For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture

Divine Hiddenness / Deborah Casewell

7 snips
Jan 23, 2025
Deborah Casewell, an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chester, dives deep into the intriguing topic of divine hiddenness. She discusses the tension between God's apparent absence and human faith, reflecting on personal experiences akin to Mother Teresa's. The conversation touches on Simone Weil's insights, Martin Luther's theology of the cross, and the existential implications of feeling abandoned. Ultimately, it emphasizes the brave pursuit of meaning amidst unanswered questions and the complexity of faith, hope, and love.
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INSIGHT

Three Dimensions of Divine Hiddenness

  • Divine hiddenness is explored through epistemic, moral, and existential lenses.
  • It considers God's unknowability, the terror of God's choices, and the human experience of God's absence.
INSIGHT

Exploring Hiddenness

  • Epistemic hiddenness says God is beyond human knowledge, even in revelation.
  • Moral hiddenness explores the terror of God's choices, like predestination, while existential hiddenness focuses on the human experience of God's absence.
INSIGHT

Terror and the Incomprehensible God

  • The incomprehensibility of God should evoke terror, reminding us we are dealing with God.
  • This terror ensures we don't become too comfortable or accommodate God to our understanding.
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