Analysis part 1: Why God takes providential Sample Clauses

Analysis part 1: Why God takes providential care of his creation In the following pages I will present an analysis of Opif. 6b–12, focused on discovering Xxxxx’x view on the relationship between God and creation, because divine forgiveness implies interaction between God and creation. The analysis is divided into three parts. The first is dedicated to Xxxxx’x main concern regarding the opinion that the world was not created. He maintained that such a view implies that God does not care for the world.175 Philo structured Opif. 6b–12 in such a way that his strong support for God’s providential care is placed at the centre of his argument, in Opif. 10–11. Therefore, this central argument will be analysed first. In the second and third parts of the analysis, Xxxxx’x two arguments in support of the created nature of the material world will be explored. What will become apparent is that for Philo it was essential to maintain that even though God and creation are of completely different natures, God still cares for his creation. Why was it so important for Philo to maintain that God takes care of his creation? Several observations come to the fore. Xxxxx saw God’s providential care as a law of nature connected to God’s goodness, he argued that God created the world out of goodness and goodness automatically leads to care.176 Some 175 The world under discussion in Opif. 6b–12 is the world experienced through the senses – the material world – as becomes clear in Opif. 12. 176 In Opif. 10, Xxxxx writes that it is reasonable and logical that the father and maker of the material world also takes care of this world. In Praem. 42, he calls care for one’s creation a natural law. — Xxxxx’x doctrine of God — scholars maintain that Xxxxx did so because he found these ideas in the Bible.177 In the Bible, however, God’s reasons for creating the world are not explored, nor is his providential care considered a law of nature. Philosophical arguments, particularly those of Xxxxx, provide a better background for a notion that Xxxxx apparently took for granted. A paraphrase of Xxxxx’x deliberations will shed light on what Xxxxx believed was at stake when the created nature of the world and God’s providential care for that world were denied. In Laws, X 893B–903D, Xxxxx carefully deliberates on whether there is a spirit that guides the created world and whether it is good or evil. Here, Xxxxx contemplates whether there is proof for the belief that the gods exist and that they are good. He observes that the movement of the sta...
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