Thomas, you can try to marginalize me all you want.
No I'm not ... but if you want to interpret the works of St Thomas according to your own insights, radically differently than their own teaching, then you have marginalised yourself.
So what I'm saying is you can interpret Christianity according to your own tastes, as many do here, but you can't quote extracts from the works of Orthodox Catholics to support your heterodox viewpoint, on the basis that only you understand what they meant to say.
You can argue a heterodox interpretation of those works, and orthodoxy will respond with a counter argument. As you never respond to these, I assume you have no response.
I am currently working on the apophatic line from Denys, Eriugena, Eckhart, Cusa on ... and two of those four were accused of heresy, and I defend them against that accusation according to their own works, so in that sense I am marginalising myself from orthodoxy ... but I cannot defend them by picking selective texts from Aquinas or Bonaventure or others and interpreting them in a heterodox fashion, my peers will see straight through that and toss it out ... what I have to do is argue the point that Eriugena (for example) is saying the same thing as orthodoxy understands an accepted orthodox commentary, in his own words, and that his words were misinterpreted by his accusers, and that although complex, he was orthodox in his Catholicism.
Like I said, there is nothing new in these discussion on panentheism. And you're not having this argument with me. There are plenty of Christian theologians who are panentheists. I really like Jürgen Moltmann, who was a pastor. I quoted Karl Rahner, who was a Catholic priest and professor of dogmatic theology. Both John Macquarrie and Alan Watts were priests.
OK. But I don't think Rahner was a panentheist ... Aquinas definitely wasn't. So that leads me to doubt your commentaries on anyone else. Sorry, but that's understandable, I think.
Rahner argues for mutability and Immutability in the Deity ... so do I ... but the mutability is from our perspective looking at Him, not from His perspective looking at us ... mutability means being subject to time, change, place, movement ... and whilst Scripture accords all these to God, it is not because God moves, changes, ages, places ... but to enable us to understand something of the Divine ... so language addresses human capacity to comprehend ... the language to define God as He is in Himself does not, nor can it, exist.
I'm saying that ther Immutable Deity contains mutability within Himself, as the Infinite contains the finite within itself ... but the finite is so radically different to the infinite, that to assume the finite is, in essence, infinite, seems to me to be an error.
I stand to be enlightened, but as yet I don't see it.
If you look around, I think you'll find the most favorable discussions of panentheism among Christian theologians. I suspect they are drawn to panentheism because it is essentially Biblical.
Is it ... then why is Judaism, Christianity and Islam not panentheist?
You might start with Teilhard de Chardin, who developed the idea that superorganization of matter and the personalization of G-d's body: "'God all in everyone is
essentially orthodox and Christian." As you know, he was a Roman Catholic Jesuit priest. I'm sure he was familiar with classical theism and the idea of Unmoved Mover. Do you think Teilhard de Chardin saw evidence of
creatio ex nihilo whe he discoverred Peking man in 1929? Or do you think he saw evidence of panentheistic evolutionary soteriology?[/QUOTE]
I don't know ... but I don't think you can claim so either, as he never claims to be a panentheist. De Chardin was supported by heavyweights like de Lubac, and opposed by heavyweights like Etienne Gilson and Jacques Maritain ... so I'm suggesting as easy statement like 'Chardin was a panentheist' cannot be made, other than an opinion which might or might not be the case.
Thomas