Reclaiming the Transcendent: God in Process

Reclaiming the Transcendent: God in Process

by Thomas Gates
Reclaiming the Transcendent: God in Process

Reclaiming the Transcendent: God in Process

by Thomas Gates

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Overview

God is commonly imagined as a supreme Being, acting from afar to influence events in the world. For many people today, this image of God has become unbelievable. Tom Gates presents process theology as another way of understanding God that is more congruent with a scientific worldview, as well as with the biblical witness and with the understanding of early Friends. He invites readers to "reclaim the Transcendent" through a vision of God that is less like a king and more like an energy field, constantly but imperceptibly nudging us toward True North, less like a puppeteer and more like an inner yearning toward future possibilities of beauty and harmony. In this way of understanding, God is less a noun, and more a verb; "an activity that is going on everywhere rather than a being who exists somewhere." The author finds this understanding of "God in process" to be deeply congruent with Quaker spirituality. Discussion questions included.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149975679
Publisher: Pendle Hill Publications
Publication date: 01/14/2015
Series: Pendle Hill Pamphlets , #422
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 100 KB

About the Author

Thomas Gates is a member of Lancaster (PA) Monthly Meeting, where he has served for many years on the Committee for Worship and Ministry. He also served for ten years on Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s Working Group on Deepening and Strengthening Our Meetings. He is a graduate of The School of the Spirit’s Spiritual Nurturer Program (2002–2003) as well as The Way of Ministry (2008–2009).
Tom is a graduate of Williams College and Harvard Medical School. He spent the first eight years of his medical career as a family doctor in rural New Hampshire. In 1991–1994, he and his wife Elizabeth and their sons Matthew and Nathan lived and worked at Friends Lugulu Hospital in Kenya (see Pendle Hill Pamphlet 319, Stories from Kenya, and Pendle Hill Pamphlet 341, Sickness, Suffering, and Healing). Upon their return, he spent a year studying at Earlham School of Religion. Since 1995, he has been a member of the faculty of the Family Medicine Residency at Lancaster General Hospital.
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