No
dogma has ever been formulated without there being certain
prior causes.
The
cause
for formulating
the dogma
on
Creation from nil
was chiefly the Platonics’ influence with
their concept of Creation; a concept that the Church did not
accept. Subsequently, the Church’s dogma on Creation differs
in its essence from the Platonic perceptions on Creation.
Platonism and Christianity parted ways very opportunely on
the issue of Creation, and it is very important that we
remember that this took place as early as the first two
centuries, although it did become even clearer in the 3rd
century with the Fathers. So, let us see what the term “from
nil” implies:
The first thing that it signifies is that the
world is not eternal, because, if it was not
created “from nil”, then the opposite would be implied;
i.e., that the world was created from “something” that
already existed before it. Thus, if that “something”
already existed (from which the world originated), then,
logically, it must have pre-existed, and in fact must have
existed prior to the creation of the world. Consequently,
that “something” cannot be within the limits of Time;
it cannot have anything to do with Time or Creation,
unless that “something” is “from nil”; instead, it would
have to be an eternal creation -as Origen asserted- and the
world would necessarily be eternal also, the way that the
ancient Hellenes had perceived it.
These ideas are all rejected. The world is
not eternal.
"Çí ðïôÝ üôå ïõê çí",
(=there
was a time that it was not).
The world
“was not”.
Then what
was there?
There was God.
There was nothing else but God, because
everything outside of God is a creation. Therefore, we must
infer that “there was a time” that God was on His own,
without anything else co-existing.
This is the first consequence of the term
“from nil”.
The second consequence is that if the world
was created from nil, it would be subject to a “return to
nil”. Why
is this necessary?
Well, it is necessary, simply because if something is not
eternal, then it cannot remain eternal. The characteristic
of the world is not eternicity, but its continuous
dependence on “nil”. Consequently, the world can return to
“nil”, and furthermore, it is in the nature of Creation to
be constantly threatened by the “return to nil”.
Athanasios the Great wrote in his work “On
Incarnation” that Creation has “nil” and “death” within its
nature. Therefore, “death”, in the sense of “elimination of
Creation” is something that is embedded in Creation. When
we say “creation” we definitely imply something mortal, as
nothing immortal can be created.
This is the second consequence of
“from
nil.”
Now the third
consequence.
The following
question
arises:
If the world is “from nil” and is threatened by “nil”, i.e.,
the world is destined to return to nil, then how can it
possess a true existence, and how can it avoid its “return
to nil”? Because, if God created a world from nil so that
it would return to nil, then that world is condemned – not
only by nature, but also on account of God’s intention for
it to die.
But God did
not
make the world so that it should die; He made it so that it
should live. We have already eliminated the nature of the
world as its means of survival. In other words, when God
made the world so that it could live, so that it would be
able to transcend “nil”, He did not implant in its
nature any kind of force that would ensure its immortality,
because that would have automatically rendered the world
eternal, and it would no longer be a creation; it would have
become an immortal god. If God had placed such laws within
the nature of Creation, which would have -once and for all-
ensured the survival of the world, then that world – albeit
with a beginning “from nil”, as something non-eternal –
would have ended up eternal “by nature”. This means that God
would have created another, eternal, god. Therefore, this
would not have been the way for the world to
transcend “nil” and continue to live, and be in a perpetual
relationship with God.
We have God on the one hand, Who is eternal,
Who lives eternally within His nature, and on the other
hand, we have a world that began from nil and within its
nature cannot live eternally. This world cannot
live eternally and not die, since it doesn’t have anything
inside it – inside its nature – that can draw from any
powers for its eternal survival. All the laws of life, of
nature, are simultaneously laws of death, and that is why we
die. We begin to die, from the moment of our birth. Death
begins from the very first moment of life. Death is not the last moment of life.
Consequently, the laws that bring us into
life are the same laws that bring us into death. The only
way that something created can transcend death and
deterioration is to remain in constant communion with the
eternal God. God and the world should be in communion with
each other. This communion was given to Creation as a
mission to be accomplished by mankind. Thus, we have here a
different kind of cosmology than the one we saw in Origen.
Take note of these significant differences.
Man was created at the end of all Creation,
precisely so that he might unite the created with the
Uncreated God and bring them into a permanent relationship,
so that this created world – by having a relationship only
with the Uncreated, eternal God – will not die, but live
on. This is the only way that Creation can transcend
“nil”.
Therefore, the purpose of creating man was
this precise communion with God. Why did God use man and
not any other beings, such as angels for example? It is
because man by nature has a natural bond with the rest of
nature, and because of nature’s bond with man, all of
nature, all of the created world, by means of man’s body,
can enter into a communion with God and live. If God had
chosen angels, i.e. the incorporeal powers, whichever ones
and as many as they might be, the material world would never
have been able to live on. In other words,
an angel would not have been able to offer
the material world the things necessary for it to live,
which is the union with God; the union of created and
Uncreated.
The creation of man was a necessary element
that would give the term “Creation” its full meaning,
because without man, Creation would have been condemned to
die. This was precisely the train of thought followed by
Athanasios the Great in his “On the incarnation of the
Logos”; he showed that it was not by chance that God
chose this form of incarnation for the Logos in His plan to
save the world, because what the world needed to be saved
was –no less- the transcending of “nil” and the ability to
live on. And for the material world this would have been
impossible, if the union with God was not arranged in such a
way as to also include the material world. No other being
in nature has this potential to transcend the material world
and become joined to God, except mankind. Angels may be
superior in quality and more spiritual, but they have a
disadvantage: they do not possess a material body; they have
no ties with matter, whereas we humans even partake of
creation’s death. We die, because birds and trees die;
because all animals die. Consequently, we know, we carry in
our flesh the death of the created world. An angel does
not partake of it. An angel does not share the
fate of material death. Thus, the material part of creation
cannot commune with God through angelic beings.
When man was created, he was created
precisely for that destination: to unite all of nature with
God, thus enabling the transcendence of “nil” and death.
And since this was man’s supreme destiny, one would
naturally have expected God to do things the way He did, so
that this destiny would eventually be fulfilled. However,
this destiny, this plan of God’s, encountered a
stumbling-block, i.e., man’s refusal to go along with the
plan. Man said to himself: “I don’t want to follow this
plan; I have my own plan – I myself will become a god”, and
he fooled himself. Adam believed that by his
becoming God, the world would be able to transcend “nil”, it
would live on, and he too would live on. That is how he
became entangled in the adventure we know as “the Fall”.
Adam’s option to say “no” is attributed to the fact that God
had given him the potential to say “no” – in other words,
Adam was bestowed with “freedom”.
Thus, with regard to the dogma on Creation,
the question is posed: Why does
freedom exist
in man?
Why didn’t God make things in such a way, that His plan
wouldn’t have stumbled over man’s freedom? Of course we
cannot ask God why He did things this way and not that
way... But, we need to be aware of what would have happened,
if God had done things in another way. What is evident is
that if man had been created without the freedom to choose
-or not choose- to follow that plan, then any union of God
with the world and of the world with God would have been a
compulsory union. The world would not have been able
to escape –so to speak- from this union, and that is
precisely what God did not want, when He made the
world “from nil”. He made it into something outside
Himself, which, however, would not merely function like a
machine that was joined to Him, but would function in the
same manner that God functions, i.e., of his own free will.
God did not want a world that did not
want to exist. Can you create someone out of love, who would
not want to exist? God preferred to make a world that would
want to exist, and this is precisely why he bestowed on man
the freedom to say “yes” or “no” to His plan. The fact that
man chose the negative reply – and man did choose it, and
continues to choose it, even when he is fully aware of the
fact that it will lead him to certain death and “nil” – is
indicative of the fact that God, when creating the world,
did not want a world that existed without wanting to. In
other words, the world had the God-given potential, during
creation, to choose self-destruction. By the looks of
things, Adam’s choice –existentially- was indeed the choice
for self-destruction.
It was thus, that the world was “let be”,
without any further intervention by God. Take special note
of this, because this point completes the dogma on
creation: If Creation had been abandoned free, the way that
Adam had chosen to direct it, it is certain that it would
have already reached the point of self-destruction - the
point of annihilating itself. This choice was indeed
respected by God; nevertheless, He never ceased His efforts
to help the world to live. And this is where Providence
enters the picture; the history of “salvation”, which is the
means through which God tries to mend Adam’s choice, so that
it will not harm the world.
The idea behind “salvation” was for the world to survive,
and to transcend death.