Mystics tell us that there are things about God which we cannot understand. This drives the followers of Reason bananas. But, what if Romans 11:33, "Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out!" means we just wouldn't have enough time in our lives to do so? And maybe not in a thousand life times? What if 70 years in this time limited, spatially limited dimension simply isn't appropriate a period to cover such an awesome subject? Do we look at something as mundane as Biology and blithely declare that Reason will allow any human to completely understand it in a single lifetime? That we will get to the End of the Knowledge of Biology in our life time? I don't think so.
The only way we have anymore than a cursory knowledge, as it is, is due to thousands of life times accumulating the knowledge of the ages, and compressing it down (not without compression errors, I'm sure) to transfer it to the next generation. And, if the Knowledge of Biology could seem such a barely approachable subject, imagine trying to understand the force of God that created Biology, and then expand it across every other subject of human learning. And then expand it into multiple dimensions. It may be, under our strict definition of Reason, that God is not "unknowable," but that the time required to "know" God approaches infinity as we learn more and more, with each layer of learning expanding geometrically the knowledge we must attain to gain complete understanding.
So, what is the result? Can we only understand God through special revelation, that which He chooses to give to us? In the short term, yes. In practicality, in the long term, yes. And yet Reason is not diminished, only rationally set in its place.
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My kids know a little kids song with the line "No matter what we know, there's more that we'll never know. Next to what God knows, we know next to nothing at all." Your thoughts reminded me of this song.
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