Abstract
While proponents of traditional theism obviously reject the “pantheistic” metaphysic that there is nothingwhich is ultimately distinct from God—i.e., that the Divine Substance exhausts the whole of Reality—it seems tome that the following question is yet properly to be addressed: given that the doctrine of God’s infinity or absolute unlimitedness is no less axiomatic or nonnegotiably foundational to traditional theism than it is to the pantheistic interpretation of reality, how can traditional theists justifiably deny that the Divine Substance exhausts the whole of Reality? What acceptable basis do traditional theists have—given their presupposition that God is absolutely unlimited—for denying the long-standing contention of Spinoza and Spinozists that the Divine Being of canonical Judeo-Christian belief could not ultimately fail to be all-inclusive?