Divine passibility refers to the hypothesis that God
feels the suffering and joy
of the world. Passibility implies that God not only knows all propositions
that are true of the world (if such a list is logically possible) but that
God
subjectively experiences, either partially or entirely, what is experienced
within the world. The question of God's passibility is related to
a surprising
number of areas important to contemporary theology. For example, omniscience
is thought to be impossible unless passibility is assumed, for to know
something fully implies a certain level of experiential knowledge. But
it seems
that any being open to experience would also have to be passible, or so
it is
argued. Additionally, the precise character of God's passibility or
impassibility has ramifications for issues in Christology and theodicy.
Not
surprisingly, therefore, the question of whether or not God is immanently
involved with the processes of a changing world has become a matter of
great
debate in this century. Recently Charles Hartshorne (1984 relying on 1941,
1948), Marcel Sarot (1992, 1995), Paul Fiddes (1988), Charles Taliaferro
(1989) and George Shields (1992) have argued that God does in fact feel,
either emotionally or physically, the vicissitudes, happiness and anguish
of
the world. Others, such as Richard Creel (1986) and Paul Helm (1988, 1990)
argue that God cannot possibly be implicated in or, even worse, identified
with a created, contingent and imperfect world. Although the question of
whether or not God is passible relates to important aspects of God's
nature
such as omniscience, omnipresence and immutability, this paper will focus
on the question of whether divine passibility is metaphysically possible.