Neville, Robert C. Creativity and God: A Challenge to Process Theology. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995 (New Edition)
Abstract
Creativity and God
is a sympathetic criticism of process theology. Neville shows that
process thought is deeply mistaken to distinguish as it does so sharply
between creativity and God and thus falls into both metaphysical and
religious difficulties. Metaphysically, it cannot give an adequate
account of temporality in God and Lewis Ford's attempt to do so is
analyzed here; nor can it give an account of eternity in God, and
Charles Hartshorne's efforts are analyzed. Schubert Ogden has argued
that a process neo-classical conception of God is both philosophically
superior to alternatives and adequate for representing the religious
dimensions of human experience and Neville argues in detail that this
is not so. Charles Winquist has argued that process theology can be
made compatible with transcendental theology and its contemporary
heirs, and Neville argues that this diminishes the contributions of
both sides. John Cobb, Jr. has pioneered the use of process theology
for establishing dialogues with East Asian religions, but Neville warns
against the biases in its categories. Where process theology seeks to
preserve both divine benevolence and human freedom by separating God's
creativity from that in human individuals, Neville argues that this
makes God unworthy of worship and the human heart empty of the divine.
Whereas process theologians look on Neville's theology of divine
creation ex nihilo of everything determinate as a peculiar kind of
mystical atheism, Neville argues that process theology makes God just
another cosmological object, not God at all. Creativity and God joins
these issues.