What characteristic does panentheism assign the Causative Force?

Part II of II

...If St. Anselm is correct in arguing that as a species, if we conceive of a necessary being, its existence takes on a reality, then the acceptance of the concept of a Causative Force is perfectly logical.

 

At this point, it is also worth noting that the argument against the Causative Force based upon speculation, that the Causative Force must then have a Causative Force, would have no bearing here.

 

The acknowledgment of a Causative Force for our universe is what is at issue here.

 

The acceptance of such a Force then leads to the discussion of the question regarding where that Force would be.

 

Religions once professing a Causative Force to be omnipresent, cannot then declare that She is not.

 

The paradox of “evil” existing in a “perfect” being has to be dealt with in another fashion.

 

That is one of the benefits of symbiotic panentheism for just as symbiotic panentheism elevates human perceptions to new levels through expanding the size of the Causative Force, it also does away with one of religion’s most perplexing paradoxes which has caused them to reject the omnipresence of the Causative Force even while they proclaim it.