Seems like the idea of creatio ex nihilo is not based on scripture or philosophy, but doctrine. And that doctrine seems to have ben developed mainly as a reaction to ancient heresies such as dualism. I'm not sure it holds any great importance in today's Church.
The only stuff I could find about current Church teaching on creation emphasises that creation is above all an act of revelation. That act of revelation is constantly occurring, not limited to some unique point of time in the past. Also, God is logically distinct from the created world, and did not create the world out of some part or potential of Himself. I really couldn't find anything that stated ex nihilo creation as being of fundamental importance.
I think it's anachronistic to read ex nihilo doctrine into Genesis. I also think it's somewhat anachronistic to read that doctrine into John 1:1 - 5.
I'll admit, by the time of John's Gospel, Christians were probably starting to develop an idea of creation from nothing. But it seems more like an idea that developed gradually over the 2nd to 5th centuries. The philosophical framework simply didn't exist at that time to make sense of the idea that the universe came from nothing. John's Gospel was written for a largely hellenist audience and goes to some effort to portray the story of Christ in a way that makes sense to it's audience.
Creatio ex nihilo really wasn't incorporated into a coherent cosmology until St Thomas came along with the idea of an act-of-existence.
Wow! I even made that sound like it wasn't just pulled out of my butt!
[threadjack]At the same time, the Judaeo-Christian tradition has never really been tied to any one specific philosophy. Starting off as a local tribal cult, it gradaully refined the ideas behind strict monotheism. Early Christianity had to deal with both the hebrew and the hellenistic world-views. It's really only in the past few hundred years that Christianity has hitched it's cart quite so staunchly to one particular philosophy.
The basic revelations of Christianity should probably not be tightly dependent on any particular cosmology.
I wonder just how much the Thomist world-view is necessary to the Church?
[/threadjack]
So yeah, creatio ex nihilo:
Not explicitly supported by Genesis or other scripture.
Not a logical requirement in understanding the cosmology of creation.
Principally developed as a doctrinal refutation of some early heresies.
So my basic question remains:
To what extent is the idea of ex nihilo creation really necessary to Christianity?
The only stuff I could find about current Church teaching on creation emphasises that creation is above all an act of revelation. That act of revelation is constantly occurring, not limited to some unique point of time in the past. Also, God is logically distinct from the created world, and did not create the world out of some part or potential of Himself. I really couldn't find anything that stated ex nihilo creation as being of fundamental importance.
The early Greeks tended to view the world as flowing by necessity out of some basic raw material.
I think it's anachronistic to read ex nihilo doctrine into Genesis. I also think it's somewhat anachronistic to read that doctrine into John 1:1 - 5.
I'll admit, by the time of John's Gospel, Christians were probably starting to develop an idea of creation from nothing. But it seems more like an idea that developed gradually over the 2nd to 5th centuries. The philosophical framework simply didn't exist at that time to make sense of the idea that the universe came from nothing. John's Gospel was written for a largely hellenist audience and goes to some effort to portray the story of Christ in a way that makes sense to it's audience.
Creatio ex nihilo really wasn't incorporated into a coherent cosmology until St Thomas came along with the idea of an act-of-existence.
Wow! I even made that sound like it wasn't just pulled out of my butt!
[threadjack]At the same time, the Judaeo-Christian tradition has never really been tied to any one specific philosophy. Starting off as a local tribal cult, it gradaully refined the ideas behind strict monotheism. Early Christianity had to deal with both the hebrew and the hellenistic world-views. It's really only in the past few hundred years that Christianity has hitched it's cart quite so staunchly to one particular philosophy.
The basic revelations of Christianity should probably not be tightly dependent on any particular cosmology.
I wonder just how much the Thomist world-view is necessary to the Church?
[/threadjack]
So yeah, creatio ex nihilo:
Not explicitly supported by Genesis or other scripture.
Not a logical requirement in understanding the cosmology of creation.
Principally developed as a doctrinal refutation of some early heresies.
So my basic question remains:
To what extent is the idea of ex nihilo creation really necessary to Christianity?
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