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Panentheism

Panentheism ("all in God", from the Greek πᾶν, pân, 'all', ἐν, en, 'in' and Θεός, Theós, 'God')[1] is the belief that the divine intersects every part of the universe and also extends beyond space and time. The term was coined by the German philosopher Karl Krause in 1828 to distinguish the ideas of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775–1854) about the relation of God and the universe from the supposed pantheism of Baruch Spinoza,[1] after reviewing Hindu scriptures. Unlike pantheism, which holds that the divine and the universe are identical,[2] panentheism maintains an ontological distinction between the divine and the non-divine and the significance of both.

In panentheism, the universal spirit is present everywhere, which at the same time "transcends" all things created. While pantheism asserts that "all is God", panentheism claims that God is greater than the universe. Some versions of panentheism suggest that the universe is nothing more than the manifestation of God. In addition, some forms indicate that the universe is contained within God,[2] like in the Kabbalah concept of tzimtzum. Much of Hindu thought is highly characterized by panentheism and pantheism.[3][4]

In philosophy

Ancient Greek philosophy

The religious beliefs of Neoplatonism can be regarded as panentheistic. Plotinus taught that there was an ineffable transcendent God ("the One", to En, τὸ Ἕν) of which subsequent realities were emanations. From "the One" emanates the Divine Mind (Nous, Νοῦς) and the Cosmic Soul (Psyche, Ψυχή). In Neoplatonism the world itself is God (according to Plato's Timaeus 37). This concept of divinity is associated with that of the Logos (Λόγος), which had originated centuries earlier with Heraclitus (c. 535–475 BC). The Logos pervades the cosmos, whereby all thoughts and all things originate, or as Heraclitus said: "He who hears not me but the Logos will say: All is one." Neoplatonists such as Iamblichus attempted to reconcile this perspective by adding another hypostasis above the original monad of force or Dunamis (Δύναμις). This new all-pervasive monad encompassed all creation and its original uncreated emanations.

Modern philosophy

Baruch Spinoza later claimed that "Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or be conceived."[5] "Individual things are nothing but modifications of the attributes of God, or modes by which the attributes of God are expressed in a fixed and definite manner."[6] Though Spinoza has been called the "prophet"[7] and "prince"[8] of pantheism, in a letter to Henry Oldenburg Spinoza states that: "as to the view of certain people that I identify god with nature (taken as a kind of mass or corporeal matter), they are quite mistaken".[9] For Spinoza, our universe (cosmos) is a mode under two attributes of Thought and Extension. God has infinitely many other attributes which are not present in our world.

According to German philosopher Karl Jaspers, when Spinoza wrote "Deus sive Natura" (God or Nature) Spinoza did not mean to say that God and Nature are interchangeable terms, but rather that God's transcendence was attested by his infinitely many attributes, and that two attributes known by humans, namely Thought and Extension, signified God's immanence.[10] Furthermore, Martial Guéroult suggested the term panentheism, rather than pantheism to describe Spinoza's view of the relation between God and the world. The world is not God, but it is, in a strong sense, "in" God. Yet, American philosopher and self-described panentheist Charles Hartshorne referred to Spinoza's philosophy as "classical pantheism" and distinguished Spinoza's philosophy from panentheism.[11]

In 1828, the German philosopher Karl Christian Friedrich Krause (1781–1832) seeking to reconcile monotheism and pantheism, coined the term panentheism (from the Ancient Greek expression πᾶν ἐν θεῷ, pān en theṓ, literally "all in god"). This conception of God influenced New England transcendentalists such as Ralph Waldo Emerson. The term was popularized by Charles Hartshorne in his development of process theology and has also been closely identified with the New Thought.[12] The formalization of this term in the West in the 19th century was not new; philosophical treatises had been written on it in the context of Hinduism for millennia.[13]

Philosophers who embraced panentheism have included Thomas Hill Green (1839–1882), James Ward (1843–1925), Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison (1856–1931) and Samuel Alexander (1859–1938).[14] Beginning in the 1940s, Hartshorne examined numerous conceptions of God. He reviewed and discarded pantheism, deism, and pandeism in favor of panentheism, finding that such a "doctrine contains all of deism and pandeism except their arbitrary negations". Hartshorne formulated God as a being who could become "more perfect": He has absolute perfection in categories for which absolute perfection is possible, and relative perfection (i. e., is superior to all others) in categories for which perfection cannot be precisely determined.[15]

In religion

Buddhism

The Reverend Zen Master Soyen Shaku was the first Zen Buddhist Abbot to tour the United States in 1905–6. He wrote a series of essays collected into the book Zen For Americans. In the essay titled "The God Conception of Buddhism" he attempts to explain how a Buddhist looks at the ultimate without an anthropomorphic God figure while still being able to relate to the term God in a Buddhist sense:

At the outset, let me state that Buddhism is not atheistic as the term is ordinarily understood. It has certainly a God, the highest reality and truth, through which and in which this universe exists. However, the followers of Buddhism usually avoid the term God, for it savors so much of Christianity, whose spirit is not always exactly in accord with the Buddhist interpretation of religious experience. Again, Buddhism is not pantheistic in the sense that it identifies the universe with God. On the other hand, the Buddhist God is absolute and transcendent; this world, being merely its manifestation, is necessarily fragmental and imperfect. To define more exactly the Buddhist notion of the highest being, it may be convenient to borrow the term very happily coined by a modern German scholar, "panentheism," according to which God is πᾶν καὶ ἕν (all and one) and more than the totality of existence.[a] [16]

The essay then goes on to explain first utilizing the term "God" for the American audience to get an initial understanding of what he means by "panentheism," and then discusses the terms that Buddhism uses in place of "God" such as Dharmakaya, Buddha or Adi-Buddha, and Tathagata.[citation needed]

Christianity

Panentheism is also a feature of some Christian philosophical theologies and resonates strongly within the theological tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church.[17] It also appears in process theology. Process theological thinkers are generally regarded in the Christian West as unorthodox. Furthermore, process philosophical thought is widely believed to have paved the way for open theism, a movement that tends to associate itself primarily with the Evangelical branch of Protestantism, but is also generally considered unorthodox by most Evangelicals.

Catholic panentheism

A number of ordained Catholic mystics (including Richard Rohr, David Steindl-Rast, and Thomas Keating) have suggested that panentheism is the original view of Christianity.[18][19][20] They hold that such a view is directly supported by mystical experience and the teachings of Jesus and Saint Paul. Richard Rohr surmises this in his 2019 book, The Universal Christ:

But Paul merely took incarnationalism to its universal and logical conclusions. We see that in his bold exclamation “There is only Christ. He is everything and he is in everything” (Colossians 3:11). If I were to write that today, people would call me a pantheist (the universe is God), whereas I am really a panentheist (God lies within all things, but also transcends them), exactly like both Jesus and Paul.[18]

Similarly, David Steindl-Rast posits that Christianity's original panentheism is being revealed through contemporary mystical insight:

What characterizes our moment in history is the collapse of Christian theism. Gratefulness mysticism makes us realize that Christianity never was theistic, but panentheistic. Faith in God as triune implied this from the very beginning; now we are becoming aware of it. It becomes obvious, at the same time, that we share this Trinitarian experience of divine life with all human beings as a spiritual undercurrent in all religions, an undercurrent older and more powerful than the various doctrines. At the core of interreligious dialogue flows this shared spirituality of gratefulness, a spirituality strong enough to restore to our broken world unity.[19]

This sentiment is mirrored in Thomas Keating's 1993 article, Clarifications Regarding Centering Prayer:

Pantheism is usually defined as the identification of God with creation in such a way that the two are indistinguishable. Panentheism means that God is present in all creation by virtue of his omnipresence and omnipotence, sustaining every creature in being without being identified with any creature. The latter understanding is what Jesus seems to have been describing when he prays "that all might be one, Father, as we are one" and "that they may also be in us" (John 17:22). Again and again, in the Last Supper discourse, he speaks of this oneness and his intentions to send his Spirit to dwell within us. If we understand the writings of the great mystics rightly, they experience God living within them all the time. Thus the affirmation of God's transcendence must always be balanced by the affirmation of his imminence both on the natural plane and on the plane of grace.[20]

Panentheism in other Christian confessions

Panentheistic conceptions of God occur amongst some modern theologians. Process theology and Creation Spirituality, two recent developments in Christian theology, contain panentheistic ideas. Charles Hartshorne (1897–2000), who conjoined process theology with panentheism, maintained a lifelong membership in the Methodist church but was also a Unitarian. In later years he joined the Austin, Texas, Unitarian Universalist congregation and was an active participant in that church.[21] Referring to the ideas such as Thomas Oord's ‘theocosmocentrism’ (2010), the soft panentheism of open theism, Keith Ward's comparative theology and John Polkinghorne's critical realism (2009), Raymond Potgieter observes distinctions such as dipolar and bipolar:

The former suggests two poles separated such as God influencing creation and it in turn its creator (Bangert 2006:168), whereas bipolarity completes God’s being implying interdependence between temporal and eternal poles. (Marbaniang 2011:133), in dealing with Whitehead’s approach, does not make this distinction. I use the term bipolar as a generic term to include suggestions of the structural definition of God’s transcendence and immanence; to for instance accommodate a present and future reality into which deity must reasonably fit and function, and yet maintain separation from this world and evil whilst remaining within it.[22]

Some argue that panentheism should also include the notion that God has always been related to some world or another, which denies the idea of creation out of nothing (creatio ex nihilo). Nazarene Methodist theologian Thomas Jay Oord (* 1965) advocates panentheism, but he uses the word "theocosmocentrism" to highlight the notion that God and some world or another are the primary conceptual starting blocks for eminently fruitful theology. This form of panentheism helps in overcoming the problem of evil and in proposing that God's love for the world is essential to who God is.[23]

The Latter Day Saint movement teaches that the Light of Christ "proceeds from God through Christ and gives life and light to all things".[24]

Gnosticism

Manichaeists, being of another gnostic sect, preached a very different doctrine in positioning the true Manichaean God against matter as well as other deities, that it described as enmeshed with the world, namely the gods of Jews, Christians and pagans.[25] Nevertheless, this dualistic teaching included an elaborate cosmological myth that narrates the defeat of primal man by the powers of darkness that devoured and imprisoned the particles of light.[26]

Valentinian Gnosticism taught that matter came about through emanations of the supreme being, even if to some this event is held to be more accidental than intentional.[27] To other gnostics, these emanations were akin to the Sephirot of the Kabbalists and deliberate manifestations of a transcendent God through a complex system of intermediaries.[28]

Hinduism

The earliest reference to panentheistic thought in Hindu philosophy is in a creation myth contained in the later section of Rig Veda called the Purusha Sukta,[29] which was compiled before 1100 BCE.[30] The Purusha Sukta gives a description of the spiritual unity of the cosmos. It presents the nature of Purusha or the cosmic being as both immanent in the manifested world and yet transcendent to it.[31] From this being the sukta holds, the original creative will proceeds, by which this vast universe is projected in space and time.[32]

The most influential[33] and dominant[34] school of Indian philosophy, Advaita Vedanta, rejects theism and dualism by insisting that "Brahman [ultimate reality] is without parts or attributes...one without a second."[35] Since Brahman has no properties, contains no internal diversity and is identical with the whole reality it cannot be understood as an anthropomorphic personal God.[36] The relationship between Brahman and the creation is often thought to be panentheistic.[37]

Panentheism is also expressed in the Bhagavad Gita.[37] In verse IX.4, Krishna states:

By Me all this universe is pervaded through My unmanifested form.
All beings abide in Me but I do not abide in them.

Many schools of Hindu thought espouse monistic theism, which is thought to be similar to a panentheistic viewpoint. Nimbarka's school of differential monism (Dvaitadvaita), Ramanuja's school of qualified monism (Vishistadvaita) and Saiva Siddhanta and Kashmir Shaivism are all considered to be panentheistic.[38] Chaitanya Mahaprabhu's Gaudiya Vaishnavism, which elucidates the doctrine of Achintya Bheda Abheda (inconceivable oneness and difference), is also thought to be panentheistic.[39] In Kashmir Shaivism, all things are believed to be a manifestation of Universal Consciousness (Cit or Brahman).[40] So from the point of view of this school, the phenomenal world (Śakti) is real, and it exists and has its being in Consciousness (Ćit).[41] Thus, Kashmir Shaivism is also propounding of theistic monism or panentheism.[42]

Shaktism, or Tantra, is regarded as an Indian prototype of Panentheism.[43] Shakti is considered to be the cosmos itself – she is the embodiment of energy and dynamism, and the motivating force behind all action and existence in the material universe. Shiva is her transcendent masculine aspect, providing the divine ground of all being. "There is no Shiva without Shakti, or Shakti without Shiva. The two ... in themselves are One."[44] Thus, it is She who becomes the time and space, the cosmos, it is She who becomes the five elements, and thus all animate life and inanimate forms. She is the primordial energy that holds all creation and destruction, all cycles of birth and death, all laws of cause and effect within Herself, and yet is greater than the sum total of all these. She is transcendent, but becomes immanent as the cosmos (Mula Prakriti). She, the Primordial Energy, directly becomes Matter.

Judaism

While mainstream Rabbinic Judaism is classically monotheistic, and follows in the footsteps of Maimonides (c. 1135–1204), the panentheistic conception of God can be found among certain mystical Jewish traditions. A leading scholar of Kabbalah, Moshe Idel[45] ascribes this doctrine to the kabbalistic system of Moses ben Jacob Cordovero (1522–1570) and in the eighteenth century to the Baal Shem Tov (c. 1700–1760), founder of the Hasidic movement, as well as his contemporaries, Rabbi Dov Ber, the Maggid of Mezeritch (died 1772), and Menahem Mendel, the Maggid of Bar. This may be said of many, if not most, subsequent Hasidic masters. There is some debate as to whether Isaac Luria (1534–1572) and Lurianic Kabbalah, with its doctrine of tzimtzum, can be regarded as panentheistic.

According to Hasidism, the infinite Ein Sof is incorporeal and exists in a state that is both transcendent and immanent. This appears to be the view of non-Hasidic Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin, as well. Hasidic Judaism merges the elite ideal of nullification to a transcendent God, via the intellectual articulation of inner dimensions through Kabbalah and with emphasis on the panentheistic divine immanence in everything.[46]

Many scholars would argue that "panentheism" is the best single-word description of the philosophical theology of Baruch Spinoza.[47] It is therefore no surprise, that aspects of panentheism are also evident in the theology of Reconstructionist Judaism as presented in the writings of Mordecai Kaplan (1881–1983), who was strongly influenced by Spinoza.[48]

Sikhism

 
Guru Nanak talking to hindu sadhus (holy men)

Many newer, contemporary Sikhs have suggested that human souls and the monotheistic God are two different realities (dualism),[49] distinguishing it from the monistic and various shades of nondualistic philosophies of other Indian religions.[50] However, Sikh scholars have explored nondualism exegesis of Sikh scriptures, such as Bhai Vir Singh. According to Mandair, Singh interprets the Sikh scriptures as teaching nonduality.[51] The renowned Sikh Scholar, Bhai Mani Singh, is quoted to saying that Sikhism has all the essence of Vedanta Philosophy.[52] Historically, the Sikh symbol of Ik Oankaar has had a monist meaning, and has been reduced to simply meaning, "There is but One God", which is incorrect.[53] Older exegesis of Sikh scripture, such as the Faridkot Teeka, and Garab Ganjani Teeka has always described Sikh Metaphysics as a non-dual, panentheistic universe.[53] For this reason, Sikh Metaphysics has often been compared to the Non-Dual, Vedanta metaphysics.[52] The Sikh Poet, Bhai Nand Lal, often used Sufi terms to describe Sikh philosophy, talking about wahdat ul-wujud in his persian poetry.[54]

Islam

Several Sufi saints and thinkers, primarily Ibn Arabi, held beliefs that have been considered somewhat panentheistic.[55] These notions later took shape in the theory of wahdat ul-wujud (the Unity of All Things). Some Sufi Orders, notably the Bektashis[56] and the Universal Sufi movement, continue to espouse panentheistic beliefs. Nizari Ismaili follow panentheism according to Ismaili doctrine. Nevertheless, some Shia Muslims also do believe in different degrees of Panentheism.

Al-Qayyuum is a Name of God in the Qur'an which translates to "The Self-Existing by Whom all subsist". In Islam the universe can not exist if Allah doesn't exist, and it is only by His power which encompasses everything and which is everywhere that the universe can exist. In Ayaẗ al-Kursii God's throne is described as "extending over the heavens and the earth" and "He feels no fatigue in guarding and preserving them". This does not mean though that the universe is God, or that a creature (like a tree or an animal) is God, because those would be respectively pantheism, which is a heresy in traditional Islam, and the worst heresy in Islam, shirk (polytheism). God is separated by His creation but His creation can not survive without Him.

In Pre-Columbian America

The Mesoamerican empires of the Mayas, Aztecs as well as the South American Incas (Tahuatinsuyu) have typically been characterized as polytheistic, with strong male and female deities.[57] According to Charles C. Mann's history book 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus, only the lower classes of Aztec society were polytheistic. Philosopher James Maffie has argued that Aztec metaphysics was pantheistic rather than panentheistic, since Teotl was considered by Aztec philosophers to be the ultimate all-encompassing yet all-transcending force defined by its inherit duality.[58]

Native American beliefs in North America have been characterized as panentheistic in that there is an emphasis on a single, unified divine spirit that is manifest in each individual entity.[59] (North American Native writers have also translated the word for God as the Great Mystery[60] or as the Sacred Other[61]). This concept is referred to by many as the Great Spirit. Philosopher J. Baird Callicott has described Lakota theology as panentheistic, in that the divine both transcends and is immanent in everything.[62]

One exception can be modern Cherokee who are predominantly monotheistic but apparently not panentheistic;[63] yet in older Cherokee traditions many observe both aspects of pantheism and panentheism, and are often not beholden to exclusivity, encompassing other spiritual traditions without contradiction, a common trait among some tribes in the Americas. In the stories of Keetoowah storytellers Sequoyah Guess and Dennis Sixkiller, God is known as ᎤᏁᎳᏅᎯ, commonly pronounced "unehlanv," and visited earth in prehistoric times, but then left earth and her people to rely on themselves. This shows a parallel to Vaishnava cosmology.

Konkōkyō

Konkokyo is a form of sectarian Japanese Shinto, and a faith within the Shinbutsu-shūgō tradition. Traditional Shintoism holds that an impersonal spirit manifests/penetrates the material world, giving all objects consciousness and spontaneously creating a system of natural mechanisms, forces, and phenomena (Musubi). Konkokyo deviates from traditional Shintoism by holding that this spirit (Comparable to Brahman), has a personal identity and mind. This personal form is non-different from the energy itself, not residing in any particular cosmological location. In Konkokyo, this god is named "Tenchi Kane no Kami-Sama" which can be translated directly as, "Spirit of the gilded/golden heavens and earth".

Though practitioners of Konkokyo are small in number (~300,000 globally), the sect has birthed or influenced a multiplicity of Japanese New Religions, such as Oomoto. Many of these faiths carry on the Panentheistic views of Konkokyo[citation needed]

See also

People associated with panentheism
  • Gregory Palamas (1296–1359), Byzantine Orthodox theologian and hesychast
  • Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677), Dutch philosopher of Sephardi-Portuguese origin
  • Alfred North Whitehead (1861–1947), English mathematician, philosopher, and father of process philosophy
  • Charles Hartshorne (1897–2000), American philosopher and father of process theology
  • Arthur Peacocke (1924–2006), British Anglican theologian and biochemist
  • John B. Cobb (b. 1925), American theologian and philosopher
  • Mordechai Nessyahu (1929–1997), Jewish-Israeli political theorist and philosopher of Cosmotheism
  • Sallie McFague (1933–2019), American feminist theologian, author of Models of God and The Body of God
  • William Luther Pierce (1933–2002), American political activist and self-proclaimed cosmotheist
  • Rosemary Radford Ruether (b. 1936), American feminist theologian, author of Sexism and God-Talk and Gaia and God
  • Jan Assmann (b. 1938), German Egyptologist, theorist of Cosmotheism
  • Leonardo Boff (b. 1938), Brazilian liberation theologian and philosopher, former Franciscan priest, author of Ecology and Liberation: A New Paradigm
  • Matthew Fox (priest) (b. 1940), American theologian, exponent of Creation Spirtuality, expelled from the Dominican Order in 1993 and received into the Episcopal priesthood in 1994, author of Creation Spirituality, The Coming of the Cosmic Christ and A New Reformation: Creation Spirituality and the Transformation of Christianity
  • Marcus Borg (1942–2015), American New Testament scholar and theologian, prominent member of the Jesus Seminar, author of The God We Never Knew
  • Richard Rohr (b. 1943), American Franciscan priest and spiritual writer, author of Everything Belongs and The Universal Christ
  • Carter Heyward (b. 1945), American feminist theologian and Episcopal priest, author of Touching our Strength and Saving Jesus from Those Who Are Right
  • Norman Lowell (b. 1946), Maltese writer and politician, self-proclaimed cosmotheist
  • John Polkinghorne (b. 1960), English theoretical physicist and theologian
  • Michel Weber (b. 1963), Belgian philosopher
  • Thomas Jay Oord (b. 1965), American theologian and philosopher

Citations

  1. ^ a b John Culp (2013): "Panentheism", in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
  2. ^ a b Erwin Fahlbusch; Geoffrey William Bromiley; David B. Barrett (2005). The Encyclopedia of Christianity. Vol. 4. William B. Eerdmans. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-8028-2416-5.
  3. ^ "Pantheism and Panentheism in non-Western cultures", in: Britannica.
  4. ^ Whiting, Robert. Religions for Today. Stanley Thomes, London 1991, p. viii. ISBN 0-7487-0586-4.
  5. ^ Ethics, part I, prop. 15.
  6. ^ Ethics, part I, prop. 25S.
  7. ^ Picton, J. Allanson, "Pantheism: Its Story and Significance", 1905.
  8. ^ Fraser, Alexander Campbell, "Philosophy of Theism", William Blackwood and Sons, 1895, p. 163.
  9. ^ Correspondence of Benedict de Spinoza, Wilder Publications, 2009, ISBN 978-1-60459-156-9, letter 73.
  10. ^ Karl Jaspers, Spinoza (Great Philosophers), Harvest Books, 1974, ISBN 978-0-15-684730-8, pp. 14 and 95.
  11. ^ Charles Hartshorne and William Reese, Philosophers Speak of God, Humanity Books, 1953, ch. 4.
  12. ^ Smith, David L. (2014). Theologies of the 21st Century: Trends in Contemporary Theology. Eugene OR: Wipf and Stock. p. 228. ISBN 978-1625648648. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  13. ^ Southgate, Christopher (2005). God, Humanity and the Cosmos: A Companion to the Science-Religion Debate. London: T&T Clark. pp. 246–47. ISBN 978-0567030160. Retrieved 29 September 2015.
  14. ^ John W. Cooper Panentheism, the other God of the philosophers: from Plato to the present Baker Academic, 2006, ISBN 0-8010-2724-1.
  15. ^ Charles Hartshorne, Man's Vision of God and the Logic of Theism (1964) ISBN 0-208-00498-X p. 348; cf. Michel Weber, Whitehead’s Pancreativism. The Basics. Foreword by Nicholas Rescher, Ontos Verlag, Frankfurt am Main and Paris, 2006.
  16. ^ Zen For Americans by Soyen Shaku, translated by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, 1906, pages 25–26. "Zen for Americans: The God-Conception of Buddhism". www.sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
  17. ^ Nesteruk, Alexei V. (2004). "The Universe as Hypostaic Inherence in the logos of God: Panentheism in the Eastern Orthodox Perspective", in In Whom We Live and Move and Have Our Being: Panentheistic Reflections on God's Presence in a Scientific World, edited by Philip Clayton and Arthur Robert Peacocke. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 169–83. ISBN 978-0802809780. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  18. ^ a b Rohr, Richard (2019-03-05). The Universal Christ: How a Forgotten Reality Can Change Everything We See, Hope For, and Believe. Crown Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-5247-6210-0.
  19. ^ a b "Shared Spirituality". Gratefulness.org. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
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  21. ^ About Charles Hartshorne 2007-11-14 at the Wayback Machine.
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  23. ^ Baker, Vaughn W. (2013). Evangelism and the Openness of God: The Implications of Relational Theism. Eugene OR: Wipf and Stock. pp. 242–243. ISBN 9781620320471. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  24. ^ "Light of Christ", churchofjesuschrist.org.
  25. ^ "Now, he who spoke with Moses, the Jews, and the priests he says is the archont of Darkness, and the Christians, Jews, and pagans (ethnic) are one and the same, as they revere the same god. For in his aspirations he seduces them, as he is not the god of truth. And so therefore all those who put their hope in the god who spoke with Moses and the prophets have (this in store for themselves, namely) to be bound with him, because they did not put their hope in the god of truth. For that one spoke with them (only) according to their own aspirations." And elsewhere: "Now God has no part in this cosmos nor does he rejoice over it." Classical Texts: Acta Archelai, p. 76. (www.fas.harvard.edu/~iranian/Manicheism/Manicheism_II_Texts.pdf).
  26. ^ "But the blessed One [...] sent, through his beneficent Spirit and his great mercy, a helper to Adam, luminous Epinoia which comes out of him, who is called Life. [...] And the luminous Epinoia was hidden in Adam, in order that the archons might not know her, but that the Epinoia might be a correction of the deficiency of the mother. And the man came forth because of the shadow of the light which is in him. [...] And they took counsel with the whole array of archons and angels. [...] And they brought him (Adam) into the shadow of death, in order that they might form (him) again from earth [...] This is the tomb of the newly-formed body with which the robbers had clothed the man, the bond of forgetfulness; and he became a mortal man. [...] But the Epinoia of the light which was in him, she is the one who was to awaken his thinking. ([1]).
  27. ^ "Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  30. ^ Oberlies (1998:155) gives an estimate of 1100 BC for the youngest hymns in book 10. Estimates for a terminus post quem of the earliest hymns are more uncertain. Oberlies (p. 158) based on 'cumulative evidence' sets wide range of 1700–1100 BC.
  31. ^ The Purusha Sukta in Daily Invocations by Swami Krishnananda.
  32. ^ Swami Krishnananda. A Short History of Religious and Philosophic Thought in India. Divine Life Society. p. 19.
  33. ^ Consciousness in Advaita Vedānta, William M. Indich, Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 1995, ISBN 81-208-1251-4.
  34. ^ "Gandhi And Mahayana Buddhism". Class.uidaho.edu. Retrieved 2011-06-10.
  35. ^ Wainwright, William. "Concepts of God". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  36. ^ Wainwright, William, "Concepts of God", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2010 Edition).
  37. ^ a b Southgate, Christopher. God, Humanity, and the Cosmos. T&T Clark Int'l, New York. p. 246. ISBN 0567030164.
  38. ^ Sherma, Rita DasGupta; Sharma Arvind. Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought: Toward a Fusion of Horizons. Springer, 2008 edition (December 1, 2010). p. 192. ISBN 9048178002.
  39. ^ Chaitanya Charitamrita, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Bhaktivedanta Book Trust.
  40. ^ The Doctrine of Vibration: An Analysis of Doctrines and Practices of Kashmir Shaivism, Mark S. G. Dyczkowski, p. 44.
  41. ^ Ksemaraja, trans. by Jaidev Singh, Spanda Karikas: The Divine Creative Pulsation, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, p. 119.
  42. ^ The Trika Śaivism of Kashmir, Moti Lal Pandit.
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General and cited references

  • Ankur Barua, "God’s Body at Work: Rāmānuja and Panentheism," in: International Journal of Hindu Studies, 14.1 (2010), pp. 1–30.
  • Philip Clayton and Arthur Peacock (eds.), In Whom We Live and Move and Have Our Being; Panentheistic Reflections on God's Presence in a Scientific World, Eerdmans (2004)
  • Bangert, B.C. (2006). Consenting to God and nature: Toward a theocentric, naturalistic, theological ethics, Princeton theological monograph ser. 55, Pickwick Publications, Eugene.
  • Cooper, John W. (2006). Panentheism: The Other God of the Philosophers, Baker Academic ISBN 9780801027246
  • Davis, Andrew M. and Philip Clayton (eds.) (2018). How I Found God in Everyone and Everywhere, Monkfish Book Publishing ISBN 9781939681881
  • Thomas Jay Oord (2010). The Nature of Love: A Theology ISBN 978-0-8272-0828-5.
  • Joseph Bracken, "Panentheism in the context of the theology and science dialogue", in: Open Theology, 1 (2014), 1–11 (online).
  • Marbaniang, Domenic (2011). Epistemics of Divine Reality. POD. ISBN 9781105160776.

External links

  • Culp, John. "Panentheism". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Biblical Panentheism: The “Everywhere-ness” of God—God in all things, by Jon Zuck 2008-02-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • John Polkinghorne on Panentheism
  • The Bible, Spiritual authority and Inspiration – Lecture by Tom Wright at Spiritual Minded

panentheism, confused, with, pantheism, from, greek, πᾶν, pân, ἐν, Θεός, theós, belief, that, divine, intersects, every, part, universe, also, extends, beyond, space, time, term, coined, german, philosopher, karl, krause, 1828, distinguish, ideas, georg, wilhe. Not to be confused with pantheism Panentheism all in God from the Greek pᾶn pan all ἐn en in and 8eos Theos God 1 is the belief that the divine intersects every part of the universe and also extends beyond space and time The term was coined by the German philosopher Karl Krause in 1828 to distinguish the ideas of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1770 1831 and Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling 1775 1854 about the relation of God and the universe from the supposed pantheism of Baruch Spinoza 1 after reviewing Hindu scriptures Unlike pantheism which holds that the divine and the universe are identical 2 panentheism maintains an ontological distinction between the divine and the non divine and the significance of both In panentheism the universal spirit is present everywhere which at the same time transcends all things created While pantheism asserts that all is God panentheism claims that God is greater than the universe Some versions of panentheism suggest that the universe is nothing more than the manifestation of God In addition some forms indicate that the universe is contained within God 2 like in the Kabbalah concept of tzimtzum Much of Hindu thought is highly characterized by panentheism and pantheism 3 4 Contents 1 In philosophy 1 1 Ancient Greek philosophy 1 2 Modern philosophy 2 In religion 2 1 Buddhism 2 2 Christianity 2 2 1 Catholic panentheism 2 2 2 Panentheism in other Christian confessions 2 3 Gnosticism 2 4 Hinduism 2 5 Judaism 2 6 Sikhism 2 7 Islam 2 8 In Pre Columbian America 2 9 Konkōkyō 3 See also 4 Citations 5 General and cited references 6 External linksIn philosophy EditAncient Greek philosophy Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The religious beliefs of Neoplatonism can be regarded as panentheistic Plotinus taught that there was an ineffable transcendent God the One to En tὸ Ἕn of which subsequent realities were emanations From the One emanates the Divine Mind Nous Noῦs and the Cosmic Soul Psyche PSyxh In Neoplatonism the world itself is God according to Plato s Timaeus 37 This concept of divinity is associated with that of the Logos Logos which had originated centuries earlier with Heraclitus c 535 475 BC The Logos pervades the cosmos whereby all thoughts and all things originate or as Heraclitus said He who hears not me but the Logos will say All is one Neoplatonists such as Iamblichus attempted to reconcile this perspective by adding another hypostasis above the original monad of force or Dunamis Dynamis This new all pervasive monad encompassed all creation and its original uncreated emanations Modern philosophy Edit Baruch Spinoza later claimed that Whatsoever is is in God and without God nothing can be or be conceived 5 Individual things are nothing but modifications of the attributes of God or modes by which the attributes of God are expressed in a fixed and definite manner 6 Though Spinoza has been called the prophet 7 and prince 8 of pantheism in a letter to Henry Oldenburg Spinoza states that as to the view of certain people that I identify god with nature taken as a kind of mass or corporeal matter they are quite mistaken 9 For Spinoza our universe cosmos is a mode under two attributes of Thought and Extension God has infinitely many other attributes which are not present in our world According to German philosopher Karl Jaspers when Spinoza wrote Deus sive Natura God or Nature Spinoza did not mean to say that God and Nature are interchangeable terms but rather that God s transcendence was attested by his infinitely many attributes and that two attributes known by humans namely Thought and Extension signified God s immanence 10 Furthermore Martial Gueroult suggested the term panentheism rather than pantheism to describe Spinoza s view of the relation between God and the world The world is not God but it is in a strong sense in God Yet American philosopher and self described panentheist Charles Hartshorne referred to Spinoza s philosophy as classical pantheism and distinguished Spinoza s philosophy from panentheism 11 In 1828 the German philosopher Karl Christian Friedrich Krause 1781 1832 seeking to reconcile monotheism and pantheism coined the term panentheism from the Ancient Greek expression pᾶn ἐn 8eῷ pan en theṓ literally all in god This conception of God influenced New England transcendentalists such as Ralph Waldo Emerson The term was popularized by Charles Hartshorne in his development of process theology and has also been closely identified with the New Thought 12 The formalization of this term in the West in the 19th century was not new philosophical treatises had been written on it in the context of Hinduism for millennia 13 Philosophers who embraced panentheism have included Thomas Hill Green 1839 1882 James Ward 1843 1925 Andrew Seth Pringle Pattison 1856 1931 and Samuel Alexander 1859 1938 14 Beginning in the 1940s Hartshorne examined numerous conceptions of God He reviewed and discarded pantheism deism and pandeism in favor of panentheism finding that such a doctrine contains all of deism and pandeism except their arbitrary negations Hartshorne formulated God as a being who could become more perfect He has absolute perfection in categories for which absolute perfection is possible and relative perfection i e is superior to all others in categories for which perfection cannot be precisely determined 15 In religion EditBuddhism Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Reverend Zen Master Soyen Shaku was the first Zen Buddhist Abbot to tour the United States in 1905 6 He wrote a series of essays collected into the book Zen For Americans In the essay titled The God Conception of Buddhism he attempts to explain how a Buddhist looks at the ultimate without an anthropomorphic God figure while still being able to relate to the term God in a Buddhist sense At the outset let me state that Buddhism is not atheistic as the term is ordinarily understood It has certainly a God the highest reality and truth through which and in which this universe exists However the followers of Buddhism usually avoid the term God for it savors so much of Christianity whose spirit is not always exactly in accord with the Buddhist interpretation of religious experience Again Buddhism is not pantheistic in the sense that it identifies the universe with God On the other hand the Buddhist God is absolute and transcendent this world being merely its manifestation is necessarily fragmental and imperfect To define more exactly the Buddhist notion of the highest being it may be convenient to borrow the term very happily coined by a modern German scholar panentheism according to which God is pᾶn kaὶ ἕn all and one and more than the totality of existence a 16 The essay then goes on to explain first utilizing the term God for the American audience to get an initial understanding of what he means by panentheism and then discusses the terms that Buddhism uses in place of God such as Dharmakaya Buddha or Adi Buddha and Tathagata citation needed Christianity Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Panentheism is also a feature of some Christian philosophical theologies and resonates strongly within the theological tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church 17 It also appears in process theology Process theological thinkers are generally regarded in the Christian West as unorthodox Furthermore process philosophical thought is widely believed to have paved the way for open theism a movement that tends to associate itself primarily with the Evangelical branch of Protestantism but is also generally considered unorthodox by most Evangelicals Catholic panentheism Edit A number of ordained Catholic mystics including Richard Rohr David Steindl Rast and Thomas Keating have suggested that panentheism is the original view of Christianity 18 19 20 They hold that such a view is directly supported by mystical experience and the teachings of Jesus and Saint Paul Richard Rohr surmises this in his 2019 book The Universal Christ But Paul merely took incarnationalism to its universal and logical conclusions We see that in his bold exclamation There is only Christ He is everything and he is in everything Colossians 3 11 If I were to write that today people would call me a pantheist the universe is God whereas I am really a panentheist God lies within all things but also transcends them exactly like both Jesus and Paul 18 Similarly David Steindl Rast posits that Christianity s original panentheism is being revealed through contemporary mystical insight What characterizes our moment in history is the collapse of Christian theism Gratefulness mysticism makes us realize that Christianity never was theistic but panentheistic Faith in God as triune implied this from the very beginning now we are becoming aware of it It becomes obvious at the same time that we share this Trinitarian experience of divine life with all human beings as a spiritual undercurrent in all religions an undercurrent older and more powerful than the various doctrines At the core of interreligious dialogue flows this shared spirituality of gratefulness a spirituality strong enough to restore to our broken world unity 19 This sentiment is mirrored in Thomas Keating s 1993 article Clarifications Regarding Centering Prayer Pantheism is usually defined as the identification of God with creation in such a way that the two are indistinguishable Panentheism means that God is present in all creation by virtue of his omnipresence and omnipotence sustaining every creature in being without being identified with any creature The latter understanding is what Jesus seems to have been describing when he prays that all might be one Father as we are one and that they may also be in us John 17 22 Again and again in the Last Supper discourse he speaks of this oneness and his intentions to send his Spirit to dwell within us If we understand the writings of the great mystics rightly they experience God living within them all the time Thus the affirmation of God s transcendence must always be balanced by the affirmation of his imminence both on the natural plane and on the plane of grace 20 Panentheism in other Christian confessions Edit Panentheistic conceptions of God occur amongst some modern theologians Process theology and Creation Spirituality two recent developments in Christian theology contain panentheistic ideas Charles Hartshorne 1897 2000 who conjoined process theology with panentheism maintained a lifelong membership in the Methodist church but was also a Unitarian In later years he joined the Austin Texas Unitarian Universalist congregation and was an active participant in that church 21 Referring to the ideas such as Thomas Oord s theocosmocentrism 2010 the soft panentheism of open theism Keith Ward s comparative theology and John Polkinghorne s critical realism 2009 Raymond Potgieter observes distinctions such as dipolar and bipolar The former suggests two poles separated such as God influencing creation and it in turn its creator Bangert 2006 168 whereas bipolarity completes God s being implying interdependence between temporal and eternal poles Marbaniang 2011 133 in dealing with Whitehead s approach does not make this distinction I use the term bipolar as a generic term to include suggestions of the structural definition of God s transcendence and immanence to for instance accommodate a present and future reality into which deity must reasonably fit and function and yet maintain separation from this world and evil whilst remaining within it 22 Some argue that panentheism should also include the notion that God has always been related to some world or another which denies the idea of creation out of nothing creatio ex nihilo Nazarene Methodist theologian Thomas Jay Oord 1965 advocates panentheism but he uses the word theocosmocentrism to highlight the notion that God and some world or another are the primary conceptual starting blocks for eminently fruitful theology This form of panentheism helps in overcoming the problem of evil and in proposing that God s love for the world is essential to who God is 23 The Latter Day Saint movement teaches that the Light of Christ proceeds from God through Christ and gives life and light to all things 24 Gnosticism Edit Main article Gnosticism Manichaeists being of another gnostic sect preached a very different doctrine in positioning the true Manichaean God against matter as well as other deities that it described as enmeshed with the world namely the gods of Jews Christians and pagans 25 Nevertheless this dualistic teaching included an elaborate cosmological myth that narrates the defeat of primal man by the powers of darkness that devoured and imprisoned the particles of light 26 Valentinian Gnosticism taught that matter came about through emanations of the supreme being even if to some this event is held to be more accidental than intentional 27 To other gnostics these emanations were akin to the Sephirot of the Kabbalists and deliberate manifestations of a transcendent God through a complex system of intermediaries 28 Hinduism Edit The earliest reference to panentheistic thought in Hindu philosophy is in a creation myth contained in the later section of Rig Veda called the Purusha Sukta 29 which was compiled before 1100 BCE 30 The Purusha Sukta gives a description of the spiritual unity of the cosmos It presents the nature of Purusha or the cosmic being as both immanent in the manifested world and yet transcendent to it 31 From this being the sukta holds the original creative will proceeds by which this vast universe is projected in space and time 32 The most influential 33 and dominant 34 school of Indian philosophy Advaita Vedanta rejects theism and dualism by insisting that Brahman ultimate reality is without parts or attributes one without a second 35 Since Brahman has no properties contains no internal diversity and is identical with the whole reality it cannot be understood as an anthropomorphic personal God 36 The relationship between Brahman and the creation is often thought to be panentheistic 37 Panentheism is also expressed in the Bhagavad Gita 37 In verse IX 4 Krishna states By Me all this universe is pervaded through My unmanifested form All beings abide in Me but I do not abide in them Many schools of Hindu thought espouse monistic theism which is thought to be similar to a panentheistic viewpoint Nimbarka s school of differential monism Dvaitadvaita Ramanuja s school of qualified monism Vishistadvaita and Saiva Siddhanta and Kashmir Shaivism are all considered to be panentheistic 38 Chaitanya Mahaprabhu s Gaudiya Vaishnavism which elucidates the doctrine of Achintya Bheda Abheda inconceivable oneness and difference is also thought to be panentheistic 39 In Kashmir Shaivism all things are believed to be a manifestation of Universal Consciousness Cit or Brahman 40 So from the point of view of this school the phenomenal world Sakti is real and it exists and has its being in Consciousness Cit 41 Thus Kashmir Shaivism is also propounding of theistic monism or panentheism 42 Shaktism or Tantra is regarded as an Indian prototype of Panentheism 43 Shakti is considered to be the cosmos itself she is the embodiment of energy and dynamism and the motivating force behind all action and existence in the material universe Shiva is her transcendent masculine aspect providing the divine ground of all being There is no Shiva without Shakti or Shakti without Shiva The two in themselves are One 44 Thus it is She who becomes the time and space the cosmos it is She who becomes the five elements and thus all animate life and inanimate forms She is the primordial energy that holds all creation and destruction all cycles of birth and death all laws of cause and effect within Herself and yet is greater than the sum total of all these She is transcendent but becomes immanent as the cosmos Mula Prakriti She the Primordial Energy directly becomes Matter Judaism Edit While mainstream Rabbinic Judaism is classically monotheistic and follows in the footsteps of Maimonides c 1135 1204 the panentheistic conception of God can be found among certain mystical Jewish traditions A leading scholar of Kabbalah Moshe Idel 45 ascribes this doctrine to the kabbalistic system of Moses ben Jacob Cordovero 1522 1570 and in the eighteenth century to the Baal Shem Tov c 1700 1760 founder of the Hasidic movement as well as his contemporaries Rabbi Dov Ber the Maggid of Mezeritch died 1772 and Menahem Mendel the Maggid of Bar This may be said of many if not most subsequent Hasidic masters There is some debate as to whether Isaac Luria 1534 1572 and Lurianic Kabbalah with its doctrine of tzimtzum can be regarded as panentheistic According to Hasidism the infinite Ein Sof is incorporeal and exists in a state that is both transcendent and immanent This appears to be the view of non Hasidic Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin as well Hasidic Judaism merges the elite ideal of nullification to a transcendent God via the intellectual articulation of inner dimensions through Kabbalah and with emphasis on the panentheistic divine immanence in everything 46 Many scholars would argue that panentheism is the best single word description of the philosophical theology of Baruch Spinoza 47 It is therefore no surprise that aspects of panentheism are also evident in the theology of Reconstructionist Judaism as presented in the writings of Mordecai Kaplan 1881 1983 who was strongly influenced by Spinoza 48 Sikhism Edit Guru Nanak talking to hindu sadhus holy men Many newer contemporary Sikhs have suggested that human souls and the monotheistic God are two different realities dualism 49 distinguishing it from the monistic and various shades of nondualistic philosophies of other Indian religions 50 However Sikh scholars have explored nondualism exegesis of Sikh scriptures such as Bhai Vir Singh According to Mandair Singh interprets the Sikh scriptures as teaching nonduality 51 The renowned Sikh Scholar Bhai Mani Singh is quoted to saying that Sikhism has all the essence of Vedanta Philosophy 52 Historically the Sikh symbol of Ik Oankaar has had a monist meaning and has been reduced to simply meaning There is but One God which is incorrect 53 Older exegesis of Sikh scripture such as the Faridkot Teeka and Garab Ganjani Teeka has always described Sikh Metaphysics as a non dual panentheistic universe 53 For this reason Sikh Metaphysics has often been compared to the Non Dual Vedanta metaphysics 52 The Sikh Poet Bhai Nand Lal often used Sufi terms to describe Sikh philosophy talking about wahdat ul wujud in his persian poetry 54 Islam Edit Further information Tawheed Several Sufi saints and thinkers primarily Ibn Arabi held beliefs that have been considered somewhat panentheistic 55 These notions later took shape in the theory of wahdat ul wujud the Unity of All Things Some Sufi Orders notably the Bektashis 56 and the Universal Sufi movement continue to espouse panentheistic beliefs Nizari Ismaili follow panentheism according to Ismaili doctrine Nevertheless some Shia Muslims also do believe in different degrees of Panentheism Al Qayyuum is a Name of God in the Qur an which translates to The Self Existing by Whom all subsist In Islam the universe can not exist if Allah doesn t exist and it is only by His power which encompasses everything and which is everywhere that the universe can exist In Ayaẗ al Kursii God s throne is described as extending over the heavens and the earth and He feels no fatigue in guarding and preserving them This does not mean though that the universe is God or that a creature like a tree or an animal is God because those would be respectively pantheism which is a heresy in traditional Islam and the worst heresy in Islam shirk polytheism God is separated by His creation but His creation can not survive without Him In Pre Columbian America Edit The Mesoamerican empires of the Mayas Aztecs as well as the South American Incas Tahuatinsuyu have typically been characterized as polytheistic with strong male and female deities 57 According to Charles C Mann s history book 1491 New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus only the lower classes of Aztec society were polytheistic Philosopher James Maffie has argued that Aztec metaphysics was pantheistic rather than panentheistic since Teotl was considered by Aztec philosophers to be the ultimate all encompassing yet all transcending force defined by its inherit duality 58 Native American beliefs in North America have been characterized as panentheistic in that there is an emphasis on a single unified divine spirit that is manifest in each individual entity 59 North American Native writers have also translated the word for God as the Great Mystery 60 or as the Sacred Other 61 This concept is referred to by many as the Great Spirit Philosopher J Baird Callicott has described Lakota theology as panentheistic in that the divine both transcends and is immanent in everything 62 One exception can be modern Cherokee who are predominantly monotheistic but apparently not panentheistic 63 yet in older Cherokee traditions many observe both aspects of pantheism and panentheism and are often not beholden to exclusivity encompassing other spiritual traditions without contradiction a common trait among some tribes in the Americas In the stories of Keetoowah storytellers Sequoyah Guess and Dennis Sixkiller God is known as ᎤᏁᎳᏅᎯ commonly pronounced unehlanv and visited earth in prehistoric times but then left earth and her people to rely on themselves This shows a parallel to Vaishnava cosmology Konkōkyō Edit Konkokyo is a form of sectarian Japanese Shinto and a faith within the Shinbutsu shugō tradition Traditional Shintoism holds that an impersonal spirit manifests penetrates the material world giving all objects consciousness and spontaneously creating a system of natural mechanisms forces and phenomena Musubi Konkokyo deviates from traditional Shintoism by holding that this spirit Comparable to Brahman has a personal identity and mind This personal form is non different from the energy itself not residing in any particular cosmological location In Konkokyo this god is named Tenchi Kane no Kami Sama which can be translated directly as Spirit of the gilded golden heavens and earth Though practitioners of Konkokyo are small in number 300 000 globally the sect has birthed or influenced a multiplicity of Japanese New Religions such as Oomoto Many of these faiths carry on the Panentheistic views of Konkokyo citation needed See also EditAchintya Bheda Abheda concept of qualified non duality in Gaudiya Vaishnava Hinduism Brahman Christian Universalism Conceptions of God Creation Spirituality Divine simplicity Double aspect theory Essence energies distinction German idealism Henosis Kabbalah Neoplatonism Neutral monism Open theism The Over Soul 1841 essay by Ralph Waldo Emerson Orthodox Christian theology Pantheism Pandeism Parabrahman Paramatman Philosophy of space and time Process theology Subud spiritual movement founded by Muhammad Subuh Sumohadiwidjojo 1901 1987 Tawhid concept of indivisible oneness in Islam People associated with panentheismGregory Palamas 1296 1359 Byzantine Orthodox theologian and hesychast Baruch Spinoza 1632 1677 Dutch philosopher of Sephardi Portuguese origin Alfred North Whitehead 1861 1947 English mathematician philosopher and father of process philosophy Charles Hartshorne 1897 2000 American philosopher and father of process theology Arthur Peacocke 1924 2006 British Anglican theologian and biochemist John B Cobb b 1925 American theologian and philosopher Mordechai Nessyahu 1929 1997 Jewish Israeli political theorist and philosopher of Cosmotheism Sallie McFague 1933 2019 American feminist theologian author of Models of God and The Body of God William Luther Pierce 1933 2002 American political activist and self proclaimed cosmotheist Rosemary Radford Ruether b 1936 American feminist theologian author of Sexism and God Talk and Gaia and God Jan Assmann b 1938 German Egyptologist theorist of Cosmotheism Leonardo Boff b 1938 Brazilian liberation theologian and philosopher former Franciscan priest author of Ecology and Liberation A New Paradigm Matthew Fox priest b 1940 American theologian exponent of Creation Spirtuality expelled from the Dominican Order in 1993 and received into the Episcopal priesthood in 1994 author of Creation Spirituality The Coming of the Cosmic Christ and A New Reformation Creation Spirituality and the Transformation of Christianity Marcus Borg 1942 2015 American New Testament scholar and theologian prominent member of the Jesus Seminar author of The God We Never Knew Richard Rohr b 1943 American Franciscan priest and spiritual writer author of Everything Belongs and The Universal Christ Carter Heyward b 1945 American feminist theologian and Episcopal priest author of Touching our Strength and Saving Jesus from Those Who Are Right Norman Lowell b 1946 Maltese writer and politician self proclaimed cosmotheist John Polkinghorne b 1960 English theoretical physicist and theologian Michel Weber b 1963 Belgian philosopher Thomas Jay Oord b 1965 American theologian and philosopherCitations Edit a b John Culp 2013 Panentheism in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 18 March 2014 a b Erwin Fahlbusch Geoffrey William Bromiley David B Barrett 2005 The Encyclopedia of Christianity Vol 4 William B Eerdmans p 21 ISBN 978 0 8028 2416 5 Pantheism and Panentheism in non Western cultures in Britannica Whiting Robert Religions for Today Stanley Thomes London 1991 p viii ISBN 0 7487 0586 4 Ethics part I prop 15 Ethics part I prop 25S Picton J Allanson Pantheism Its Story and Significance 1905 Fraser Alexander Campbell Philosophy of Theism William Blackwood and Sons 1895 p 163 Correspondence of Benedict de Spinoza Wilder Publications 2009 ISBN 978 1 60459 156 9 letter 73 Karl Jaspers Spinoza Great Philosophers Harvest Books 1974 ISBN 978 0 15 684730 8 pp 14 and 95 Charles Hartshorne and William Reese Philosophers Speak of God Humanity Books 1953 ch 4 Smith David L 2014 Theologies of the 21st Century Trends in Contemporary Theology Eugene OR Wipf and Stock p 228 ISBN 978 1625648648 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Southgate Christopher 2005 God Humanity and the Cosmos A Companion to the Science Religion Debate London T amp T Clark pp 246 47 ISBN 978 0567030160 Retrieved 29 September 2015 John W Cooper Panentheism the other God of the philosophers from Plato to the present Baker Academic 2006 ISBN 0 8010 2724 1 Charles Hartshorne Man s Vision of God and the Logic of Theism 1964 ISBN 0 208 00498 X p 348 cf Michel Weber Whitehead s Pancreativism The Basics Foreword by Nicholas Rescher Ontos Verlag Frankfurt am Main and Paris 2006 Zen For Americans by Soyen Shaku translated by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki 1906 pages 25 26 Zen for Americans The God Conception of Buddhism www sacred texts com Retrieved 2020 11 08 Nesteruk Alexei V 2004 The Universe as Hypostaic Inherence in the logos of God Panentheism in the Eastern Orthodox Perspective in In Whom We Live and Move and Have Our Being Panentheistic Reflections on God s Presence in a Scientific World edited by Philip Clayton and Arthur Robert Peacocke Grand Rapids MI Wm B Eerdmans pp 169 83 ISBN 978 0802809780 Retrieved 23 March 2018 a b Rohr Richard 2019 03 05 The Universal Christ How a Forgotten Reality Can Change Everything We See Hope For and Believe Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 1 5247 6210 0 a b Shared Spirituality Gratefulness org Retrieved 2022 09 19 a b Keating Thomas 2012 The Thomas Keating Reader Selected Writings from the Contemplative Outreach Newsletter Lantern Books ISBN 978 1 59056 352 6 About Charles Hartshorne Archived 2007 11 14 at the Wayback Machine Potgieter R 2013 Keith Ward s Soft Panentheism In die Skriflig In Luce Verbi 47 1 Art 581 9 pages https dx doi org 10 4102 Baker Vaughn W 2013 Evangelism and the Openness of God The Implications of Relational Theism Eugene OR Wipf and Stock pp 242 243 ISBN 9781620320471 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Light of Christ churchofjesuschrist org Now he who spoke with Moses the Jews and the priests he says is the archont of Darkness and the Christians Jews and pagans ethnic are one and the same as they revere the same god For in his aspirations he seduces them as he is not the god of truth And so therefore all those who put their hope in the god who spoke with Moses and the prophets have this in store for themselves namely to be bound with him because they did not put their hope in the god of truth For that one spoke with them only according to their own aspirations And elsewhere Now God has no part in this cosmos nor does he rejoice over it Classical Texts Acta Archelai p 76 www fas harvard edu iranian Manicheism Manicheism II Texts pdf But the blessed One sent through his beneficent Spirit and his great mercy a helper to Adam luminous Epinoia which comes out of him who is called Life And the luminous Epinoia was hidden in Adam in order that the archons might not know her but that the Epinoia might be a correction of the deficiency of the mother And the man came forth because of the shadow of the light which is in him And they took counsel with the whole array of archons and angels And they brought him Adam into the shadow of death in order that they might form him again from earth This is the tomb of the newly formed body with which the robbers had clothed the man the bond of forgetfulness and he became a mortal man But the Epinoia of the light which was in him she is the one who was to awaken his thinking 1 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Lewis James R and Murphy Pizza 2008 Handbook of contemporary Paganism Boston Brill pp 15 16 ISBN 978 90 04 16373 7 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Nigal Sahebrao Genu 2009 Vedic Philosophy of Values New Delhi Northern Book Centre p 81 ISBN 978 8172112806 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Oberlies 1998 155 gives an estimate of 1100 BC for the youngest hymns in book 10 Estimates for a terminus post quem of the earliest hymns are more uncertain Oberlies p 158 based on cumulative evidence sets wide range of 1700 1100 BC The Purusha Sukta in Daily Invocations by Swami Krishnananda Swami Krishnananda A Short History of Religious and Philosophic Thought in India Divine Life Society p 19 Consciousness in Advaita Vedanta William M Indich Motilal Banarsidass Publishers 1995 ISBN 81 208 1251 4 Gandhi And Mahayana Buddhism Class uidaho edu Retrieved 2011 06 10 Wainwright William Concepts of God Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 1 October 2015 Wainwright William Concepts of God The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2010 Edition a b Southgate Christopher God Humanity and the Cosmos T amp T Clark Int l New York p 246 ISBN 0567030164 Sherma Rita DasGupta Sharma Arvind Hermeneutics and Hindu Thought Toward a Fusion of Horizons Springer 2008 edition December 1 2010 p 192 ISBN 9048178002 Chaitanya Charitamrita A C Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada Bhaktivedanta Book Trust The Doctrine of Vibration An Analysis of Doctrines and Practices of Kashmir Shaivism Mark S G Dyczkowski p 44 Ksemaraja trans by Jaidev Singh Spanda Karikas The Divine Creative Pulsation Delhi Motilal Banarsidass p 119 The Trika Saivism of Kashmir Moti Lal Pandit Vitsaxis Vassilis Thought and Faith The concept of divinity Somerset Hall Press p 167 ISBN 978 1 935244 03 5 Subramanian V K Saundaryalahari of Sankaracarya Sanskrit Text in Devanagari with Roman Transliteration English Translation Explanatory Notes Yantric Diagrams and Index Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt Ltd Delhi 1977 6th ed 1998 p ix Hasidism Between Ecstacy and Magic SUNY 1995 p 17 f Ariel David S 2006 Kabbalah The Mystic Quest in Judaism Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield pp 184 85 ISBN 978 0742545649 Retrieved 17 August 2015 Diller Jeanine and Asa Kasher 2013 Models of God and Alternative Ultimate Realities Dordrecht Springer Science amp Business Media pp 425 26 ISBN 978 94 007 5218 4 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Scult Mel 2013 The Radical American Judaism of Mordecai M Kaplan Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 7 8 ISBN 978 0 253 01075 9 Retrieved 1 October 2015 Nirmal Kumar 2006 Sikh Philosophy and Religion 11th Guru Nanak Memorial Lectures Sterling Publishers pp 89 92 ISBN 978 1 932705 68 3 Arvind pal Singh Mandair 2013 Religion and the Specter of the West Sikhism India Postcoloniality and the Politics of Translation Columbia University Press pp 76 430 432 ISBN 978 0 231 51980 9 Mandair Arvind 2005 The Politics of Nonduality Reassessing the Work of Transcendence in Modern Sikh Theology Journal of the American Academy of Religion 74 3 646 673 doi 10 1093 jaarel lfj002 S2CID 154558545 a b Singh Nirbhai Philosophy of Sikhism Reality and its manifestations Atlantic Publishers amp Distri 1990 a b Chahal Devinder Singh UNDERSTANDING OF THE FIRST STANZA OF OANKAR ਓਅ ਕ ਰ BANI Nanda Lala 2003 Kalaam e Goya Institute of Sikh Studies OCLC 190842786 Minai Asghar Talaye 2003 Mysticism aesthetics and cosmic consciousness a post modern worldview of unity of being N Y Global Academic Pub p 250 ISBN 978 1586842499 Abiva Huseyin Bektashi Thought amp Practice Bektashi Order of Dervishes Retrieved 1 October 2015 Murphy John 2014 Gods amp Goddesses of the Inca Maya and Aztec Civilizations New York Rosen Education Service ISBN 978 1622753963 Retrieved 17 August 2015 Maffie James 2013 Aztec Philosophy Understanding a World in Motion Boulder University Press of Colorado ISBN 9781607322238 Retrieved 17 August 2015 Solomon Robert C and Kathleen M Higgins 2003 From Africa to Zen An Invitation to World Philosophy Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield pp 51 54 ISBN 978 0742513495 Retrieved 17 August 2015 Russell Means Where White Men Fear To Tread Macmillan 1993 pp 3 4 15 17 George Tinker Spirit and Resistance Political Theology and American Indian Liberation 2004 p 89 He defines the Sacred Other as the Deep Mystery which creates and sustains all Creation Earth s Insights A Multicultural Survey of Ecological Ethics from the Mediterranean Basin to the Australian Outback Berkeley University of California Press 1994 p 122 ISBN 9780520085602 Retrieved 17 August 2015 The Peoples of the World Foundation Education for and about Indigenous Peoples The Cherokee People retrieved 2008 03 24 General and cited references EditAnkur Barua God s Body at Work Ramanuja and Panentheism in International Journal of Hindu Studies 14 1 2010 pp 1 30 Philip Clayton and Arthur Peacock eds In Whom We Live and Move and Have Our Being Panentheistic Reflections on God s Presence in a Scientific World Eerdmans 2004 Bangert B C 2006 Consenting to God and nature Toward a theocentric naturalistic theological ethics Princeton theological monograph ser 55 Pickwick Publications Eugene Cooper John W 2006 Panentheism The Other God of the Philosophers Baker Academic ISBN 9780801027246 Davis Andrew M and Philip Clayton eds 2018 How I Found God in Everyone and Everywhere Monkfish Book Publishing ISBN 9781939681881 Thomas Jay Oord 2010 The Nature of Love A Theology ISBN 978 0 8272 0828 5 Joseph Bracken Panentheism in the context of the theology and science dialogue in Open Theology 1 2014 1 11 online Marbaniang Domenic 2011 Epistemics of Divine Reality POD ISBN 9781105160776 External links Edit Look up panentheism in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Panentheism Culp John Panentheism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Dr Jay McDaniel on Panentheism Biblical Panentheism The Everywhere ness of God God in all things by Jon Zuck Archived 2008 02 19 at the Wayback Machine John Polkinghorne on Panentheism The Bible Spiritual authority and Inspiration Lecture by Tom Wright at Spiritual Minded Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panentheism amp oldid 1154733428, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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