How & Why Jenson's Right About What God Feels - Syncretistic Cat

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Syncretistic Catholicism

Another Minority Report


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Syncretistic Catholicism where any Anglican, Episcopal, Roman & Orthodox consensus informs core beliefs & divergences are
received as valid theological opinions

How & Why Jenson’s Right About What God Feels

Below, in his chapter of _Trinity, Time, and Church: A Response to the


Theology of Robert W. Jenson, W.B. Eerdmans Pub., 2000_ , Colin Gunton
probes & challenges Jenson’s conceptions of withinness: “Creation takes
place within Christ, rather than within God simpliciter.”

That conceptual tweaking by Gunton fits my own reformulation: I like to read


Jenson as doing – not theogony, but- theophany (re the meta-noetic, grammar
of identity, etc), when he’s talking about the Trinity vis a vis Creation. When he
does speak narratively & dramatically in terms of be-coming, I interpret that,
more specifically, as a defensible Christogony, amenable (meta-ontically per a
tapeinoticon of the communio naturarum vis a vis a real human to divine
directionality ) to Bracken’s Divine Matrix.

~ excerpted from a heuristic that can affirm eternal creation as Incarnation &
Christogony, while denying theogony

While some have argued against & summarily dismissed the coherence of
such as Jenson’s notion of divine withinness & Clarke’s esse intentionale
distinction, I’ve found it profitable to explore how & why their intuitions might
indeed be correct. As discussed in my Christogonal heuristic, above, and as
with others like Bulgakov & Hegel, I find both Jenson & Clarke’s intuitions
eminently defensible when situated within Joe Bracken’s Divine Matrix.

To wit, consider Bracken’s account of intersubjectivity:

Through intersubjective relations, a person can know & understand others’


subjective experiences by prehending the structural objectifications of those
experiences, objectively knowing & identifying with them but not subjectively
identifying with them. Infinite persons objectively know & identify with each
other in every way. The different subjective realities of each person precludes
ontological identity (as in the logical principle of identity). Knowing & willing,
then, pertain to both the divine nature AND to each person.
The rubrics & heuristics above introduce some indispensable distinctions,
such as between subjective & objective ways of knowing & identifying, such
as between infinite & finite persons, such as between creation within Christ vs
God simpliciter. These best guide our intuitions regarding divine im/mutability
& im/passibility, in general.

Questions that might still beg, especially for Neo-Chalcedonians perhaps,


would involve the precise nature of Jesus’ passibility, in particular. That would
in turn have immense normative significance for exactly how we, as created
co-creators, should aspire toward & within our own affective conversions,
which are integral to each of our own Spirit-filled theotic transformations.

Robert Jenson proffers the correct answer, I believe: A person is a moral


subjectivity with a sense of humor. If God, therefore, is personal, He is not only
the moral intention at the ground of things. He is also the laughter at the ground
of things, the sense of humor at the ground of things.

In that Jensonian vein, I cannot more highly commend Chris Green’s God is a
Giddy Thing – The doctrine of the Trinity teaches us what it means to be
happy and it’s follow God Makes Me Laugh – theology, at its best, is funny ha-
ha and funny peculiar .
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John Sobert Sylvest November 2, 2023 Uncategorized

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