Powell, Samuel M. “The World's Participation in God's Trinitarian Life.” Process Studies 37, no. 1 (Spring-Summer 2008): 143-65.
Abstract
Like
process theism, Christian theology affirms the immanence of God in the
world and of the world in God. Unlike process theism, it also affirms
the ontological priority of God over the world. As a result, Christian
theologians will object to describing God's relation to the world by
analogy with the mind's relation to the body or in terms of whole-part
relations. In Christian history, the God-world relation has been more
often described in terms of "participation." The world is said to
participate in God, keeping in mind that this language is highly
metaphorical. The idea of participation is a development of themes
enunciated by Plato and Aristotle, but adapted by Christian theologians
to trinitarian ends. The created world participates in God by
reflecting the trinitarian life of identity and difference. This
establishes an organic and internal relation between God and the world.