Matchbox God

Matchbox God is a poem reflecting on what essentially is a panendeist philosophy. Panendeism is a branch of deism identifying God with being the sum total of all creation, but also greater than that, transcending creation.

As a partial component of creation we can appreciate that of which we are merely a part. What we cannot do is fathom the whole, even less so what transcends the whole. We comprehend the being of God, but not what God is.

God must always be elusive, beyond us, ineffable, otherwise that would not be God.

Matchbox God

There’s a modest looking matchbox
Neither very deep nor wide,
And yet it is remarkable
As God can be found inside.

Once the drawer has been pushed open
Folk look in, look up and glare,
Crying, “Even if we’re faithful
We can see God’s not in there.”

Although never readily seen
God’s not easily dismissed,
Being all that there is and more than
What does and does not exist.

The sum of every particle
And all the space in between,
Whatever was or will be, God
Becomes, is now or has been.

As the primary catalyst,
The cosmic key that unlocks
The door to creation, God is
Also inside that matchbox.

Dave Alton

Materialism, Idealism and the Universal Dialectic

In simple terms philosophy traditionally split into two basic camps, accepting that each has a wide variety of tents, which are materialism and idealism. Idealism posits the notion that all phenomena are ultimately mental constructs, while materialism reduces the very same phenomena to matter and its properties.

Idealism begs the question as to what is the source of the consciousness giving form to the world. If it is not material in origin then there must be a positive absence giving rise to the thoughts constructing the phenomenal world.

However, materialism fares little better as an explanation: despite appearances, matter is not the fundamental source of the physical realm. Science has demonstrated clearly that energy is required for mater to come into existence, while a vacuum-potentiality is required for energy to emerge.

So, it can be said that both idealism and materialism arise from some sort of super-nothingness. Idealism suggests an infinite consciousness manifesting as if vacuous matter was the source of its own being. Materialism, meanwhile, is a 19th century concept reflecting definite ideas about a hard reality that has been subsequently dissolved by modern physics.

As “nothingness” lies at the heart of both idealism and materialism it is reasonable to begin with that as the underlying ground of reality. Indeed, a “fecund void” becomes the source of everything, the prerequisite of both mind and matter, and consistent with the understanding of quantum physics.

Why does nothing, that is “nothing-with-potential”, bring something into being? Because if it didn’t, that potential would, by definition, be non-existence which for obvious reasons can’t exist: the circularity of this argument is unavoidable because undifferentiated potential cannot come into being if nothing exists, yet as the source of all existence, neither is it non-being.

What there is, is a state of continuous becoming, the infinite is the source of the finite, indeed, exists through the finite. This is the universal dialectic, the objective realised through the subjective. The world is not an illusion, a mental construct, nor is it a hard unchanging reality, but a constantly arising limited expression of limitless potentiality.

Crucially, the two dialectical poles of infinite and finite are aspects of a single reality that can only be perceived as a dualism. There is no ultimate reality transcending the mundane: the mundane and the transcendent are both elements of a single reality, the universal dialectic.

The universal dialectic is an expression of the principle of creativity, of how existence becomes, how nature works. As unity appears as duality there arises a contradiction in nature, producing complimentary opposites interacting with each other, ceaselessly producing new syntheses.

This results in progressive creation, a naturalistic teleology of which evolution is an example. All things possess within them pairings of opposites and exist in a milieu of contending opposites. These are the creative forces acting and reacting, to shape and change, within the universal context of one reality.

There is a strand of deism, panendeism (a word coined by Larry Copling in 2000, literally meaning, “all in God”), that considers the universe to be an element of God, but not all of God. This obviously corresponds with the finite being one with the infinite, but patently not all the infinite.

By way of analogy, an organism is an assemblage of semi-autonomous individual cells and is a semi-autonomous individual in its own right. As an organism it amounts to rather more than just being the sum total of its cells. Similarly, God is every particle of the universe, while simultaneously transcending it.

While an individual cell might be “aware” of being part of something larger, it cannot comprehend the organism of which it is a component. Similarly, an organism, man for instance, can appreciate being a finite expression of infinite potential, part of its self-realisation, but remains incapable of truly apprehending it.

Deists, and panendeists, refer to this as God, or Deus; or some other word with non-religious connotations could be coined if preferred. It serves as the X in a cosmic equation to which there is no final solution, the answer constantly recurring, otherwise the potential would not be infinite.

For a deist/panendeist infinite potential arising out of nothingness is the divine process. This is not to introduce a supreme being as the manufacturer of that potential. Indeed, deists understand only too well that the concept of God is fraught with cultural accretions and difficulties. That is why God in deism is ineffable; definitely not to be thought of anthropomorphically.

Deism/panendeism is a human construct for contemplating and celebrating the awe inspiring nature of reality, and the reality of nature. Universal dialectic gives some inkling as to how whatever is came about and that it is transitory. Materialists and idealists do not have to shed cherished conceits, though they might appreciate they hold to only half the story.

Words, like all aspects of reality are finite and though, therefore, they are of the infinite they cannot encompass it. So the word “God” is bound to be inadequate, acceptable to some as an indication, a way of talking about something that’s beyond any language. Those for whom “God” is anathema find other verbal signs to point towards an ever receding concept that can never quite be grasped.

(Source: “Dialectical Monism” by Naturyl, http://naturyl.humanists.net/diamon.html )

Differing Deisms

All ideologies, religious and secular, have their internal differences. Christianity, for example, has the three major divisions, Roman Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant. Taking the latter, it sub-divides into Episcopalians, Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists, Quakers and others. Within each of these further divergences can be identified.

The same is true of politics for instance. The British parliament boasts three main parties and representatives from a number of others. Take any of those parties and within it a variety of views will be found, coalescing around official or semi-official groupings.

This is perfectly natural as it is the way ideas contest and prove themselves or change or become discarded. All positions, no matter how formidable they may seem for a time, are provisional, influenced by changing times, events and advancing knowledge.

Unfortunately, problems arise when a particular ideology becomes so dominant it considers all opposition as heresy requiring the apparatus of repression. This engenders bitter opposition often resulting in violence: the bloody history of the Reformation being but one example of this tendency. An agreement to differ is not only more civilised, it opens up possibilities for the exploration and formulation of new thinking.

Just as Christians of whatever stripe have fundamentals on which they agree, so it is with Deists. Deism is usually broadly defined as belief in God founded on Reason, Experience and Nature (of the universe). However, this does not imply all deists are alike in their thinking.

There is a variety of deist positions, some of them being:
• Monodeism – The universe was created by a single god that does not intervene in human affairs. Instead, God observes the universe, and therefore people as a sentient element, and its development in the way of an impartial scientist.
• Polydeism – Rather than the creation of one god, the universe is the product of various gods, each responsible for creating a different part, which is why there isn’t a single god taking an interest in the universe as a whole.
• Pandeism – God is the universe and the universe is God. Not only did God create the universe the divine pervades every aspect of it, living and non-living. This does not imply God takes a personal interest in human affairs, but that the whole universe is the extension of God.
• Panendeism – The universe is only a part of God, the divine power extending way beyond physical limitations. The philosopher Immanuel Kant insisted the power of omnipotent being cannot be limited, and allows for the idea of some cosmologists of the existence of multi-verses.
• Process Deism – God, like the universe, is subject to change. Not omnipotent, but omnipresent, God is eternal and experiences the passage of time. For people who also change over time, their lives can be validated by sharing this experience of God.
• Christian Deism – Interprets the teachings of Jesus in a Deist way while rejecting supernatural elements or that Jesus is the Son of God in a literal sense, other than as all people are ultimately the sons and daughters of God.
• Philosophical Deism – Draws on a broad range of religious and philosophical sources for deist ideas, while discounting as myths all suggestions of miracles.
• Scientific Deism – Scientific precepts and methodologies have pre-eminence, so any religious thinking must not be in contradiction with science. Particular reference is made to quantum physics as a demonstration of the strangeness of the universe.

These are some of the main strands of deism and there may well be others. There can be no definitive deism because God stands beyond human definition. Reason and experience applied to the nature of the universe is, for deists, suggestive of God, but by no means a proof.

Even what is meant by God is open to question, certainly not an anthropomorphic figure often suggested by religions. Language can only go so far to express what is little more than an inkling at best. Deism thus has much in common with Humanism that would not use the word “God”, but still express spiritual concepts drawn from the religion it grew.

Deism is not a proselytising religion, knocking on doors with the intention of securing converts. In its many forms it offers views of creation and suggests to those who are in some way in agreement that they also may be deists.

Those who are prepared to accept such a designation will, most likely, favour the form of deism that most closely accords with their thinking, or maybe prefer to be just deists, reflecting an implicit imprecision.

Difference for deists is a strength and should be embraced as an opportunity for keeping the conversation alive: reason and experience are not limited to a particular moment so there will always be room for new ideas and shared speculation.