•  106
    Presentism, Atemporality, and Time’s Way
    Faith and Philosophy 35 (2): 173-194. 2018.
    After defining presentism, I consider four arguments that presentism and divine atemporality are incompatible. I identify an assumption common to the four, ask what reason there is to consider it true, and argue against it.
  •  105
    Time Travel and the Trinity
    Faith and Philosophy 29 (3): 313-324. 2012.
    I have used a time travel story to model the “Latin” version of the Trinity. William Hasker’s “A Leftovian Trinity?” criticizes my arguments. This piece replies.
  •  98
    Omnipotence
    In Thomas P. Flint & Michael Rea (eds.), The Oxford handbook of philosophical theology, Oxford University Press. 2008.
    The doctrine that God is omnipotent takes its rise from Scriptural texts which concern two linked topics. One is how much power God has to put behind actions: enough that nothing is too hard, enough to do whatever he pleases. The other is how much God can do: ‘all things’. The link is obvious: we measure strength by what tasks it is adequate to perform, and God is so strong he can do all things. The Christian philosophical theologian who seeks to explicate omnipotence seeks a convincing account …Read more
  •  97
    Time and Eternity
    Cornell University Press. 1991.
    [I] Introduction The Western religions all claim that God is eternal. This claim finds strong expression in the Old Testament, which is common property of ...
  •  93
    Aquinas on God and Modal Truth
    Modern Schoolman 82 (3): 171-200. 2005.
  •  77
    Aquinas on the Infinite
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 2 27-38. 1999.
    Both Copleston and Duhem—I believe—claim that for Thomas Aquinas, there cannot be an infinity of anything. In this essay I argue that Thomas allows that there can be an infinity of some sorts of item and, more, that there actually are infinities of some items.
  •  74
    Anselm on the Necessity of the Incarnation
    Religious Studies 31 (2). 1995.
    Anselm's "Cur Deus" Homo argues that only by the Incarnation can God save humanity. This seems to sit ill with the claim that God is omnipotent and absolutely free, for this entails that God could save humanity in other ways. I show that features of Anselm's concept of God and treatment of necessity make the claim that the Incarnation is a necessary means of salvation problematic. I then show that for Anselm, all conditions which make the Incarnation necessary for human salvation stem from God's…Read more
  •  72
    Eternity and Simultaneity
    Faith and Philosophy 8 (2): 148-179. 1991.
  •  70
    Anselm on the Beauty of the Incarnation
    Modern Schoolman 72 (2-3). 1995.
    Among the objections to the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation which Anselm takes up in ’Cur Deus Nomo’ is an argument that a wise God would not act so, because it is inefficient. I explicate Anselm’s reply to this. It is (I argue) that the Incarnation is an elegant way to achieve a large set of goods including human salvation, and that God might well be wise to treat a sort of beauty the Incarnation involves as a value more important than efficiency
  •  68
    On Hasker on Leftow on Hasker on Leftow
    Faith and Philosophy 29 (3): 334-339. 2012.
    William Hasker has rejected my rejection of his criticisms of my “Latin” account of the Trinity. I now reject his rejection.
  •  65
    Power, Possibilia and Non-Contradiction
    Modern Schoolman 82 (4): 231-243. 2005.
  •  64
    Composition and Christology
    Faith and Philosophy 28 (3): 310-322. 2011.
    One central claim of orthodox Christianity is that in Jesus of Nazareth, God became man. On Chalcedonian orthodoxy, this involves one person, God the Son, having two natures, divine and human. If He does, one person has two properties, deity and humanity. But the Incarnation also involves concrete objects, God the Son (GS), Jesus’s human body (B) and—I will assume—Jesus’s human soul (S). If God becomes human, GS, B and S somehow become one thing. It would be good to have a metaphysical account o…Read more
  •  62
    The Roots of Eternity
    Religious Studies 24 (2). 1988.
    The claim that God is eternal is a standard feature of late–classical and mediaeval philosophical theology. It is prominent in discussions of the relation of God's foreknowledge to human freedom, and its consequences pervade traditional accounts of other kinds of divine knowledge, of God's will, and of God's relation to the world. So an examination of the concept of eternity promises to repay our efforts with a better understanding of the history of philosophical theology and with insight into t…Read more
  •  59
    Tempting God
    Faith and Philosophy 31 (1): 3-23. 2014.
    Western theism holds that God cannot do evil. Christians also hold that Christ is God the Son and that Christ was tempted to do evil. These claims appear to be jointly inconsistent. I argue that they are not
  •  55
    Time, Actuality and Omniscience
    Religious Studies 26 (3). 1990.
    Many traditional theists have said that God is propositionally omniscient, i.e. knows all truths. Many traditional theists also hold that God is timeless. That is, these theists hold that though God exists, there is no time at which He exists, and He does not exist earlier or later than anything. Some recent philosophers, among them Arthor Prior, Robert Coburn, Norman Kretz mann, Nicholas Wolterstorfl Richard Gale and Patrick Grim, have argued that There are truths to whose expression ‘now’ is e…Read more
  •  55
    Two Trinities: Reply to Hasker
    Religious Studies 46 (4). 2010.
    William Hasker replies to my arguments against social Trinitarianism, offers some criticism of my own view, and begins a sketch of another account of the Trinity. I reply with some defence of my own theory and some questions about his
  •  55
    Rowe, Aquinas and God's freedom
    Philosophical Books 48 (3): 195-206. 2007.
  •  55
    The Cambridge Companion to Anselm (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2004.
    Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109), Benedictine monk and the second Norman archbishop of Canterbury, is regarded as one of the most important philosophers and theologians of the Middle Ages. The essays in this volume explore all of his major ideas both philosophical and theological, including his teachings on faith and reason, God's existence and nature, logic, freedom, truth, ethics, and key Christian doctrines. There is also discussion of his life, the sources of his thought, and his influence o…Read more
  •  54
    Presentism, Atemporality, and Time’s Way
    Faith and Philosophy 35 (2): 173-194. 2018.
    After defining presentism, I consider four arguments that presentism and divine atemporality are incompatible. I identify an assumption common to the four, ask what reason there is to consider it true, and argue against it.
  •  53
    Two trinities: Reply to Hasker: Brian Leftow
    Religious Studies 46 (4): 441-447. 2010.
    William Hasker replies to my arguments against Social Trinitarianism, offers some criticism of my own view, and begins a sketch of another account of the Trinity. I reply with some defence of my own theory and some questions about his
  •  52
  •  50
    Time and Eternity
    Cornell University Press. 2018.
    Brian Leftow makes an important contribution to the longstanding debate among philosophers and theologians about the nature of God's eternity. The author develops a powerful and original defense of the notion that God is eternal in that he exists timelessly; that is, that though God exists, he does not exist at any time. Leftow defends the claim that a timeless God can be an object of human experience, and he attempts to delineate the extent of such a God's omniscience. Finally, the author pays …Read more
  •  46
    Is Perfect Being Theology Informative?
    Philosophical Quarterly 73 (1): 164-183. 2022.
    Jeff Speaks has recently argued that perfect being theology treating God as the greatest possible being—he calls it alethic perfect being theology—cannot deliver new information about God. This argument is central to his critique of all forms of perfect being theology. For as Speaks sees it, other forms of perfect being theology may collapse into alethic perfect being theology, i.e. fail in the end to be a different sort of project. I lay out how he understands alethic perfect being theology and…Read more
  •  45
    Luis de Molina: On Divine Foreknowledge
    International Philosophical Quarterly 31 (3): 374-376. 1991.
  •  41
    Souls dipped in dust
    In Kevin Corcoran (ed.), Soul, body, and survival: essays on the metaphysics of human persons, Cornell University Press. pp. 120--138. 2001.
  •  39
    Divine Action and Embodiment
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 71 113-124. 1997.
  •  39
    God, Time and Knowledge
    Philosophical Review 101 (2): 444. 1992.