(c) The conception of the Triune God removes the difficulty of ascribing
reaction, limitation, passivity, and emotion to God, which is so fatal to pure
transcendence, and which, nevertheless, is inevitable as soon as you have
ascribed to Him creation. The difficulty has for us lost its terror, for as we
have seen that relatedness is the very soul of God, we see also that limitation
is simply another way of expressing relatedness. All relations are limitations;
they all involve action and reaction, activity and passivity. God who is Father,
Son, and Spirit, is the home of all these things. Why should we be afraid of
them then? True love and true freedom are not absence of all limitations. But
freedom and love are expressed in self-limitation, and blessedness is seen in
the free play of action and reaction. All these things were found eternally in
the bosom of the one Godhead, who is love, being Father, Son, and Spirit.
In the same way passivity is now shown not to be a thing that degraded God;
in God is both activity and passivity. Blessedness needs both; love needs both.
So also emotion. The conscience, heart, and moral needs of men cry out for a
God who stands not coldly aloof, but for one with feeling; yet the intellect of
man has feared to yield on this point, and attempts to figure God as totally
unaffected by anything that man can do or suffer. But the doctrine of the Triune
God who is Love shows that such fears are groundless; for love is the highest |