In recent continental philosophy of religion there has been significant attention paid to the Abrahamic doctrines of creation
ex nihilo and divine omnipotence, especially by deconstructive thinkers such as Derrida, Caputo, and Keller. For these thinkers,
the doctrine represents a form of agency that does violence to various forms of alterity. While broadly supportive of their
fundamental philosophical and ethico-political views, especially about the primordiality of alterity, I differ from them in
that I argue that creation ex nihilo articulates the very structure of the alterity they are concerned with. The essay proceeds
through a reading of Derrida’s representation of the doctrine and a “deconstruction” of his view by means of a reading of
Augustine and Anselm.
Keywords Derrida, Jacques - Creation ex nihilo - Deconstruction - Augustine - Anselm - Caputo, John - Keller, Catherine