Through Him All Things Were Made

Max Woolley
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The medieval theological worldview was a synthesis of grace and nature that allowed theology and science to act together in a sacred and salvific pursuit of knowledge. This synthesis is beautifully expressed in the Divine Ideas tradition. In this tradition, the tapestry upon which ancient and medieval theology was written, created things existed by reflecting God’s eternal ideas of them. This gave all natural knowledge a Trinitarian dimension because the generation of ideas in the Divine Mind and of created things in the world was isomorphic with the generation of the Son, the uncreated Logos. In my paper, I will argue that just as all things exist as a primordial sacrifice of the Creator offered and known outside Godself through the Son-Logos, so we participate in that primordial gift (in beatitude) when we, recognizing the divine profundity of nature, come to a knowing of God-in-things—to use Meister Eckhart’s phrase. In this tradition, humans, made in God’s image, are ordained to participate in God’s knowing of all things, and to offer creation back up into Divine life by knowing and worshiping God through theology, science, and liturgy. The Divine Ideas model, then, would restore to the sciences a contemplative, salvific power in recognizing the mystical depth of creatures. I will examine theologians like Maximus the Confessor, the Victorines, and modern theologian Mark McIntosh as they see both scientific and theological knowing as a deifying participation in Divine life. I will look at the poetry of St. John the Divine and Thomas Traherne as it lifts the human imagination, illumined by nature and consecrated through liturgy into the life of the world to come. I will close by saying that this tradition becomes especially important in a world confronting the climate crisis. By recognizing the Divine dimensions of creatures, we see how the waste and pollution of the integrity and beauty of the wilderness blemishes the sacrifice of knowing and love that humanity is called to offer to God through theology, the sciences, and the eucharist.
万物都是借着他造的
中世纪的神学世界观是恩典和自然的综合,它允许神学和科学在对知识的神圣和救赎的追求中共同行动。这种综合在神圣观念传统中得到了完美的表达。在这一传统中,古代和中世纪的神学被写在挂毯上,创造的事物通过反映上帝对它们永恒的想法而存在。这给了所有自然知识一个三位一体的维度,因为神的思想和世界上受造之物的产生与圣子,非受造之道的产生是同构的。在我的论文中,我将论证,正如所有事物的存在都是造物主通过圣子逻各斯在上帝自身之外提供和认识的原始牺牲一样,当我们认识到自然的神圣深度时,我们就参与了这种原始的礼物(在幸福中),来了解事物中的上帝——用梅斯特·埃克哈特的话来说。在这个传统中,人类是按照上帝的形象被造的,被任命参与上帝对所有事物的认识,并通过神学、科学和礼拜仪式,通过认识和崇拜上帝,将受造界重新奉献给上帝的生命。因此,“神圣观念”模型将为科学恢复一种沉思的、救赎的力量,以认识生物的神秘深度。我将考察像忏悔者马克西姆斯、维多利亚时代和现代神学家马克·麦金托什这样的神学家,因为他们认为科学和神学知识都是对神圣生活的一种神化参与。我将着眼于圣·约翰和托马斯·特拉赫恩的诗歌,因为它们激发了人类的想象力,受到自然的启发,并通过礼拜仪式将其奉献给来世的生活。最后,我想说,在一个面临气候危机的世界里,这一传统变得尤为重要。通过认识到受造物的神圣维度,我们看到对荒野的完整性和美丽的浪费和污染如何玷污了人类通过神学,科学和圣餐向上帝奉献的知识和爱的牺牲。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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