Znany – nieznany Bóg. Uwagi na temat rozwoju doktryny niepoznawalności Boga u chrześcijańskich autorów od II do VI w.
Abstract
KNOWN - UNKNOWN GOD. REMARKS ON DEVELOPMENT OF THE
DOCTRINE OF UNKNOWABILITY OF GOD IN CHRISTIAN AUTHORS
FROM SECOND TO SIXTH CENTURY
The Fathers of the Church from the beginning of the Christian thought
were under a strong influence of the Greek philosophy which was in
this time understood mainly as the path to unity with the Supreme
Being. Christian Apologists tried to convince in their apologies that
Christianity is the true philosophy because it allows to reach its goal in
the best and the most certain way. Apologists commonly claimed that
thanks to the biblical revelation Christians have the knowledge of God
which is the most perfect and accurate. We can observe such claims also
in the writings of Alexandrian Fathers for whom God is somehow
known even at the highest mystical experiences. The Christian doctrine
of the knowledge of God changed radically in the fourth century AD in
the writings of Cappadocian Fathers who defended the orthodox faith
against the Arians. The most famous of them - Eunomius claimed that
the essence of God is to be unbegotten. Basil the Great and Gregory of
Nyssa answered him that we cannot know the essence of God and none
of his attributes can be understood as his essence. The Cappadocian
Fathers were the founders of the Christian doctrine of unknowability of
God, and they formulated it in the precise philosophical language. They
also made a great contribution to the further development of this
doctrine. Dialectic arguments showed only one aspect of unknowability
of God; another one was the darkness in the ultimate mystical
experience. Gregory of Nyssa explained it well in his Life of Moses, but
this teaching reached its ultimate figure in writings of Pseudo-Dionysius
Areopagite - unknown author from the end of the fifth century AD.
Pseudo-Dionysius claimed that the best knowledge which we can have
of God is ignorance. The man can reach this knowledge only at the
highest stage of mystical life at the apophatic way. The conclusion of
this brief analysis of unknowability of God in the Patristic tradition is
the statement that there were two main stimulants of its evolution:
theoretical and mystical. For both of them the key role played the Greek philosophy which was an inspiration in creative explanation of the Holy
Scripture made by the Fathers of the Church.