Wednesday, March 02, 2016
Understanding God
A quotation from Gerhard Tersteegen (1697-1769) is often repeated:
I suspect that most people who quote "Ein begriffener Gott ist kein Gott" do so at second hand, probably from its mention by Rudolf Otto in The Idea of the Holy. I came across the sentence in Robert B. Palmer's introduction to Walter F. Otto, Dionysus: Myth and Cult (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 1965), p. xix:
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Ein begriffener Gott ist kein Gott.I.e. "An understood God is no God." I can't locate the original. Cf. Tersteegen's Unparteiischer Abriss christlicher Wahrheiten (Spelldorf: Bernh. Rosshof und Comp., 1801), p. 25 (chap. 2, quaest. 14: "Was lehret dich diese Eigenschaft Gottes?"):
Gott zu bewundern, anzubeten, und mich im Geist und in der Wahrheit zu verlieren in diesem göttlichen Ungrund: und mich darüber zu erfreuen, daß wir einen so großen, so herrlichen und vollkommenen Gott haben, daß er nicht kann von einem endlichen Verstande begriffen werden.This means something like:
What does this property of God teach you?In quaestio 13 he asks "Warum wird Gott unbegreiflich gennant?" (Why is God called incomprehensible?). "This property of God" in quaestio 14 is therefore his incomprehensibility.
To admire God, to worship him, and to lose myself in spirit and in truth in this divine abyss: and to be glad that we have such a great, magnificent, and perfect God, that he can't be understood by a finite intellect.
I suspect that most people who quote "Ein begriffener Gott ist kein Gott" do so at second hand, probably from its mention by Rudolf Otto in The Idea of the Holy. I came across the sentence in Robert B. Palmer's introduction to Walter F. Otto, Dionysus: Myth and Cult (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 1965), p. xix:
Applied to religion, this principle could easily echo Tersteegen's statement: "Ein begriffener Gott ist kein Gott" (A god who is understood is no god).Augustine said something similar in his Sermon 117:
si comprehendis, non est Deus.