Panentheism holds that the universe is a part of God or Goddess, or both, but that it is not the whole of God's being. Nature is thus an aspect of divinity. Unlike pantheism, however, it does not say that the universe is identical to God; it maintains that there is more to God than just the material universe. In panentheism God maintains a transcendent character, and is viewed as both the creator and the original source of universal morality.
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2 Panentheism in Judaism 3 Opposing Views |
Panentheism has only recently been introduced to Christianity via process theology. More recently, this view has also been embraced by Creation Spirituality. This belief is only held by a minority of Christians.
When Hasidic Orthodox Jews first developed as a movement and as a theology, their theology was essentially panentheistic, even though they themselves never had even heard of this word. Non-Hasidic Orthodox Jews viewed this theology as as heretical. However, after the schism between Hasidic and non-Hasidic Orthodox Jews closed in the mid 1800s, panentheism became an accepted way of thinking in Orthodox Jewish theology. While not the mainstream point of view, panentheism has become more popular in the non-Orthodox Jewish denominations like Conservative Judaism and Reform Judaism through the writings of rabbis like Abraham Joshua Heschel, Arthur Green, Wayne Dosick, and Lawrence Kushner.
Gnosticism holds the inverse idea of panentheism: it regards matter as evil and ultimately flawed, and thus not a part of God, even though they admit that it came about through emanations of the supreme being, but this event being more of an accident than of being on purpose.
See also: process theology, Creation SpiritualityPanentheism in Christianity
Panentheism in Judaism
Opposing Views