The Church
has two fundamental doctrines with regard to the creation. The first is
that God created the universe out of non-being and not from allegedly
pre-existing ideas. The second is that God governs, maintains and
provides for the creation through His uncreated energy and not by means
of created laws.
The energy of God is single, but it is differentiated into many energies according to its results,
namely: existence-bestowing, life-giving, wisdom-imparting or
glorifying, just as there is the creative, sustaining, providential and
glorifying energy of God. The entire creation participates to varying
extents in God’s energy. At this point, when mentioning the energy of
God in creation, we shall refer to the creative energy of God but not to
His glorifying energy, in which the angels and saints share, as we
shall see later.
Only the
angels and saints participate in the glorifying energy of God. The
creative and sustaining energy of God exists in creation.
“Creative
means that it brings into existence, sustaining means that it maintains:
in other words, maintenance. Like the plumber who comes to your house
and maintains the pipes.”
In the
universe there are no so-called natural laws, which God is alleged to
have put into creation before abandoning it. Instead there are natural
inner principles (logoi), which are the uncreated energy of God. Christ
referred to this when He said of the birds of the air that “the heavenly
Father feeds them”, when He said of the lilies of the field that the
heavenly Father arrays them, and of man, that God is personally
interested in him (Matt. 6:26-33). Other words of Christ that refer to
this issue are: “My Father has been working until now, and I have been
working” (John 5:17). The introductory psalm at Vespers (103 LXX) also
contains many phrases that show God’s personal intervention in the
world: “You are He who sends springs into the valley”, “You are He who
waters the mountains from His higher places”, “You are He who causes
grass to grow for the cattle…” and so on.
“The energy of God is everywhere. It is everywhere present and pervades the universe.”
Many
Fathers, particularly St Maximos the Confessor, when they refer to the
sustaining, maintaining energy of God that is present in the whole of
creation, mention the inner principles (logoi) of things. These ‘inner
principles of beings’ are not the archetypes of the ideas, as the
ancient philosophers asserted, but the creative and sustaining energy of
God.
“There is a
difference between the Fathers and Augustine on the following point:
because Augustine identified the glory of God with Plato’s archetypes
and Plato’s forms, illumination for Augustine was not the unceasing
remembrance of God in the heart, but the vision of the archetypes in the
essence of God, when someone conceives the archetypes or forms with his
brain.
We need to
be careful here because sometimes the archetypes are used by the
Fathers, but for the Fathers the archetypes are formless: they are not
the Platonic forms, whereas for Augustine they are the forms that are
identical to the archetypes. Here we have the forms. We have the
rationes – that is to say, the rationes that are the inner principles
(logoi). The inner principles (logoi) are called rationes in Latin.
Augustine occasionally refers to the rationes.
This would
be fine if he went no further. This is the teaching of the faith,
because we ought to know the inner principles (logoi) of things.
However, for us these inner principles are not archetypal forms. They
are not forms but divine purposes, destinies and so on; they are what
God wills. For Plato they are not divine purposes. For Plato they are
the originals of which the world is a copy. That is to say, there is a
form of man and we are a copy of the idea of man. Yes, but man is not a
copy of the inner principles (logoi) of beings, because the principles
of beings are free from form and have no shape. The principles of beings
have no similarity at all with created things in patristic literature.”
It is
significant that the teaching of the Fathers on the inner principles
(logoi) of beings is not speculative or rationalistic but empirical,
because they had at some time, through the illuminating and glorifying
energy of God, reached the point of seeing the sustaining and
providential energy of God in creation, a vision that is called natural
theoria.
“When
someone is in the state of illumination he acquires natural theoria of
beings, which means that he sees the uncreated energy of God within
creation. He who is illuminated has the energy of God within him and
sees the energy of the Holy Spirit in all created things.”
Certainly there are degrees of spiritual knowledge, depending on someone’s spiritual state.
“One stage
is when you see it through faith. That is to say, you understand the
energy of God within creation when you accept the teaching of the
saints. The next is when you see the energy of God within creation, when
you participate in the illuminating energy of God.”
—Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos. Empirical Dogmatics, Volume Two
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