The Otherness of God: Opinion and Revelation

I. What "God" Means: American Historical, Intellectual, and Popular Sources
Vital Christianity draws from consistent and still-fruitful sources of Christian tradition
(worship, community, scripture, sacramental life, charity, mission, etc.).
These sources, and Christian literacy, have weakened in many American circles.
Cultural Christianity draws from Constantinianism, folk religion, and hardened and even vestigial tradition (cf. Matt 9:14-17).
Therapeutic Moralistic Deism (Christian Smith) draws from contemporary forms of pragmatism.
Indifference draws from competing priorities and stimuli (cf. Matt 13:7, 22).
Diversity (see this 2020 study) draws from immigration, globalization, and American religious ingenuity.
(Where have these and other forces been informing meanings of God in your cultures, circles, churches, and families?)
II. Is "God" a Misunderstanding? The Challenge of Modern Secularism
Secularism (George Holyoake) draws from the Enlightenment, especially 19th and 20th century "Masters of Suspicion":
Freud/Nietzsche: Belief in "God" destroys human freedom (in order to cope, or to pacify others).
Marx et al.: Belief in "God" sanctions exploitation of the weak (marginal, poor, female, etc.).
Feuerbach: Belief in "God" constructs a super-personal, or impersonal, projection.
Durkheim: Belief in "God" reinforces mere private, personal 'taste' or group identity.
Contemporary pop culture synthesis: From secularism to "the death of God" (Nietzsche), apathy (Schopenhauer), "the culture of death" (John Paul II) ... and Critical Theory.
Secularist arguments come from cultural and personal desires and influences, not just logic (Henri de Lubac, The Discovery of God; Karl Giberson, Saving Darwin).
What do they produce?
Do they really remedy the conditions critics attribute to belief in God (immaturity, servitude, exploitation, ignorance, uncritical loyalty)?
Or might these conditions have other sources?
What other 'fruits' or effects do they have (cf. Matt 12:43-45)?
Are they valid (cf. Jer 16:19-21)? For at least some theologies? For ours?
Where does this leave God's teachers and students?
III. First Things First: The Doctrine of Hiddenness
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob:
Deut 4:15-16, 5:8: "Since you saw no form, ... beware.... You shall make no image."
Job 38:4: "Where were you?"
Isaiah 55:8: "My thoughts are not your thoughts."
John 1:18: "No one has ever seen God."
Luther: God is revealed in hiddenness (as transcendent) and hidden in revelation (immanent).
IV. From "God" to God: Lessons from Yahweh
As when Moses meets his maker (Ex 3:13-15, Ex 19:16-20:8, 20:18-26), God's witnesses have learned:
Mystery: God is not naturally accessible to us; thus confession involves epistemic humility.
Revelation: Knowledge of God is a gift of God; thus theology relies on special (and general) revelation.
Tradition: Indirect knowledge of God is mediated; thus God's people practice evangelism/witness and reception.
Holiness: God is other (Barth: "wholly other"); thus theology is via negativa or apophatic.
Activity: God is known through what God does; thus theology is via positiva or kataphatic. (Analogy has been one way to reconcile these.)
Personhood: YHWH is personal; thus knowledge of God is 'I-thou' knowledge.
Goodness: What God does is deliver, justify, reconcile, include, heal, refine, mature; thus proper theology honors, reflects, and pursues wisdom.
Life: God is the living life-giver; thus theology involves foundational gratitude and trust.
Unity: God is one; thus knowledge is coherent.
These lessons are not "faith" versus "reason" as academically/culturally construed, but inferences through disciplined trust.
Subsequent events, including God's own advent in the incarnate Son and ongoing manifestations of the Spirit, are surprising yet consistent 'signs and wonders.'
V. Contextualization: Has "God" Been Ruined?
Can Christians reliably use a term with such diversity of incoherent meanings?
Abram renarrates the Canaanite creator-god 'El' (Gen 14:17-24).
This demonstrates Newbigin's "true contextualization" and widespread intercultural experience (Don Richardson, Peace Child).
The ascended Jesus often manifests his reality in ways that use cultural assumptions about 'God' but transcend and even overturn them (cf. Ex 8:7 versus 8:18-19, Matt 12:6, 28, 38-42, healings among Hindus, dreams among Muslims, etc.).
(By contrast, the prophets reject the Canaanite lord 'Ba'al' [1 Kings 18:21].
Confusing the two is syncretism, and domesticating 'God' within a cultural framework is "false contextualization".)
Jesus brings worship "in Spirit and truth" to both Judea and Samaria (John 4:21-24).
He critically and selectively affirms some incompatible meanings of "God,"
though only as his gospel corrects, transforms, and redeems them.
Following him relearns 'God': not for private benefit, but in order to highlight God's Spirit and truth in compromised and confused contexts (Luke 8:16-18).