Table of Contents
- The history of Christianity
Read Next
The leaders of an 18th-century movement called Deism saw God as impersonal and unempathic—a principle of order and agent of responsibility not personal or addressable as the Christian God had been. Deism contributed to some intellectualizations of the idea of God, approaches that had sometimes appeared in the more sterile forms of medieval Scholasticism. God appeared to have been withdrawn from creation, which was pictured as a world machine; this God, at best, observed its running but never interfered. According to the original Christian understanding of God of the early church, the Middle Ages, and the Reformation, God neither is ...(100 of 123588 words)