Abstract
Abstract The argument of this chapter is that creation is a Trinitarian event, and as such divine eloquence. Attention to paid to the liturgical canticle of Benedicite. In creation the intra-Trinitarian rhythm of gifted loving is expressed in its creaturely manner, all things communicating a doxology both to the divine Creator and to each other. This circle of endless prayer constitutes the order of love. There is a comparison between this account of creation and the one offered by process theology, bringing out the Christomorphic character of the dynamics operating in this account. Love is the basis for the interchange of acknowledgements in which and through which divine expression is taken up within human expression. Human communication, it is argued, emerges from the communicative relations between language and land: mimesis being written into all things. Hidden with Christ in God, human creativity is a continual longing to belong.
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