Hiddenness of God

#1
C C Offline
Entry first published Sat Apr 23, 2016

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/divine-hiddenness/

INTRO: “Divine hiddenness”, as the phrase suggests, refers, most fundamentally, to the hiddenness of God, i.e., the alleged fact that God is hidden, absent, silent. In religious literature, there is a long history of expressions of annoyance, anxiety, and despair over divine hiddenness, so understood. For example, ancient Hebrew texts lament God’s failure to show up in experience or to show proper regard for God’s people or some particular person, and two Christian Gospels portray Jesus, in his cry of dereliction on the cross, as experiencing abandonment by God, whom he regarded as “Abba, Father”, an experience shared by many mystics, saints, and ordinary folk of all theistic traditions, described at its worst as “the dark night of the soul”. Understood in this way, divine hiddenness poses an existential problem for those who have such experiences.

However, “divine hiddenness” refers to something else in recent philosophical literature, especially since the publication of J.L. Schellenberg’s landmark book, Divine Hiddenness and Human Reason (1993). In this context, it refers to alleged facts about the absence of belief of God, on the basis of which one might think there is no God. For example, Schellenberg argues that, since there are nonbelievers who are capable of a personal relationship with God and who do not resist it, there is no perfectly loving God, while Stephen Maitzen argues that naturalism better explains the “demographics” of nonbelief than theism and Jason Marsh argues that naturalism better explains “natural nonbelief” than theism. Understood in this way, divine hiddenness constitutes putative evidence for atheism.

Although some of the recent philosophical literature addresses the problem understood in the first way (e.g., DeWeese-Boyd 2016; Garcia 2002), this entry focuses on divine hiddenness understood in the second way. The first section discusses the relationships between nonbelief and another source of alleged evidence for atheism: evil. The second section states and defends the argument from nonresistant nonbelief. The third section sketches attempts to explain nonresistant nonbelief from a theistic perspective. The fourth section states other responses to the argument from nonresistant nonbelief. The fifth section discusses the argument from the demographics of nonbelief and the sixth section discusses the argument from natural nonbelief....
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#2
Magical Realist Offline
Quote:two Christian Gospels portray Jesus, in his cry of dereliction on the cross, as experiencing abandonment by God, whom he regarded as “Abba, Father”, an experience shared by many mystics, saints, and ordinary folk of all theistic traditions, described at its worst as “the dark night of the soul”. Understood in this way, divine hiddenness poses an existential problem for those who have such experiences.

Taken in it's most general sense, this crisis of faith can be seen as but a phase in the spiritual quest. Had the gospels ended with Jesus' outcries for God on the cross, it would have been a much more accurate portrayal of the human experience of God. The initial naive faith in his presence, the everyday affirmation of his will in our lives, eventually leading over the years to an existential crossroads where everything gets questioned, and then culminating in a wiser more mystical understanding of the spiritual experience. Had Jesus actually survived his crucifixion, this overwhelming sense of abandonment and alienation would have turned Jesus either into a Nietzsche or a Kierkegaard, grounding his experience of the transcendental into something more personal and less literalist. Perhaps the Gnostic gospels, though apocryphal fictions, rightly extend the psychology of Jesus beyond the Messianic myth of his earlier years. A hypothetical wiser and aged Jesus who has learned the deep metaphorical language of the inner divinity inside all of us.

"The Kingdom of God is inside/within you (and all about you), not in buildings/mansions of wood and stone. (When I am gone) Split a piece of wood and I am there, lift the/a stone and you will find me."--Gospel of Thomas
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