Tracy, Thomas F. God, Action, and Embodiment. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 1984.
Abstract
In this tightly structured and
well-reasoned essay, Thomas F. Tracy outlines a fresh model for
understanding God in his relationships with the world, his creatures,
and history. Specifically, Tracy succeeds in opening up a pathway of
understanding the nature of God that falls midway between classical
Thomistic theism on the one hand and process theology on the other.
From the former he retains the concept of a God who depends on nothing
but himself for his existence, independent of creation. From the latter
he retains the concept of a God profoundly involved in relationships
with his creatures and the created world, a God who has invested
himself in their destiny through love. After demonstrating that human
action is intrinsically tied to bodiliness, Tracy goes on to argue that
it is precisely because God is not embodied that he can transcend human
limitations to achieve perfect freedom, unity, and power as an agent.