Abstract:
Modern scientific models of cosmological space and the theological concept of God’s immensity
seem to exclude the possibility that God himself is personally present with us humans at
particular places in space. Are God and our spatial reality incompatible? Or, is it possible to
conceive the connection between God and space as ‘positive’, that is, in such a way that God
himself can be fully and personally present with us at particular places in space? This essay
explores how this question may be addressed in a theology which accepts the results of the
natural sciences and acknowledges that God is the free creator of physical space. It describes
how space can be conceptualised, and presents an overview of five different views on a
positive relation between God and space in recent protestant theology. It concludes by some
considerations on the question whether a positive relation between God and space requires
that God himself is spatial.
CONTRIBUTION : This article contributes to the conversation between natural science and
theology by making three points. (1) The scientific understanding of cosmological space and
the biblical witness of God’s personal and local presence with humans require an alternative
for the traditional theological view on God and space in terms of God’s immensity and
omnipresence. (2) It is argued that new theological models for the interrelation between God
and space have serious weaknesses. (3) A ‘positive’ relation between God and space may be
articulated in terms of the correspondence among God’s uncreated movement, multiplicity
and relationality, and the movement, multiplicity and relationality in the physical space of
creation.
Description:
This research is part of The
research project
‘Understanding Reality
(Theology and Nature)’,
directed by Prof. Dr Johan
Buitendag, Department of
Systematic and Historical
Theology, Faculty of
Theology and Religion,
University of Pretoria.