Axioms — Beginner-Friendly Overview#
What are axioms — and why do they matter?#
An axiom is a starting assumption — a statement you accept as given so you can see what follows from it. Think of axioms like the rules of a board game: once everyone agrees on the rules, you can play and discover strategies that nobody saw coming. Change the rules and you get a different game.
Mathematical theology uses axioms to state precisely what different traditions claim about God and the world. By writing those claims in formal language, we can check them for contradictions, find where traditions actually agree (more often than you might expect), and discover what logically follows.
This page presents all 25 axioms in plain language. No formulas, no jargon — just the core idea and one memorable quote from across the world’s traditions. If you want the full technical detail, each axiom links to its expert view.
Group I — How the World Relates to God#
These four axioms describe the most basic relationship: the world exists inside God, God exceeds the world, and every part of creation is within God.
a1 — Containment#
The world exists inside God, the way a fish lives inside the ocean. The ocean is bigger than the fish and surrounds it on every side, but the fish is genuinely in the ocean — not separate, not disconnected.
This is the heart of “pan-en-theism” — the idea that everything is in God. Not that everything is God (that would be pantheism), but that everything exists within something greater.
“Wherever you turn, there is the Face of God.” — Quran 2:115
a2 — Transcendence#
God is bigger than the world. You could study every atom, every galaxy, every living thing — and you still would not have captured all of God. God contains the world, but the world does not contain God.
This is what keeps panentheism from collapsing into pantheism. The fish is in the ocean, but the ocean is vastly more than the fish.
“Not this, not this” (neti neti) — Brahman exceeds all description. — Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 2.3.6
a3 — Divine Surplus#
God does not just technically exceed the world — there is real, genuine content in God beyond what we can find in creation. The difference is not an empty gap; it is filled with something.
Think of it this way: if you only looked at the world, you would be missing things about God that genuinely exist but are simply not available to observation.
“If all the trees on earth were pens and the ocean were ink, God’s words would not be exhausted.” — Quran 31:27
a4 — Universal Immanence#
No corner of creation is outside God. Not the smallest atom, not the most distant galaxy, not the loneliest person. Every single part of the world is within God.
This is the “pan” (all) in pan-en-theism: all is in God, without exception.
“Where can I flee from your presence? If I ascend to heaven, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.” — Psalm 139:7–8
Group II — What Must Be True, What Might Be True#
These three axioms distinguish between what is necessary (could not be otherwise) and what is contingent (could have been different).
a5 — God Necessarily Exists#
In every possible way reality could be arranged, God exists. God’s existence is not a lucky accident. It is the one thing that could not have been otherwise.
“I AM WHO I AM.” — Exodus 3:14
a6 — The World Didn’t Have To Exist#
Unlike God, the world is not necessary. There are possible scenarios where no world exists at all. The fact that our world is here is a contingent fact, not an inevitable one.
This is why creation stories matter to every tradition — they mark the moment when something that did not have to exist came into being.
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” — Genesis 1:1
a7 — If a World Exists, It Is in God#
The containment of the world in God (a1) is not an accident either. In every possible scenario where a world exists, that world is inside God. There is no possible version of creation that could exist outside God.
“All things were made through him, and without him nothing was made.” — John 1:3
Group III — God Is Not a Passive Container#
These three axioms say that God does not merely contain the world like a box holds its contents. God is actively present, actively sustaining, and the relationship runs one way.
a8 — God Is Present to Everything#
A box holds its contents without knowing what is inside. God is not like that. God is intimately present to every part of creation — aware of it, in contact with it, caring about it. This rules out any version of “God created the world and walked away.”
“We are closer to him than his jugular vein.” — Quran 50:16
a9 — God Keeps the World Going#
The world does not sustain itself. Like a song that stops when the singer stops singing, the world depends on God’s active sustaining for its continued existence.
“In him all things hold together.” — Colossians 1:17
a10 — The World Does Not Sustain God#
The dependence runs strictly one way. God sustains the world, but the world does not sustain God. God does not need creation — creation needs God.
This distinguishes panentheism from some forms of process theology where God and the world need each other equally.
“All beings exist in Me, but I do not dwell in them.” — Bhagavad Gita 9:4
Group IV — What God Is Like#
a11 is the deepest and most consequential axiom about divine nature.
a11 — God Has Two Aspects#
God has an unchanging core (what philosophers call the “necessary nature”) and a responsive experience (what changes based on what happens in the world).
Think of a great musician. Their musical skill does not change (necessary nature). But their experience of performing this concert with this audience is unique and unrepeatable (responsive experience). God’s joy when someone freely chooses love is different from God’s grief when someone freely chooses cruelty — even though God’s essential character remains constant.
Hindu tradition calls this the distinction between nirguna Brahman (without qualities — the unchanging core) and saguna Brahman (with qualities — the responsive, relational aspect). It is the clearest traditional parallel.
“Jesus wept.” — John 11:35
Group V — Testing What People Claim About God#
These three axioms build a method for checking whether human claims about divine revelation are consistent. They are the most practical axioms in the system.
a12 — God’s Self-Knowledge Is True#
This one is deliberately obvious: what is actually true about God is true. The point is not to state something surprising but to set up a framework. The real work happens in a14.
“Your word is truth.” — John 17:17
a13 — God Doesn’t Contradict God#
Whatever is truly true about God cannot contradict other things that are truly true about God. If two religious claims appear to contradict each other, at least one of them is a human error — not a divine one.
“If the Quran had been from other than God, they would have found within it much contradiction.” — Quran 4:82
a14 — The Consistency Test#
Here is where it gets practical. a14 says: when people claim something is divinely revealed, we can test that claim. Does it contradict other claimed revelations? Does it contradict axioms a1–a13? If so, at least one claim is a human error.
This is not about proving who is right. It is about finding where traditions actually contradict each other vs. where they merely think they do. The result, so far, is that the actual contradictions are far fewer than centuries of conflict would suggest.
“Test everything; hold fast what is good.” — 1 Thessalonians 5:21
Group VI — Why Bad Things Happen When Good Solutions Exist#
These eleven axioms extend the foundation into the territory of human agency, responsibility, and innovation. They build toward a specific answer to the question: “If God cares, why is there so much suffering?”
The answer: because humans have genuine freedom, have been entrusted with real authority, receive guidance without coercion — and sometimes choose not to innovate toward the flourishing of others. The responsibility for that failure rests with the human agents, not with God.
a15 — Humans Have Genuine Freedom#
Within a defined domain of free choices, you can genuinely choose between at least two alternatives. This is not a polite fiction. The act of denying your own freedom is itself an exercise of freedom — which makes the denial self-defeating.
“I have set before you life and death, blessing and curse. Choose life.” — Deuteronomy 30:19
a17 — God Guides But Does Not Force#
God provides hints, opportunities, invitations — the “still small voice” — but does not compel. This is a principled choice, not a power limitation. God could force, but chooses not to (and a22 explains why).
“A still small voice.” — 1 Kings 19:12
a18 — Responsibility Rests with the Agent#
Given genuine freedom (a15), delegated authority (a16), and non-coercive guidance (a17), the responsibility for outcomes rests with the human agent, not with God. This is the formal core of the innovation theodicy.
“The soul who sins is the one who will die.” — Ezekiel 18:20
a19 — One Person Matters Most at Each Moment#
At any given moment, one person’s choices carry more causal weight for the future of the world than anyone else’s. That person may not know they hold that position (Judas did not). The position is not permanent (it can shift from one person to another).
“For such a time as this.” — Esther 4:14
a20 — God Looks for Volunteers#
At each critical moment, God is looking for someone willing to step into a specific responsibility. The emphasis is on willing — consistent with God’s non-coercive nature. The burning bush is the archetype: the bush burns, Moses turns aside, and only then comes the call.
“Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?” — Isaiah 6:8
a21 — God Seeks a Permanent Translator#
Beyond moment-specific calls, God seeks one person willing to permanently translate between what God knows is optimal and what humanity currently understands. The quality of the translation depends on it being freely chosen — a forced translator cannot genuinely translate.
“The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve.” — Mark 10:45
a22 — God Values Genuine Love Over Forced Obedience#
Freely chosen love produces a qualitatively different divine experience than forced compliance. This is why God does not compel: not because God cannot, but because compelled love is not love. God knows the difference.
“God is love.” — 1 John 4:8
a23 — Freedom Makes Quality Possible#
Some things — genuine care, creative insight, lasting innovation — simply cannot be produced at full quality under compulsion. A compelled poet cannot write genuine poetry. This is the empirical backbone of a22: there is a real-world reason why God values freedom.
“God loves a cheerful giver.” — 2 Corinthians 9:7
a24 — The Three Cords of Lasting Innovation#
For innovation to last, it must be simultaneously stable (not fragile), extensible (can adapt to new challenges), and life-friendly (serves human flourishing). Violate any one of these three cords and the system is on a trajectory toward collapse.
There is no stable middle ground: either all three cords hold, or the system is slowly destroying itself.
“A threefold cord is not quickly broken.” — Ecclesiastes 4:12
a25 — Periodic Reset Prevents Collapse#
Even well-designed economies accumulate concentration over time. Without periodic recalibration — what the Torah calls the Jubilee (Lev 25) — resources and opportunity concentrate in fewer and fewer hands until the life-friendly cord snaps.
The Jubilee System preserves incentives between rounds (what capitalism gets right) while resetting accumulated advantages at each round (what communism aspires to). Neither ideology alone keeps all three cords intact.
“Proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants.” — Leviticus 25:10
See these axioms through a specific tradition#
The overview above draws quotes from across the world’s traditions. If you would prefer to see each axiom grounded in one tradition’s own sources, choose a lens:
Through the Lens of the Hebrew Bible — Torah and Hebrew Bible citations
Through the Lens of the Gospels — Gospels and Apostolic citations
Through the Lens of the Quran — Quran, Torah, and Gospel citations
A Secular Reading — each axiom restated without theology
What comes next?#
If these ideas spark your curiosity, here are paths forward:
Go deeper: The expert view has the full formal statements, scriptural citations from all traditions, and technical analysis.
See what follows: The theorems show what logically follows from these axioms — including the innovation theodicy and the case for a Jubilee-based innovation economy.
Challenge it: The adversarial quest contains three rounds of rigorous critique and response. Nothing here is beyond question.