Is God Personal?
Reflections by John Cobb
To my knowledge, John Cobb always understood God as personal—not as an impersonal force or abstract principle, but as a subject who acts and is acted upon, who feels the feelings of all living beings, who responds with love, and who calls us into loving relationships with one another and the world. God is a "who" not a "what."
Three of the many sources he had for this belief are: the relational metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead, which understands all actual entities—including God—as centers of experience; the life and teachings of Jesus, who revealed a God of compassion and presence; and Cobb’s own personal experience of divine love as a soldier in World War II.
These sources helped him see how belief in God can be joined with the best of science and the deepest moral and spiritual intuitions of humanity. The entire universe is filled with subjectivity and God is a subject in whose life all subjects unfold. For Cobb, as you see below, God is everywhere at once—not by having a localized body, but by being intimately present to the universe itself, which can be seen as God’s body.
This page offers a sample of these three sources, offering a vision of God as deeply personal, persuasive, and woven into the very fabric of existence—a vision central to Cobb’s theology and legacy. If you would like to learn more about how Whitehead contributed to this understanding, see his essay Whitehead's Doctrine of God in Open Horizons.
In the latter decades of his life, John Cobb began to speak of God as "Abba" - the very name by which Jesus addressed God. He felt that, for some, "Abba" or "Amma" might offer a better way of naming and feeling the tenderness of God, a tenderness by which he was himself touched while kneeling in prayer one night when he was very young. John Cobb realized that, for some but not all, the very word "God" is an obstacle to understanding the love of Abba. He never abandoned the word "God," but for him God was Abba.
- Jay McDaniel
Three of the many sources he had for this belief are: the relational metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead, which understands all actual entities—including God—as centers of experience; the life and teachings of Jesus, who revealed a God of compassion and presence; and Cobb’s own personal experience of divine love as a soldier in World War II.
These sources helped him see how belief in God can be joined with the best of science and the deepest moral and spiritual intuitions of humanity. The entire universe is filled with subjectivity and God is a subject in whose life all subjects unfold. For Cobb, as you see below, God is everywhere at once—not by having a localized body, but by being intimately present to the universe itself, which can be seen as God’s body.
This page offers a sample of these three sources, offering a vision of God as deeply personal, persuasive, and woven into the very fabric of existence—a vision central to Cobb’s theology and legacy. If you would like to learn more about how Whitehead contributed to this understanding, see his essay Whitehead's Doctrine of God in Open Horizons.
In the latter decades of his life, John Cobb began to speak of God as "Abba" - the very name by which Jesus addressed God. He felt that, for some, "Abba" or "Amma" might offer a better way of naming and feeling the tenderness of God, a tenderness by which he was himself touched while kneeling in prayer one night when he was very young. John Cobb realized that, for some but not all, the very word "God" is an obstacle to understanding the love of Abba. He never abandoned the word "God," but for him God was Abba.
- Jay McDaniel