| 
 NOTES FROM MY NOTEBOOK
  
   The following
   are notes from my notebook
   as I engage in readings for the class.    The course shows
   how:    1.  Scientific exploration of the universe and the contemporary
   issues raised are influencing theological reflection on the Christian doctrine of
      creation.     2.  Paradigm shifts in science and theology are influencing
   contemporary Christian understanding of the
   creative process.    3.  There are relationships between:  
    a. Creation and
       salvation in Christ.   b. Protology (beginning
       of creation) and eschatology (ultimate fulfilment and completion of creation).   I am looking forward to
   understanding in a new way the divine
   mystery within created reality. Also the Study Guide states “we shall garner for ourselves Christian wisdom from the past
   for the purposes of enriching our present experience – a sacramental experience in the broadest sense – and look
   to the future in hope, to that fulfilment of all human expectation when all shall be made “new” in
   Christ.”    Source:
   Marie T. Farrell, TH539 Creation and
   Fulfilment: Study Guide (Pennant Hills, Australia: The Broken Bay Institute, 2008),
   10-12.      Creation
   Theology    1.  We can think about the creation in terms of relationship – “God creates, not out of
   need, but of mutual love existing among Father, Son and Holy Spirit within the God-head.” One should “allow time
   for pondering the mystery of creation, its essential goodness and its power to reveal the triune God of
   Christian faith.”    2.  There is a relationship between ongoing creation and the biblical theme
   of salvation.    3.  Creation theology
   has developed from “a ‘static’ conceptual framework to one that is extremely ‘dynamic’ and where God’s
   communication and self-disclosure occurs from within creation itself (panentheism) while the distinction between
   creator and creature is always maintained.”    4.  Finally, creation theology can be thought of as theology of blessing and where humans are
   involved in continuing that blessing today. As a result, the relationship between ecology and justice is
   important.    Source: Marie T. Farrell,
   TH539 Creation and Fulfilment: Study
   Guide (Pennant Hills,
   Australia: The Broken Bay Institute, 2008),
   20-21.   Photo credit: Intellimon Ltd.       Is it Impossible to Know
   God?
 “The fact that over the
   course of the centuries so many people with no knowledge of revelation have recognized (and still recognize)
   that God exists and have some idea of him, authorizes me to conclude that one can know God by reason alone,
   though this knowledge is usually inadequate and imprecise.” John Paul II    Source: Christian Montenat and
   others, How to Read the World:
   Creation in Evolution (London: SCM Press,
   1985).  |