enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. God in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God_in_Christianity

    Christian teachings on the transcendence, immanence, and involvement of God in the world and his love for humanity exclude the belief that God is of the same substance as the created universe (rejection of pantheism) but accept that God the Son assumed hypostatically united human nature, thus becoming man in a unique event known as "the ...

  3. Immanence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immanence

    casting immanence as a characteristic of a transcendent God (common in Abrahamic religions), subsuming immanent personal gods in a greater transcendent being (such as with Brahman in Hinduism), or; approaching the question of transcendence as something which can only be answered through an appraisal of immanence.

  4. Transcendence (religion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transcendence_(religion)

    'The Grave of God,' was the death rattle for the continuancy of the aforementioned school without any noticeable echo." [25] Professor Piet Schoonenberg (Nijmegen, Netherlands) directly critiqued Altizer concluding: "Rightly understood the transcendence of God does not exclude His immanence, but includes it."

  5. Apophatic theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apophatic_theology

    The dual concept of the immanence and transcendence of God can help us to understand the simultaneous truth of both "ways" to God: at the same time as God is immanent, God is also transcendent. At the same time as God is knowable, God is also unknowable. God cannot be thought of as one or the other only. [web 2]

  6. Attributes of God in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attributes_of_God_in...

    The immanence of God refers to him being in the world. It is thus contrasted with his transcendence, but Christian theologians usually emphasise that the two attributes are not contradictory. To hold to transcendence but not immanence is deism, while to hold to immanence but not transcendence is pantheism.

  7. God - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God

    Theologians of theistic personalism (the view held by René Descartes, Isaac Newton, Alvin Plantinga, Richard Swinburne, William Lane Craig, and most modern evangelicals) argue that God is most generally the ground of all being, immanent in and transcendent over the whole world of reality, with immanence and transcendence being the contrapletes ...

  8. Christian mysticism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_mysticism

    Nothingness is a gulf between God and man. God is the origin of everything, including nothingness. This experience of God in hypostasis shows God's essence as incomprehensible, or uncreated. God is the origin, but has no origin; hence, he is apophatic and transcendent in essence or being, and cataphatic in foundational realities, immanence and ...

  9. Conceptions of God - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptions_of_God

    God in Sikhism is depicted in three distinct aspects: God as deity; God in relation to creation; and God in relation to man. During a discourse with siddhas (wandering Hindu adepts), Nanak is asked where "the Transcendent God" was before creation. He replies: "To think of the Transcendent Lord in that state is to enter the realm of wonder.