Immanence and Transcendence
How can we speak of anything truly holy, most especially God, as being literally present in our sick, polluted world? In process, God is the chief exemplification of all metaphysical principles. One major principle is relativity, so that Whitehead says one of his major goals is to explain what it means to be present in another entity, We are all incarnate in one another, but in a radically inferior sense. In sharp contrast, God is omnipresent in the richest and fullest sense. That means there is a direct, immediate flow of all creaturely feeling into God, and vice verse. And God is no fair-weather friend. God experiences all the tragedies of life as well as the triumphs. How else could we think of God as all-knowing? If God is not a spacio-temporal being who can suffer, how could God even begin to understand those of us who are? In process, the highest form of knowledge is direct experience, a Da Sein (being there). Do God must be omnipresent, or God cannot be fully God. In classical t...