Wednesday 4 November 2020

What does it mean that Men become divine (gods)?

Another way of considering this is to ask in what way resurrected Men in Heaven differ from mortal Men on earth. 

The key explanatory concept is that God is the creator - the prime creator: creator of Men and of all creation.

(...But not creator of every-thing - there was/is already primordial chaos. Creation is from chaos, by God.) 

The difference is that in Heaven we work with God, inside God's creation - among only those Men who do likewise. In Heaven there are only those men who have (like ourselves) made a permanent commitment to God's loving plan of creation. 

(So there is no evil in Heaven - because evil is the purposive destruction of creation.)

Heaven is bound-together by love, and directed-towards creation: creation is, at a deep level, the intrinsic consequence of love. 

In Heaven, whatever creation we do (according to our disposition) beomes a part of God's already-existant and on-going creation; harmonised with it by loving affection and being directed to the same goals. 

(And Heavenly creation includes pro-creation - the begetting of spirit children, who may in turn then choose to incarnate, die, and follow Jesus Christ to Heaven.) 

So, to be divine is to participate-in divine creation. To some extent, and temporarily, this may happen on earth during mortal life. But full divinity is self-conscious, chosen, eternal participation.  


2 comments:

Wm Jas Tychonievich said...

My only disagreement is with the idea that God is “creator of Men” in any ultimate sense. That’s some residual unresolved monotheism for you! Reread the King Follett sermon.

Bruce Charlton said...

@Wm - I know it (https://charltonteaching.blogspot.com/search?q=Follet), and broadly agree/ accept its statements (although I don't accept its infinite regress metaphysics). I believe that Men are eternal Beings (intelligences) who are then 'created' (procreated) by God to spirit children of God. We needed God to make us what we are; on the other hand we were already individual 'selves', presumably very much lacking self-consciousness and other attributes with which God endowed us.