Instead of saying "God is good," an apophatic thinker might say "God is not not-good" or "God is beyond goodness," stripping away human-centric categories to avoid "objectifying" the truth.
Language is viewed as a tool that can define truth by distinguishing it from distortion, but it cannot fully encapsulate the lived experience of that truth. 2. Historical and Theological Contexts apophatism
While apophatic elements exist in many traditions, they are most formally developed in: Instead of saying "God is good," an apophatic
It emphasizes God’s absolute "otherness" and unknowability, suggesting the divine essence is totally beyond being and human logic. Instead of saying "God is good