“Look, there! That’s what I mean by God!” — God as event by Brown

Highlights

although God does not exist and is nowhere, God is an experience, a human experience and that "if you get up from your chair and go into the world, into life, there God may happen."

God is better thought of as being, not a thing, but an "event."

John D. Caputo

2007 essay called "A Theology of the Event" (in "After the Death of God" by John D. Caputo and Gianni Vattimo, Columbia University Press, 2007, pp, 47--49).

if and when I use the word "God," I no longer understand God as something present but as something seeking to make itself felt in what is present.

it's not right to say Jesus IS God, what makes Jesus special to me is that he lived in such a way that what I am still minded to call God continues to make itself felt.

when I see people expressing in their own lives what seems to me to be that same something, I find myself also wanting to say of them, as I still say of Jesus, "Look, there! That's what I mean by God!"

it is important for me to distinguish between the name "God" and the event that is astir or transpires in this name.

when I use the word God I always try to attach it to events in which we see people actually doing true justice, loving mercy, and walking with neighbour and enemy.

I no longer understand God as an ultimate thing, a super-being whose existence could be proved (or disproved) by either science, philosophy or theology, because God is that mysterious nothing (or no-thing) which is something astir in all things.

lively, intra-active nature of the universe in which there are always-already energies at play that can both generate and support unfolding new visions of better ways of being in the world

all theories about God (including this one) can, and must, always be deconstructed.

These theories may, and often have had, some temporary ad hoc usefulness, but they must never be thought of as being themselves the event that they harbour. This is why I point to any living, always revisable, conversational, democratic, open, non-doctrinal forms of religious and secular communities and say "Look, there! That's what I mean by God!"

I understand God as event as provocation and promise. A provocation and promise that is always calling me from afar and insisting I live a form of life committed to seeking more justice, more love, more mercy and a continued walking with neighbour, including one's enemy. Given this, it's no wonder that, as far as every human power that wants to control and dominate other people and the natural world as a whole is concerned, God is indeed a dangerous memory and a radical call to reform. God as event calls and recalls. This is why I try to point to any new expressions and old memories of better, fairer, more just and loving visions of human organization that come to my notice and say "Look, there! That is what I mean by God!"

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References

Brown, Andrew James. “‘Look, There! That’s What I Mean by God!’ — God as Event.” Caute, 9 July 2022, https://andrewjbrown.blogspot.com/2022/07/look-there-what-i-mean-by-god-god-as.html.