Creation from Nothing by the Trinity

Colin Gunton The late Colin Gunton (1941-2003), in a flurry of productivity just before his untimely death, put out a bunch of books that are remarkable for containing enough ideas that they could each have been expanded into more books. Looking for a half-remembered quotation, I recently skimmed back through my copy of his book The Triune Creator. I never did find the quotation I was after, but I found these four thought-provoking statements about the Christian doctrine of creation:

…the view of creation as deified conflict is perpetually renewed in human culture, most recently perhaps in Hegel and Marx, as well as in many of their disciples. Violations of the peace of creation are an offense against the God of the Bible, in complete contrast and opposition to the fact that they are a rational response to the gods of mythical and philosophical paganism. p. 26

The choice is inescapable: either God or the world itself provides the reason why things are as they are. To ‘personalise’ the universe or parts of it, particularly inert substances like molecules, is to succumb to crude forms of superstition. As we shall see, only a theology which distinguishes God from the world ontologically justifies the practices of science without succumbing to a pantheism or crypto-pantheism which effectively divinises the temporal. p. 39

The incarnation implies a certain freedom in the relations between God and the world, and so is the basis of the doctrine that God creates ‘out of nothing.’ The act of creation is accordingly seen to be grounded in an anterior richness in God. pp. 67-68

We are created not to ascend through the material to the spiritual, but to be perfected in time, through Christ and the Spirit, in and with the created order as a whole. p. 170

If those get your mind going, treat yourself to the whole book some time. It’s a couple hundred pages just like that.

We All Like Sheep

sheep with a plan And who wouldn’t like sheep? With a cloud for a body and nub for a tail, this ovine citizen has a distinctive strut. He throws his sloping hooves out in front of him and pulls himself along the green pasture beside the still waters - - his posture suggests he’s walking backwards, but be not deceived, this sheep maketh progress. The still waters are not pictured, and the green pastures are represented by a continuous zig-zag line like a tide chart. The constant diet of grass has lent its color to his green voice (what color is your voice?), which belts out his future plans: “I’M GOING TO EAT SOME GRASS ! ! ! ! !”

Sub conditione Jacobi, lamby, “under the condition laid down by James: “If the Lord wishes, we will live and do this or that.” For what is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. If the Lord wishes, you will indeed EAT SOME GRASS ! ! ! ! ! !