CHAPTER I
GOD
God and infinity.—Proofs of God’s existence.
—Attributes of Divinity.—Pantheism.
God and infinity.
1. What is God?
“God is the Supreme Intelligence, the first cause of all things.” *
2. What is to be understood by infinity?
“That which has neither a beginning nor an end, the unknown. All
that is unknown is infinite.”
3. Can it be said that God is the infinite?
“This is an incomplete defnition. One shortcoming of the language
of humankind is that it lacks the ability to defne that which
transcends human intelligence.”
God is infinite in Divine perfections, but infinity is an abstraction.
Asserting that God is infinite is to substitute the attribute
of something with the thing itself, and to defne something unknown
by reference to something else that is likewise unknown.
* The text in quotation marks following each question is the actual response given by the spirits. The comments and clarifcations added by the author are in a smaller font whenever they might otherwise be confused with the spirits’ response. Where the author’s comments constitute full chapters, the regular font is maintained, as there is no possibility of confusion. **
** In Kardecpedia, these comments and clarifications were distinguished only through the italic type.
Proofs of God’s existence.
4. Where can the proof of God’s existence be found?
“In a premise that is applied in science: there is no effect without a
cause. Investigate the cause of anything that is not the work of human
beings and reason shall provide the answer.”
To believe in God, simply observe the works of creation. The
universe exists, therefore there is a cause. Doubting the existence
of God would be to deny that every effect has a cause,
and to presuppose the idea that something could be created
from nothing.
5. What inference can be drawn from the innate perception possessed by all of
humanity concerning God’s existence?
“That God exists, because from where would this idea originate if
there were no real basis? Once again, this is a corollary of the principle
stating that there can be no effect without a cause.”
6. Could our intuitive sense of God’s existence simply be the result of education
and the product of acquired ideas?
“If such were the case, how could this intuitive sense be retained
by primitive cultures?”
If the sentiment of the existence of a Supreme Being were solely
the result of education, it would not be universal and would
only exist, like all acquired knowledge, in the minds of those
who have received this education.
7. Is the frst cause of creation found in the essential properties of matter?
“Then what would be the cause of these properties? There must
always be a frst cause.”
To attribute creation to the essential properties of matter would
be to consider the effect as a cause, because these properties
are an effect, which must in turn have a cause.
8. What should we think of the opinion that creation was an unplanned
combination of matter, in other words, pure chance?
“Another absurdity! What person possessing common sense
can seriously view chance as an intelligent agent? Besides, what is
chance? Nothing.”
The harmony that regulates the universe can only result from
predetermined combinations and ends, thereby revealing
the existence of an intelligent power. Attributing creation to
chance is irrational because chance is blind and cannot produce
the effects of intelligence. If chance were intelligent, it
would no longer be chance.
9. Where may we see in the frst cause of all things a supreme intelligence,
superior to all other intelligences?
“There is the proverb that dictates, ‘The worker is known by his or
her work.’ In that case, look at the work and you will fnd the author.
Pride is what creates skeptics. Arrogant human beings want nothing
to be above them, which is why they are called strong-minded. Pitiful
beings, just one breath from God would obliterate them!”
We evaluate the power of intelligence by its works. As no human
being could create that which is produced by nature, the
frst cause must be superior to humans. Regardless of the wonders
accomplished by humankind, human intelligence itself
has a cause and the greater the results achieved, the greater
the cause of which it is the effect. It is this supreme intelligence
that is the frst cause of all things, whatever name humanity may bestow upon it.
Attributes of Divinity.
10. Is humanity capable of comprehending the essential nature of God?
“No, human beings lack the sense required to comprehend it.”
11. Will humans ever be able to understand the mystery of Divinity?
“Humans will see and understand God when their spirits are no
longer obscured by matter, and when they have come closer by striving
for perfection.”
The inferiority of human faculties makes it impossible for human
beings to fully grasp the essential nature of God. In the
early stages of life, humans often confuse the Creator with the
creature, and attribute the imperfections of the latter to God.
As the moral sense of human beings becomes more developed,
they are able to penetrate the nature of things more deeply.
They will be able to form a truer more conforming and rational
idea of God, even though it will always be incomplete.
12. If we cannot comprehend the essential nature of God, can we grasp an
idea of some of God’s perfections?
“Yes, some of them. Human beings understand them better as they
rise above matter. They catch glimpses of them through thought.”
14. We say that God is eternal, infinite, unchangeable, immaterial, unique,
all-powerful, supremely just and good. Is this not a complete impression of
God’s attributes?
“From your point of view, yes, because you think that you sum up
everything in those terms. However, you must understand that there
are things that transcend the intelligence of even the most intelligent
human being, and that your language cannot express. Reason tells you
that God must possess all these qualities in the supreme degree because
if one of them were short or not possessed to an infinite degree,
the Creator would not be superior to everything and everyone, and
thus would not be God. To be above all things, God must have no variations
and must have no conceivable imperfections.”
God is eternal. If God had a beginning, it either would have had to
spring from nothing, or have been created by a being that existed before God.
This is how we gradually arrive at the idea of infinity and eternity.
God is unchangeable. If God were subject to change, the laws governing
the universe would be unstable.
God is immaterial. God’s nature is completely different from everything
that we call matter. Otherwise, God would not be unchangeable. God would
be subject to the transformations of matter.
God is unique. If several Gods existed, there would be neither unity in the
plans of the universe, nor power in its organization.
God is all-powerful because God is unique. Without supreme power, there
would be something more powerful than, or as powerful as God. The Creator
would not have created everything and those which God had not created
would be the work of another God.
God is supremely just and good. The great wisdom of the Divine laws is
clearly revealed in the smallest and the greatest things. This wisdom makes it
impossible to doubt God’s justice or goodness.
Pantheism.
14. Is God a distinct being, or as some believe, or as some believe, the result of
all the forces and intelligences of the universe combined?
“If it were the former, God would not be God because the work of
creation would be an effect and not the cause. God cannot be both the
cause and effect.”
“God exists. You cannot doubt this, and that is a crucial point. Do
not try to go beyond it. Do not get lost in a labyrinth from which you
will never fnd an exit. Trying to go farther will not make you any better;
instead, it would only increase your pride by causing you to believe
that you know something, while in reality you know nothing. Cast aside
all these systems. You have enough to worry about that directly affects
you, beginning with yourselves. Study your own imperfections so that
you may shed them. This will be far more useful to you than any attempt
to penetrate the impenetrable.”
15. What about the concept that all of nature, beings and worlds of the universe
are parts of the Divinity, and they are in their entirety Divinity itself, i.e.
the Pantheistic Doctrine?
“Human beings cannot be God. Upon recognizing this, they want
to, at least, be a part of God.”
16. Those who support this doctrine claim to fnd some of God’s attributes in
it. As there are an infnite number of worlds, then God is infnite. As vacuum
or nothingness is nowhere, God is everywhere. Since God is everywhere and
everything is an integral part of God; God gives an intelligent purpose to all
natural phenomena. How can we oppose this reasoning?
“Reason. Think long and maturely about the assumption in question
and you will have no trouble fnding its irrationality.”
This doctrine makes God a material being who, despite being
endowed with supreme intelligence, would only be a large scale
version of what we are. However, as matter is incessantly transforming,
God would have no stability if this theory were true.
God would be subject to all the instabilities and needs of humanity.
God would lack one of the essential attributes of Divinity,
the quality of being unchangeable. The properties of matter
cannot be attributed to God without lowering divinity in
our thoughts, and all the subtleties of sophism fail to solve the
problem of God’s essential nature. While we do not know all
that God is, we know what God cannot be and the theory stated
above directly contradicts God’s essential attributes. It mistakes
the Creator for the creature, as if one were to consider a clever
machine to be a vital part of the engineer who designed it.
God’s intelligence is revealed in the work of creation, as an artist
in his or her canvas. God’s works are no more part of God
than the canvas is the artist who painted it.