Saturday, January 31, 2009

Can something come from nothing?

Anything that stands in direct relation to something else--must exist. Existence, then, takes in a lot of territory--material, emotional, psychological, analytical, and, at least for the person who believes, God. But, "nothing," exists only in the relationship of an absence of something, and is excluded, therefore, from existing independently. "Nothing" does not exist--it is because "nothing" is a mere place holder (like the concept zero) that whatever exists, visa vice the physical Big Bang, it does so by being in a direct relationship to the big bang and that something is not nothing.

Lift A Stone And God Is There; Ask A Question And God Is There--

In The Beginning was the paradox: How does unity coexist with multiplicity? How does oneness make room for otherness? How does the all- perfect source become something less than it-self? God, being up for this challenge, solved the dilemma, and She did this by (gender is optional here, in fact, it’s probably best to think of God in terms of process, in terms of “processing divinity”) the liberation of Her own non-being. This event had to be performed in such a way so as God could both be and not be God in the same phenomenon. Her solution is doable, even logically doable, in the form of being-what-is-not-while-not-being-what-is. In this double negation, God becomes free in the phenomenon of not, not being God, while affirming (by implication) the God that is free to not be God. In other words, the liberation of God’s non-being becomes God’s immanence while, at the same time, there exists an implied transcendent God. God’s immanence is particularly important to humans because divine immanence gets called “reality.”