Transcendence and otherness
Doctrinal positions may be modelled around any or all of the themes of the cosmogonic myth. If the emphasis falls upon creation by a high god through his thought, word, or other mode, the problem of the otherness and difference between creator and creature becomes a source of theological discussion and philosophical speculations. In Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the classical locus of this issue is found. All of these religions have theological traditions that raise this problem. Related to this issue is the transcendence and arbitrary action of the creator deity. Because he is prior to the world and its creatures, the question arises whether there are modes of creaturely knowledge or apprehension that are capable of knowing him; of whether he is subjected to the same categories of being as his creatures; of whether his time and space are the same time and space of his creation.
To some extent, the a priori nature of this type of deity creates an apparent dualism between the creator and the world and creatures. This dualism is mediated in various forms in the traditions. In Judaism it is mediated through nature and the covenant Yahweh has with his people; in Christianity through the mediatorship of his son, Jesus Christ; and in Islam through the sacred word of the Qurʾān by the Prophet Muhammad. Even within these traditions, however, the transcendent nature of the deity and his mediatorship through some other being or principle does not settle the doctrinal issue, for different cultural-historical periods of these traditions offer a variety of theological speculation concerning the nature and meaning of the deity, the world, and the mediator. The traditions offer a structure through which such speculation is ordered and clarified.