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Nothingness & The Divine: Rethinking 'Ex Nihilo'

Nothingness & The Divine: Rethinking 'Ex Nihilo'

Update: 2025-08-30
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Host Jerry Eicher (Anabaptist Theological Perspectives) leads a solo deep dive into the doctrine of creation ex nihilo — creation out of nothing — and its implications for Christian theology. The episode examines the long-standing Greek philosophical model (Plato) that treats “nothing” as non‑being, and contrasts that with thinkers who challenged this foundation, notably Martin Heidinger and the work of Carl Jung, as well as the cultural influence of Jordan Peterson.


Topics covered include the tension between traditional Christian affirmations (God as the source of all being) and the philosophical claim that nothing cannot produce anything; whether “nothing” could be the origin or source of certain forms of evil; how Augustine, C.S. Lewis, and modern movements like open theism interact with these assumptions; and practical theological consequences for doctrines of evil, freedom, and divine sovereignty.


Key points: Christians often affirm creation out of nothing while implicitly using Greek metaphysics that deny nothing’s reality; Heidinger’s critique opens space to consider nothing as an active factor in antagonism, merciless prohibition, and other painful realities; open theism’s rejection of classical constraints may leave theological gaps; and Eicher calls for renewed study and caution in reshaping theological foundations.

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Nothingness & The Divine: Rethinking 'Ex Nihilo'

Nothingness & The Divine: Rethinking 'Ex Nihilo'

Jerry Eicher