saint Augustine. In the same vein, philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724-1804), who denied the possibility of rational proof of God (see below), based his moral proof for the existence of God on the operation of conscience, which he called "practical reason."

The Eastern conception of this inward, divine self is variously called the "Atman," "original mind" or "Buddha nature." Thus the Upanishads: "In the golden city of the heart dwells / The Lord of Love, without parts, without stain" (Mundaka Upanishad 2.2.10). It is not necessarily easy to access this Atman or “original mind,” which is often covered by the selfish desires of the ego. It requires effort at meditation to strip away those delusions. In the words of the Sixth Patriarch of Zen Buddhism, Hui Neng:

Because the mind labors under delusions, he knows not his own inner nature; and the result is that he ignores the Trikaya within himself, erroneously believing that they are to be sought from without. Within yourself you will find the Trikaya which, being the manifestation of the Essence of Mind, are not to be sought from without. (Platform Sutra 6)

Yet to a person dwelling in enlightenment, "This very mind is the Buddha" (Mumonkan 30); or in the inspired mysticism of the Upanishads: "That is Reality. That is the (universal) Self. That art thou" (Chandogya Upanishad 6.8.7).

Through reason: arguments for the existence of God

Rational arguments for the existence of God have been developed especially in Christianity. The three most notable are the ontological, cosmological, and teleological arguments. The ontological argument, originally developed by Anselm of Canterbury (c. 1034-1109), claims that God must exist based on the simple fact that the human intellect can conceive of such a supreme power. In this proof, God is "that than which no greater can be conceived." This position was later reiterated with some modifications by René Descartes (1596-1650) and Gottfried Leibniz (1646-1716).

The cosmological argument was first suggested by Aristotle, who claimed that all being and movement cannot originate from nothing and therefore must have an original cause or impulse. There must exist an "Unmoved Mover" who sets in motion the causal sequences of matter and being found within the world. Thirteenth-century theologian Saint Thomas Aquinas insisted that this First Cause must be God.

Aquinas also provided the foundations for the teleological argument or the "argument from design," which contends that the instances of order and purpose which can be witnessed within the natural world suggests it has been designed. There can be no such cosmic design without a Designer, who is God. This position was elaborated by modern philosophers Frederick R. Tennant and Richard Swinburne, who claimed that the harmony observable within nature, as well as the breadth of the human mind which is capable of understanding and appreciating this harmony, proves the existence of a purposeful Creator.

Atheists who reject these arguments complain that they would only be accepted by people who already believe in God. To answer this objection, Swinburne developed the hypothetical method, which begins by positing the existence of God as a hypothesis, which then can be verified by observing the world. If the hypothesis is verified, the existence of God as its Designer becomes more probable than improbable.[9]

The via negativa

The via negativa (negative way) or apophatic theology is to seek knowledge of God through negating categories, rather than through positive statements and affirmations. It assumes that human language can never truly express the complete purview of God. Instead, anyone who wishes to understand God must go beyond words. Rather than asserting what God is, then, negative theologians discuss what God is not. This kind of theology is often allied with mystical traditions, which focus on a spontaneous or cultivated individual experience of the divine reality beyond the realm of ordinary perception, experience unmediated by the structures of traditional organized religion. Mystical experiences are often described as exceeding the boundaries of human language; therefore, statements about mystical experience of God may be best suited for such a theology of negation.

The via negativa is akin to the spirituality found in Eastern religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism. The Upanishads state: The Self is "not this, not that (neti, neti)"; it is beyond comprehension. Or as the Dao De Jing states, "The way that can be spoken of is not the eternal Way; the name that can be named is not the eternal name" (Dao De Jing 1). In other words, it is fruitless to attempt to describe Ultimate Reality by limited human categories. In Buddhism, as soon as one is led through anatta (no-self) to the realm of enlightenment in Nirvana as Fullness, the Fullness of Nirvana is immediately negated as Nothingness, its antithesis, because it is beyond description. Zen Buddhism provides various expedients, such as the Koan, which when meditated over lead adherents into such logical contradictions in order that they may break through the intellect entirely and reach Enlightenment.

Through devotional practice

Devotional practice is deemed helpful in preparing individuals for experiences of God, based on the common understanding that people can hardly recognize God's presence when daily life is so fully occupied with work and social life, and when their thoughts are dominated by self-centered desires. By quieting the mind and stopping the desires of the body, and by focusing one's attention and action towards transcendental things, a person becomes receptive to the finer vibrations of the divine Spirit.

  • Asceticism

As most people are dominated by the needs of the body for food, clothing, sleep, and sex, asceticism teaches abstinence from worldly pleasures and denying the body's desires in order to prepare a foundation for God to dwell within the self. Fasting is a very common ascetic practice. Islam, for example, practices sawm, which is fasting during the month of Ramadan. Hermetic solitariness and renunciation of possessions are also quite common amongst ascetics in various religions. Celibacy is practiced by the clergy and ascetics in some segments of Christianity, Hinduism, Jainism, and Buddhism. Jainism has practices such as meditation in difficult postures and/or atop hills and mountains. Hindu ascetics do some extreme forms of devotion such as non-use of one leg or the other and the holding of an arm in the air for a very long period of time.

Perhaps extremely harsh asceticism can be questioned because it can lead to destruction of the self rather than helping the self to accomplish the goal. But the fact is that many an ascetic has experienced spiritual bliss, accompanied by a renewed and reorganized self.

  • Prayer, meditation, and contemplation

Various religious traditions teach that prayer enables a person praying to experience the divine. Prayer involves praising and honoring the divine, confessing sins, sharing one's thoughts and feelings, and requesting guidance and assistance. Prayer is verbal communication to the divine. Often it is a form of supplication, with the expectation of a response. Better than praying out of one's own need is to pray for others in need: "He who prays for his fellowman, while he himself has the same need, will be answered first" (Talmud, Baba Kamma 92a). Best of all are prayers of determination and pledge, made not from need, but from strength and the desire to serve God's will, and accompanied by action.

Meditation is about one-pointed concentration without involving any word or image. Its purpose is first to clear the mind of surface thoughts and feelings, then to attain higher spiritual states on the path to enlightenment. Meditative techniques are widespread both in Eastern religions and in the mystical traditions of the Western religions.

Contemplation is to focus the mind on a text, an image, or an idea. For example, in Kabbalah, a frequent practice is to contemplate the four-letter holy name of God YHWH (יהוה) and all the permutations of those four letters. In Catholicism, contemplation of episodes in the life of Christ prepares the believer to make that life his or her own. Mystics and philosophers may contemplate the various attributes of God, such as his omnipresence or compassion, in search of a more profound understanding of the divine.

  • Worship and rituals

Worship is to honor and praise the divine, sometimes done by an individual person and more often by a group or congregation. It may involve prayer, singing, dancing, chanting, scripture reading, exhortations, use of images (except in Islam), rituals, and sometimes sacrifices. Rituals, whether they are done as a part of worship or not, are often of symbolic nature; among them are the Christian sacraments and the Shintoist rite of misogi, geared towards purification and reconciliation with the divine.

  • Service and charity

Many religions encourage their adherents to care for the needs of the poor, the sick and disabled, widows and orphans. This service is called charity (from the Latin word caritas) in Christianity, tzedakah (from the Hebrew verb for doing "justice" or "fairness") in Judaism, sadaqah ("voluntary charity") and zakat ("prescribed charity") in Islam, and dana ("giving") in Buddhism.

The efficacy of service and charity is based upon the common understanding amongst various religions that the divine reality is benevolent, compassionate, and giving; hence by serving the needy one will be connected with the divine. In Judaism, tzedakah, which is often done anonymously, is one of the three acts by which people can receive forgiveness of sin (the others are prayer and repentance). According to Buddhism, dana in the form of charity to support homeless monks leads to rebirth in happier states.

Other approaches to God

  • Nature

The immanence of God and His glory as reflected in the creation is the chief theme of nature mysticism, as represented by Saint Francis of Assisi (1181-1226), whose famous "Canticle of the Sun" praises God's glory in all things. Shintoism sees divinity everywhere: "Even in a single leaf of a tree, or a tender blade of grass, the awe-inspiring Deity manifests itself" (Urabe-no-Kanekuni).[10][11] Native American and African primal religions revere Mother Earth and all Her creatures as sacred. Poets of all traditions have written of the sacred within the natural world, notably the Americans William Wordsworth (1770-1850); and Henry David Thoreau (1827-1862).

Experiences in nature provide a likeness of God's harmony and peace, in contrast to the grasping rat-race of city life. Groves of trees inspire reverence as surely as any cathedral, and their unwavering fruitfulness season after season is seen as reflecting God's unchanging provision for humanity. The way trees attract birds and animals to their shade teaches lessons about magnanimity. Beautiful flowers and singing birds display God's love. Gazing at the starry night sky prompts religious emotions of awe and mystery.

According to Christian "natural theology," all people can have an indirect understanding of God through the created world of nature, which is God's "general revelation" to humanity. Thus the Book of Nature stands alongside the Bible as testimony to God's works.

  • History

The Jewish people encountered God in the events of their history, notably the Exodus from Egypt. The Christian Bible testifies to the historical manifestation of God in Jesus of Nazareth. Belief in divine providence among the Puritans and American colonists meant that they saw God's hand in the discovery of the New World as a haven for dissenting believers who faced persecution in Europe. The same belief in providence lay behind Abraham Lincoln's remarks in his Second Inaugural Address, which saw the hand of God's judgment in the blood spilled in the Civil War:

Yet, if God wills that [the war] continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid with another drawn by the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, “The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether."

  • Art

People have created religious art and awe-inspiring architecture as expressions of the divine. The great cathedrals of Europe with their soaring arches lift the spirit heavenward. Iconic religions such as Hinduism, Greek Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, and later Buddhism use images both to express divinity itself and to tell stories of the saints.

Music is another medium that inspires religious emotions. Composers like Johann Sebastian Bach wrote to glorify God, and in appreciating his music one can be moved to feel God's presence. Hymns and songs praising God are, of course, a time-honored form of devotion.

The Gender of God

Recently there have been a number of religious movements which have attempted to restore the role of the feminine in conceiving of God. Wicca, for example, has focused upon the use of powers derived from numerous gods, particularly the goddess, in order to execute magical procedures. Wiccans base this esteem for the feminine principle on the idea that such worship practices were prevalent in the world including Europe during the Middle Ages, but were repressed by patriarchal religious traditions which attempted to limit the balance of power allowed to women. Wicca, then, is seen as the current iteration of a long-standing tradition of religious beliefs which acknowledge the goddess as supreme. This line follows from an ancient shamanistic European tradition which worships the Mother Goddess in three aspects: Maiden, Mother, and Crone. Goddess, then, becomes the focus of worship and liturgy in the Wiccan tradition.

The urge to reinvigorate the sense of God as woman has found its way into mainstream religion as well. Women in Christianity have begun to reconfigure the traditionally male conception of God, attempting to make it more feminine, both linguistically and theologically. Ruminations upon the feminine aspects of God have been dubbed theaology, based on the Greek root thea, or feminine conception of God as opposed to the masculine theos. Other depictions of a female Christ, often referred to as Christa, have also been produced. These terms have not necessarily been coined to change the conception of God and Christ to exclusively female in gender, but rather to illustrate the fact that male vocabulary has dominated conceptions of God throughout history, and that ideally the divine should transcend all statements of gender. Other Christian women have made similar assertions by associating Mary with the female nature of the divine, though Mary's unquestioning obedience to God as well as her virginity have been critiqued by some feminists as reinforcing the subordinate status of women.

The gender of God has been an issue also in other religions. The goddess Asherah was worshiped in ancient Israel and Judah as the consort of Yahweh, although it was never an approved practice. Also, while the Hebrew Bible officially actually refers to God as male, it sometimes depicts God with images of a mother who wraps her child in swaddling clothes and bends down to feed it (Hosea 11). In Hinduism, Vishnu and Shakti, male and female deities, compose Ardhanarisvara, an androgynous God. According to the I Ching in Confucianism, the world is an expression of the Great Ultimate (tai-chi) with the duality of yang and yin.

Again in Christianity, feminist theologians such as Rosemary Radford Reuther have incorporated androgynous features to God in order to balance traditionally "male" and "female" virtues in the divine. Ruether refers to the Supreme Being by the gender-neutral term “God/ess,” and claims that this being must be that conceived of as both male and female, yet also neither male nor female. Androgyny may very well be the future of godly conceptions in the context of gender. As John Bowker has suggested, "Maybe the next step would be to abandon both theo- and thea- and speak instead of Deology; Latin is also gender specific (deus, dea), but both can be abandoned in speaking of Deo-."[12]

The Heart of God

God's longing

In those traditions that understand God as a being of love, his everlasting love is not only "in general" but for each and every being, and for "me." All that exists both in the physical and in the spiritual realms exist in the purpose and "habitat" of love for "me." This focus on love is central to Christianity for example, as Christians understand through life-changing personal experience ("rebirth") that God not only "so loved the world," but so loved me "that He gave his only begotten Son" to perish for my sake (John 3:16). Mystics and saints who live to plumb the depths of such love—and in so doing who recreate their own lives as similarly loving and sacrificial—have produced a wealth of literature and poetry that seek to capture and communicate divine love. One reads in their devotions and transcendent rapture the overwhelming quality of even the most fleeting encounter with the true love of God. These writings are found among Christian saints such as Teresa of Avila (1515-1582) and Islamic Sufi saints such as Rabi'a Al-Basri (717-801).

Some mystics and theologians, however, redefine this true love of God in terms of his longing for human beings. God loves us because he longs for us with his desire for fellowship with us. Such a desire, which can be called God's heart, may transcend what has traditionally been called the absolute "freedom" or "omnipotence" of God especially in the monotheistic tradition. It may not be able to be explained through a one-way street from the omnipotent God to us, but rather through a two-way street that involves the reciprocity of love between God and us. In this scenario, God is even more blissful when we love him after being inspired by his love. This understanding of God's desire can be found in mystics such as Julian of Norwich (1342-c. 1416) and Nicolas Berdyaev (1874-1948). Jürgen Moltmann defines this desire of God as "God's longing for 'his Other' and for that Other's free response to the divine love."[13] Alfred North Whitehead calls it God's "Eros," referring to it as "the living urge towards all possibilities, claiming the goodness of their realization."[14]

God's suffering

God's suffering has recently become an issue of interest to many, although in the monotheistic tradition God was regarded normally as the most perfect Being who is immutable and impassible, and who is therefore incapable of suffering. The key to divine suffering seems to be God's longing or desire for fellowship with us, for if his desire is not fulfilled, he suffers. The Hebrew Bible actually talks about God's suffering because of the wickedness of humans: "And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him to his heart" (Genesis 6:6). Jeremiah among other Hebrew prophets seems to have embodied God's painful suffering when he deplored the unacceptable condition of Israel.

Hasidic Judaism has long held that God himself went into exile with Israel, and for two thousand years has suffered with his people in their exile. Thus Baal Shem Tov wrote:

Do not pray for a thing that you lack, for your prayer will not be accepted. Rather when you wish to pray, pray for the heaviness that is in the Head of the world. For the want of the thing that you lack is [a want] in the indwelling Glory. For man is a part of God, and the want that is in the part is in the whole, and the whole suffers the same want as the part. Therefore let your prayer be directed to the want of the whole... Pray continually for God’s glory that it may be redeemed from its exile.[15]

Christian theologians, saddled with classical theisms doctrine of divine impassibility, have attempted to deal with divine suffering but without much success.[16] The "theology of the cross" (theologia crucis), to which prominent theologians such as Martin Luther, Karl Barth, Eberhart Jüngel, Kazoh Kitamori, and Hans Urs von Balthasar loosely belong, took a step in this direction by positing the polarity of God, where one side of God is transcendent and impassible and the other immanent and somewhat passible—as regards to love.

A more reasonable account of God's suffering has been suggested by Alfred North Whitehead and Jürgen Moltmann with their notions of God's longing and desire in love. Moltmann's The Crucified God has been widely read on this topic. According to Whitehead, understanding God's suffering makes us feel that God is close to us: "God is the greatest companion—the fellow-sufferer who understands."[17]

See also

Notes

  1. This point remains true today despite the criticisms of atheists, who deny that there is a God, and Agnostics, who express uncertainity about the existence of a God or gods.
  2. Later, Christians living in the Roman Empire would be quick to identify the pagan gods of the Greco-Roman pantheon with demons, especially since these gods were the official ideological support behind an oppressive imperial order that persecuted Christianity.
  3. Karl Barth, "The Reality of God," in Church Dogmatics, vol. 2, part 1, ed. G. W. Bromiley and T. F. Torrance (1957; Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 2004, ISBN 0567051293), 257-677.
  4. Hendrikus Berkhof, Christian Faith: An Introduction to the Study of the Faith, revised ed., trans. Sierd Woudstra (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1986, ISBN 0802836224), 114.
  5. Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality, corrected ed., ed. David Ray Griffin and Donal W. Sherburne (New York: Free Press, 1979, ISBN 978-0029345702).
  6. Peter L. Berger (ed.), The Other Side of God: A Polarity in World Religions (Garden City, NY: Anchor Press, 1981, ISBN 0385174233).
  7. Hilary of Poitiers, Concerning the Trinity 3:1. Christian Classics Ethereal Library. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  8. While Theravada Buddhism relegated the Hindu devas/gods to an inferior position vis-a-vis humanity, they did not reject them altogether. Thus, it is incorrect to describe Buddhism as atheistic; it is more accurate to label Theravada Buddhism as "non-theistic" (in the sense that it denies the existence of an eternal creator God and insists that all gods are subject to rebirth). Theravada Buddhism, however, does not deny the existence of smaller gods (gods with a small "g") but these gods are not seen as omnipotent, as in the typical monotheistic understanding.
  9. Richard Swinburne, The Existence of God, 2nd ed. (Clarendon Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0199271689).
  10. Andrew Wilson (ed.), World Scripture (New York: Paragon House, 1991, ISBN 0892261293), 204.
  11. Selwyn Gurney Champion and Dorothy Short, Readings from World Religions (Fawcett Columbine, 1951, 1951).
  12. John Bowker, God: A Brief History (New York: DK Publishing, 2002, ISBN 0789480506), 314.
  13. Jürgen Moltmann, The Trinity and the Kingdom: The Doctrine of God, trans. Margaret Kohl (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Press, 1993, ISBN 080062825X), 106.
  14. Alfred North Whitehead, Adventures of Ideas (The Free Press, 1967, ISBN 978-0029351703), 381.
  15. Martin Buber, Hasidism and Modern Man (Princeton University Press, 2015, ISBN 978-0691165417).
  16. For example, Huw Parri Owen, Concepts of Deity (Herder and Herder, 1971, ISBN 978-0333013427); Richard E. Creel, Divine Imapassiblity: An Essay in Philosophical Theology (Wipf and Stock, 2005, ISBN 978-1597522731); and Jung Young Lee, God Suffers for Us: A Systematic Inquiry into a Concept of Divine Passibility (Springer, 2011, ISBN 978-9401020497).
  17. Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality, corrected ed., ed. David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne (New York: Free Press, 1978, ISBN 978-0029345702), 351.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

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External links

All links retrieved July 12, 2022.

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