Christology Notes, Fr. John Galvin, Catholic University of America
Transcribed
by Timothy P. Dore, OFM Conv., Spring, 1991
Five
Models of Avery Dulles
Are
there any initial reactions to the Avery Dulles article? His style in many instances is to set up
"models." Usually there are
five. Always there are five in
number. That is not an accident. Tracy also uses models. With Dulles the typical style is to lay out
advantages and disadvantages to the different models. He usually has something good to say and some
reservations with regard to each model and tends to guard against the impression
that one perspective is sufficient to exhausting the material--even if there is
one he tends to prefer. This article[1]
on Christology [is suitable in] that is considered introductory material for
this course.
Obviously
one of the purposes I have in using this article as an introductory essay is to
give an overview of what you will see later on and secondly to raise a few
questions--in the sense of pointing out advantages to different perspectives
but also possible liabilities to those perspectives and to offer a certain set
of questions which you might bring to different authors or different themes as
the semester comes about. It would be a
mistake to paint Dulles' approach and Dulles' critique as the canon (where
anything that falls short of that is sufficient and anything that goes beyond
it is exaggeration). Dulles' essay
provides an initial set of questions which will serve a purpose.
Let
me ask a couple of questions about Dulles' article. First of all, what are the five
approaches? They are: (1) Dogmatic (2) Historical (3) Kerygmatic (4) Liturgical/ Sacramental (5) Secular/Dialogical.
When
people split things up in whatever fashion they have different purposes in
doing that. One purpose can be to say
that we are going to look at a particular field or particular reality from an
historical perspective and distinguish different stages that were prominent or
dominant in different ages. Another way
of looking at it is to extract from question of time and to say that there are
various perspectives that might be taken on a subject.
We
spoke the other day about Christologies from above and Christologies from
below. In principle you could say that
those options are available to people who think about Christ in any
period. You might also want to say that
in one or another period one of those approaches predominated.
What
is Dulles doing here? If you have an
historical approach in five stages one of the hallmarks of that is that you
have little choice about the sequence.
If you have five stages abstracting from an issue of time [???] the
sequence does not make too much difference.
Can you change the sequence of Dulles' models? For example can you go from the Liturgical/Sacramental
to the Dogmatic? (Or place the
Kerygmatic stage first?) The question
that comes up for example--if you say the church is sacramental does he have in
mind the ancient church with the principle lex orandi, lex credendi and
a movement from liturgy to dogma, or does he have in mind a modern theological
movement which has that Christ is the sacrament of the encounter with God and
that sacrament in that sense categories of worship are in the forefront. That would be one illustration. Similarly the in the Kerygmatic does he have
in mind a twentieth century movement which says lets go back to the early
church's proclamation of the risen Lord or does he have in mind Paul. Now if you are thinking in terms of a
historical stage of course it makes a difference. If you are not thinking in terms of it is
less severe [???].
I
think that Dulles is about both.
Although he has a couple of items on his agenda, one way of looking at
it is who exemplifies the dogmatic approach?
Let us say that it is the Neo-Scholastics. Dulles makes the observation with regard to
that approach that it is a useful and indispensable guideline (you should not
forget what they are talking about) but at the same time you must interpret
them carefully, you must have recourse to the Bible and so on. There are possible qualifications. Do those at the early Councils represent the
Dogmatic? The dogmas themselves do not
lead completely onto one approach and Dulles does not claim that they do, but
the approaches that come into question for them are the secular (in the sense
of dialogue with the world--including the heretical world at that time). Then you can certainly make a case with the
Liturgical/Sacramental as a point of orientation and I think you can make a
case for the Kerygmatic with recourse to the Biblical proclamation. You could not push the Historical too much
into that kind of critical historical scholarship that would be associated with
that and at least at Chalcedon there had already been a doctrine to appeal
to. As far as later Councils are
concerned they would appeal back to Nicea but they also say that Nicea does not
exactly address their particular issue and so they must develop things further
in that way. So that is the first
thing--in the dogmatic approach, if you put things chronologically is late 19th
and early 20th century Catholicism. If
you go back into an earlier period you can find a certain amount of that in
Protestantism as well. You can still
find representatives of this thought in the present time. One of the reasons I think that the Dogmatic
approach goes first here is that (first of all) Dulles is not talking about the
whole history of Christology (the historical issue is a modern issue). The historical approach is characteristic in
Protestant circles in the 19th century and this is one reason why Dulles must
offer a couple of qualifications (he distinguishes two stages to this
approach--not just chronological distinctions but content distinctions as
well.) There is enough similarity
between the two stages to justify including them under one heading, but there
is enough difference that that must be taken into account as well.
Historically
in Protestant circles we see the movement from Neo-scholasticism (and a type of
Protestant orthodoxy that focuses in that direction) to a historical approach
(i.e. the search for the historical Jesus in the 19th century). In Catholic circles at this point you still
have prevailing dogmatic approach. Then,
still in Protestant circles (between the 20s and 50s) there was a reaction away
from the historical approach (in the sense of the original search for the
historical Jesus). This was the period
of Barth and Bultmann. At this time
there was an Scriptural orientation, especially on Paul. Biblical categories of Lord and Risen Christ
became focal points of attention (we will come back to this). This was a reaction against the
Historical.
This
reaction was the third stage (Kerygmatic).
It is not the same as the first stage (Dogmatic) but comparatively
speaking it is much closer to the first stage than the second stage because the
trajectory from these [???] affirmations and the affirmations from the early
Councils is a comparatively small one.
So up to this point, at least from this perspective, there is something
of a fixed order here because stage two is a reaction to stage one and stage
three is a reaction to stage two. To
explain your position here you must say something about your understanding of
the focus of the development.
In
Catholic circles, it is basically important to [???] at an earlier stage. I'll say 1920 to 1950 but these dates are
very rough--in some ways it is more to the end of that period but it goes hand
in hand with the liturgical and sacramental revival that began after the first
world war. You can see what is at issue
here. That when you look for an alternative
approach the Protestant instinct is to go to the Bible (it may be very critical
going to the Bible for the historical Jesus--it may be more receptive going to
the Bible with Paul and with the early Church's proclamation with Christ but
the instinct is still to go to the Bible).
The Catholic instinct is to go to the liturgy. This is not exclusive in any case but you are
not going to find Protestant theologians looking for sacramental categories to
speak about Christologies. You might
find and you do find Protestant theologians who will pick it up from Catholics
(saying this is a reasonable way to express things) but it is not something
that will thrive in Protestant circles itself initially. If you ask a Protestant who Jesus is you will
not find the word sacrament in their response--you are more likely to find a
Biblical profession. In other words,
stages three and four are roughly parallel in time and in some respects very
similar in content--despite the differences in initial orientation. I think what could stand here as one figure
for this would be Edward Schillebeeckx book published in the early 1960's Christ,
the Sacrament of the Encounter with God.
You may have heard of the book in the context of sacramental
theology. Most of the book is concerned
with sacramental theology but before getting into his theology of the
individual sacraments, Schillebeeckx makes the point that the original or more
basic sense of the word sacrament is one in which Christ is the sacrament of
God and the Church is the sacrament of God which then leads to discussion of
the other individual sacraments in that Christological and Ecclesiological
context. Schillebeekcx work in
particular was not the only one to use the language at that time [which]
contributed greatly to the popularization to that use of the word sacrament in
Catholicism.
It
is at this point that you get a revival in interest in the historical
Jesus. [This occurred in] the mid 1950s
in Protestantism and about a decade later in Catholicism. The motivation is [Biblically extent???] that
both the charismatic and liturgical/sacramental as the case may be requires
some historical underpinning. It is fine
to be charismatic, but the Church did not start with Paul--so you must be able
to look back a little further (and similarly with the other perspectives). Now this is an exaggeration to call this
movement a rejection in the sense that some of the others will be called a
rejection but an original quest spoke about a dogmatic picture of Christ. They did not say that they were going to
provide [???]. One of the great
differences with the later revival of the quest is that it is not intended a as
a demolition at least in its major representatives but in its historical investigation
which we in part flesh out and provide support for, otherwise [???].
Now
that brings us to the Secular/Dialogical stage which is both Protestant and
Catholic. Dulles' article was written in
1976 and is fifteen years old now--we are now in a new period in which the
critical theology is a liberation theology which is at the focus of
attention. Something of a suggestion
that other approaches to Christology is too self-contained--not wrong in what
they say but lacking in dimension of relationship to the world. And so the Secular/Dialogical approach may
well be combined with one or the other of the earlier approaches. It will give a more sociological focus in the
broad sense than is the case with the others.
It is not coincidental that the Secular/Dialogical stage is the last
considered by Dulles because that is the one that he sees as most
representative of recent theological work.
This is not to say that this is the best of the categories.
I
would like to make just one comment on Dulles' categories here. Have you ever tried to divide things up into
groups? The tendency in a lot of people
[is to mix into the last group whatever is left over.] Dulles brings into his last category
evolutionary conceptions, personalist conceptions and political
conceptions. The catch on this is that
representatives of political conceptions (theologies of liberation etc.)
usually spend a great deal of time denouncing evolutionary and personalist
perspectives. The evolutionary
perspective is far more less justified than whatever happens to be the most
recent [???] the political perspectives want to criticize that. The personalist perspective is seen as
individualistic (I/thou) rather than anything to do with the public/social
dimension. So you do have within Dulles'
fifth group a rather mixed bag of people that you can justly include under the
broad heading of Secular/Dialogical as long as you recognize that that heading
is a broader one than the four other stages.
Let
me raise just one more question. Any
Christology is going to say something about Jesus. But typically some things get emphasized more
than others. In a very loose sense,
Incarnation, Public Life, Death and Resurrection are the four possible focal
points for Christology. It is difficult
to place all of these on the same level.
The Dogmatic approach is basically focused on the incarnation. The Historical approach is basically focused
on the public life. The modern revival
of the historical approach may also include a reference to the death. The Kerygmatic approach is basically focused
on the resurrection (and to a certain extent the death). The Liturgical/Sacramental approach may
basically be focused on the resurrection but certainly not the public life. This is why there may be an affinity between
the Kerygmatic and Liturgical/Sacramental approach to Christology. In the Secular/Dialogical approach it depends
on "what the problem is" when focusing on a particular issue within
Christology. This may be an example of
why the Secular/Dialogical approach is less unified itself than the others
because you can think of an evolutionary approach which is very oriented on the
incarnation, you can think of political approaches that might focus on Jesus'
life or may focus on his death, and personalistic approaches could well be
resurrection oriented (in the sense of individual encounter with Christ alive
today--resurrection here including ascension and so on). So under the Secular/Dialogical heading we
find something of a mixture of approaches--but not necessarily a mixture of
individual authors under that heading. I
would suggest that in addition to keeping in mind these categories throughout
the semester and using them as an initial way of perhaps different people that
we will encounter that also keep in mind the other four categories as reference
points as far as Jesus is concerned and ask which one of these predominates and
then secondly, what does the author do with the others. Are they somehow integrated into the
picture--even if subordinated to one or another reference point. An example:
Someone may develop a Christology that focuses on the resurrection and
say that it is the main point and everything else must be seen from that
perspective.
I
would think that in general the better christological approaches will be ones
that have the greater richness of this perspective.
The
Historical Jesus And The Christ Of Faith
Adequate
Christologies must deal with both the historical Jesus and the Christ of
faith. Very few people will reject
that. Some will--some of the extreme
practitioners from the historical school would brush aside the Christ of faith;
some people from the charismatic school would brush aside the historical
Jesus. Dulles' principles serve
effectively as a way of posing and indicating recent opposition to those
positions. The difficulty remains in
describing what is the relationship between the historical Jesus and the Christ
of faith. That is the question that must
be investigated. You have the term
Christ of faith and the term Jesus of history but not in the sense that you
have two different people and so the question is what is the basis for a
distinction (and how is it justifies and to what extent not justified).
If
you say initially that you want to deal with all four reference points when
investigating Jesus (incarnation, public life, death and resurrection) that is
a good orthodox position. But is still
remains to investigate the relationship between them.
A
Framework For Understanding The Very Early Period
To
begin this class with classical Christology and soteriology I would like to
just sketch a framework for understanding the very early period that has to do
with an article by Helmut Koester.
Koester
is interested in the development of Christology before the writing of the New
Testament (and the text as we now have it).
Inevitably there is something quite tentative about doing construction
and yet you can argue that roughly twenty years between the time of Jesus'
death and the time in which the New Testament books began to be written (and
even more time before the later New Testament books were written and the whole
thing was collected into what we call the New Testament). That earlier period is the subject of a lot
of significant Christian thought about Jesus.
Koester's analysis of it may serve as an original framework for focusing
some what follows. Koester says that
there are four types of Christology. The
are: (a) Parousia Christology which focused on the idea of Jesus as the Son of
Man, the judge who come at the end of the world. As far as the New Testament is concerned you
can think of the apocalyptic discourses especially in the synoptic
gospels. (b) Divine Man Christology which focuses on an
individual with superhuman powers especially those associated with miracle
working--this category is not limited to biblical material but there are
examples of this in Hellenistic literature of the period. Divine Man is not the same thing as divinity
in the later sense of the word. (c)
Wisdom Christology which focuses on Jesus as teacher. A major example of this can be found in the
gospels particularly in the Sermon on the Mount or the discourses of Luke or
the Parables. These present Jesus as a
person with wisdom who conveys that wisdom to others through his preaching and
his teaching. This includes as a kind of
sub-division the idea of Jesus as wisdom incarnate--not simply a teacher of
wisdom--the chief example of this is found in the logos Christology of the
fourth gospel ("The Word became flesh"). (d) Easter/Paschal Christology which focuses
back to Jesus' resurrection. This is
common in Pauline material but in a different form you find this in the
Passion/resurrection narratives of the gospels.
Koester
is of the opinion that the New Testament as a whole represents a bringing
together of these four types--and that to a certain extent this is true even in
individual books of the New Testament.
This is true in Mark especially but we see that almost any of the
gospels combines elements from each of these traditions. But precisely through combining them
relativizes them to a certain extent in comparison to each other. Koester's judgement is that the Christology
that stands out as the unifying force is this Easter Christology. This is not the only Christology in the New
Testament but it is the one that made possible the integration of the different
trajectories. Otherwise the different
Christologies had a tendency to spin off in their own directions and eventually
either did or would have disintegrated if they did not have this greater force
holding them together. Then when we get
to the canon of the New Testament if anything that is enhanced because the
portions of the New Testament in which Easter Christology is particularly to be
noted in the Gospels or in Paul are so prominent (although Koester is not
committed to the notion of canon as an historical relic).
My
purpose of mentioning this Koester article is twofold. (1) The initial purpose is just to suggest
something that I think {NOT SURE WHAT HE SAID} {your already familiar with--the
complexity of early . . .} at least some aspects of that complexity. But the main point, the second point (2) is
to classify the historical development what we place under the heading of
classical Christology. The focus
initially here is going to be on the person of Christ--not so much on the work
of Christ. It is possible to see this
development in the third and fourth centuries as the pursuit of this particular
aspect of New Testament Christology--a focus on the Wisdom Christology especially
in the form reflected in the fourth gospel statement "the Word became
flesh" (which becomes at least in certain periods a leading Biblical
reference point within discussions--who is the Word, what is the relationship
with the Word and God [in the sense of God the Father], what does it mean to
say "the Word became flesh?"--does it mean that there is no human
spirit (only a human body). These are
the type of questions that were asked.
It is important to keep this in mind to indicate on the one hand that
this is a set of questions with good biblical foundation and it is not
surprising that those questions arose, on the other hand there is a
concentration on one aspect of the biblical material rather than others. And so it is a line of questioning which
involves a certain narrowing of focus in some points rather than others--a
narrowing that may have been inevitable in a biblical-historical period.
Arianism
As A Prelude To Nicea
What
I would like to do is to begin with Arianism as the first major factor in the
development [of this].
The
classical period in the development of Christology ranges clearly from the
Council of Nicea in 325 and it basically comes to an end with the Council of
Chalcedon in 451 (although there was still a period of reception after
Chalcedon). The two official texts are
the credal statements from these councils.
We
use liturgically the Nicean Creed on Sundays.
It is universally used all over the United States. The creed that we use is a modification of
what was adopted at the Council of Nicea--we use the word Nicean in the sense
that that is where it came from but not
in the sense that we use it in precisely the same way that they used it at that
time. In saying that I do not mean only
the addition of the filioque--which is a controversial point which we got into
about the precession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and Son--but even
abstracting from that medieval addition there are much earlier additions which
are present in the creed. In the form
that was given out in class (see handout) was adopted at the Nicean Council. You will notice in particular that the end of
it is much shorter than what we are accustomed to and even rather abrupt--you
do not expect it to end at that point.
The reason for the abrupt ending is that the Holy Spirit was not an
issue (we will come back to this).
Let
me begin with just a sketch of the issues that Nicea is talking about before we
get to the Council's text itself.
The
key figure before Nicea was Arius. Arius
was a priest in Alexandria. Alexandria
was a center of early Christianity (as well as Jewish thought). Alexandria was a major intellectual center of
the ancient world. About the year 315
Arius began to advance a position that eventually was named after him--that the
Logos (the Word) was not equal to the Father, that the Logos is not God. Keep in mind John 1:14 which is the
formulation of this but it would not hurt to look back over the whole prologue
of John's gospel.
Basic
Positions Of Arius
Arius
believed that the Logos was not God but rather the "first
creature." This first creature was
created out of nothing by the Father--the highest creature and the only
creature made directly by God. There is
a one person God who created the Logos--not from all eternity but still a very
long time ago (long before anything else came about). The Logos then serves as the instrument of
creation. God is one step removed from
the rest of creation. We are not
speaking here of the Incarnation--that issue comes later. This is a doctrine of God that is at issue
here before we come to the Incarnation problem.
The Logos creates everything else.
The Logos is not of the same substance as the Father but because of the
unique relationship between God and the Logos it is possible to call the Logos
"Son." Arius holds that the
Logos is not on the same level with God, but also not on the same level as the
rest of creation (the Logos is in between--much closer to God than anything
else and yet not equal to God. It is
that distinctive, intermediate status which makes possible the use of the
vocabularies [???] titles which are found quite extensively in the New
Testament. Now in the course of time the
Word became flesh--the theology of the Incarnation. The Logos was united with a human body but
there is not human soul present (there is no need for a human soul--and I think
you could also say there is no room for a human soul). This is Arius' theology of the
Incarnation. The result is that Christ
is not God. He is also not a human
being. In a sense you might say that
Christ is part human and part super human but not divine. In the strict sense Christ is neither God nor
human in certain aspects of humanity.
That is the framework of Arius' theology--a non-Trinitarian doctrine of
God.
Arius
was a religious personality. He
attracted followers very quickly. It is
important to remember here that as a matter of historical [???] that Arius
himself and his adherents and those who listened to him were not people who had
been reciting the Nicean Creed every Sunday throughout their lives. These are [???] with legitimate questions for
Christians, but they are in a context in which what we have been accustomed to
has formulated answers to these questions.
People at the time of Arius were not yet there. Questions can still be raised about these
formulations but it is important to rule out any kind of automatic presumption
that Arius is deviating from a clearly articulated Christian position on these
matters. In some respects he is
deviating from an established Christian position because recognition of the
divinity of Christ is there prior to this time.
[???]. [Arius'] doctrine in some
ways enabled the Church to pursue [questions] in more thorough ways [than]
otherwise may have been possible.
Leading
Up To Nicea
Arius
was excommunicated by a local synod at Alexandria but his following was already
too large for that excommunication to prove successful. Because of this a general synod (what we call
the first ecumenical council) was called.
This matter had proved to be too serious and to wide-spread to be
settled on a regional basis and so they moved to the next step which was a
universal synod (at least in principle).
The general synod was convened by the Emperor Constantine to meet at his
summer residence at Nicea. Nicea is a
short distance from Constantinople (present day Istanbul). The general synod met in the year 325
A.D. The council was well attended with
two to three hundred bishops present. A
traditional figure (for number in attendance) associated with this council is
318 which is taken from the book of Genesis (14:14--which said that Abraham had
318 servants).
Christology January 17, 1991
Other
Issues at Nicea
Nicea
was also concerned with other issues in addition to the Arian controversy. Those issues are not of particular issue to
us here but there are two that have bearing on other aspects of Church
history. One of these issues is the date
of Easter--a problem that had certain theological implications. The second issue was one of ecclesiastical structure
and order of authority among various dioceses.
Arius
Vs. Athanasius
As
far as Arius was concerned there were very long and bitter discussion about the
relevant issues. Arius was present and
defended his teaching and was supported by several bishops. Eventually the anti-arian party was
successful. The council seems to have
met for about two months.
The
chief figure in the anti-Arian [camp] was Athanasius who was a
deacon from Alexandria. Three years
after the council Athanasius became the bishop of Alexandria. He eventually became a very well know theological
figure of this period. It may seem a bit
odd that a deacon would chief spokesman at a council but there were different
ecclesiastical circumstances and different job qualifications for the selection
of deacons at that time. It was not
unusual for a deacon to be close associate of a bishop--a kind of chief of
staff. It was not at all unusual for a
deacon to proceed as Athanasius eventually did to the episcopacy.
Chiefly
under the influence of Athanasius, Arianism was rejected. There are some historical disputes, but the
groups at the council of Nicea can basically be divided into two--the Arians
and the anti-Arians (led by Athanasius).
There was something of a middle group opposed to Arius but not with as
much fervent opposition as Athanasius (although it is difficult to pin-point
this group). An anti-Arian creed was
adopted.
The
Anti-Arian Creed
The
background of the creed adopted was that it appeared to take an existing creed
and rework it into the form that was then adopted at the council. The background of the earlier creed is not
completely clear. The creed rejects all
types of subordinationism.
The
central part (in this study) is the second article. The first article is a profession of faith in
God, the second is Christological and the third refers to the Holy Spirit. There is something of a Trinitarian structure
of the creed but the focus is almost completely on the second article because
that was what was controversial at this stage.
In
the typed form that you have (see handout) in two paragraphs the chief elements
of the anti-Arian statement are in the first of those paragraphs. The insistence that Christ is born only
begotten of the Father--that is the substance of the Father (in other words
not created out of nothing by the Father) then true God of true God--a
reinforcement of what has already preceded it.
The reason for the emphasis here is that there is a looser sense in
which the Arians were prepared to use the word God--after all the prologue to
fourth gospel says the Word was God without the definite article . . .
[???]. The purpose of this was to
exclude that looser notion of being exalted or somewhat semi-divine figure if
you insist on the true divinity of the second person. This is repeated then in effect with the born
not made (that is, not made as the rest of creation). Then the introduction of what became the
famous word homoousios--one substance, or constubstantial, with the
Father. We tend to say liturgically
"one in being with the Father."
This word has a certain history of its own and it became the touchstone
of fidelity with Nicea (whether or not one accepted this term or tried to
substitute it with related but not identical terms became a measure of loyalty
to Nicea).
An
Earlier Heresy
There
is one other item in the background (just to mention it briefly). There was another earlier heretical figure Paul
of Samosata (c.260). He was the
bishop of Antioch. His trinitarian or
anti-trinitarian views were rejected as heretical at various local synods. He appeared to have held that only the Father
is divine, but the precise description of his position is controversial. Because he was held as a heretic his writings
were destroyed. Paul of Samosata seems
to have used the word homoousios in his own position--but not with the
same sense that Nicea uses the word (in fact almost the opposite). So we see that the word homoousios had
a bad history theologically because of its association with this earlier
figure.
In
choosing the word homoousios for use in the creed, Nicea is not only
bringing in a non-biblical term but also bringing a term that had unsavory
history to it as far as Christian theology was concerned. None the less homoousios became the
key word at the Council of Nicea.
[The
word] Homoousios [was] not used [by Nicea] in any type of precise
philosophical sense. It is not adopting
one or another particular philosophical understanding of being. It is expressing that whatever is said of the
Father is also to be said of the Son (except the distinction between the Father
and the Son). The Father and the Son are
of one being.
The
Humanity Of Christ
[There
are] two other points--one in regard to the creed directly and then something
about [???] the next of the Christological paragraphs. He became flesh and he became Man. These too are anti-Arian in effect because
the Arian position is that he became flesh but not that he became man. The Arian position is that the Logos takes
the place of the human soul and so the humanity of Christ (and I am speaking
with terminology that was not particularly in vogue at that time) is also
compromised by the Arian position. The
thrust of the debates at Nicea do not lie on that level. The immediate concerns at that time had to do
with the divinity of the Logos. But
there is objective reference to anti-Arian elements in this reference to the
humanity of Christ. This issue of the
humanity of Christ becomes an issue in later centuries.
Arians
Anathamatized
After
the creed, the council also adopted a brief paragraph that is an
anathematization of the Arians. This
brief paragraph establishes a pattern that is typical of most ecumenical
councils that after an initial statement of faith there is frequently a briefer
rejection of contrary positions. The
paragraph reads as follows:
"But
those who say there was a time when he was not and before he was born he was
not or he came to be out of what was not or who claim that he is of a different
hypostasis or substance (different from the Father) or that the Son of God is
created or subject to change, these the Catholic Church anathematizes." (See DS 126)
So this is the rejection of
Arianism at Nicea and the condemnation of his main tenets.
Arianism
After The Council Of Nicea
[Let
me offer] a couple of words about the aftermath and the [???] of this. First of all, Arianism did not disappear
after the council ended--it persisted and even flourished in some places for
long periods (sometimes with variance and with modifications). Arianism influenced [Christians] through the
fourth century and was rather strong in the West as well as the East. An example of that was that the chief
opponent of Arianism (Athanasius--who was not only the chief opponent at Nicea
but also in the years that followed) was exiled several times from Alexandria
for a total of seventeen years. In other
words, as Arians came into power he was forced out and when they lost power he
would return.
On
Regulation Of The Language
Before
I say anything about the arguments used against the Arians, I would like to say
a word about the terminology that was adopted at Nicea--not as far as the
content was concerned but rather a word about the procedures and the issues
that are at stake here. This is based in
large part on some observations of Karl Rahner who has made them in
regards to dogmatic statements in general (not just on the dogmatic statement
of Nicea).
Rahner
says that in any dogmatic statement there is an element of regulation of
language[2] involved (and
by dogmatic statement here he means some sort of official and perhaps
definitive Church teaching on the subject--not simply one you or I might say in
discussing a theological question). What
does Rahner mean by "regulation of language?" Most of the time when we use words in every
day speech there is a certain fuzziness to the possible meanings of words but
we understand each other because we have the words in a certain context.
An
example of this (fuzziness of meaning) is as follows: Think simply of something like the
weather--if there is a storm and we are talking about the weather we use words
like hurricane, gale and/or blizzard; we know what we mean by these words--we
do not use the word hurricane when there is a shower or we do not use the word
blizzard after the first flake of snow falls to the ground. On the other hand we also do not use the kind
of technical understanding of those terms that is used by the weather
service--we do not speak of a blizzard unless the snow accumulates a certain amount
by a certain time. There is no doubt
that there are certain snow storms which people will classify as blizzards
which do not meet the technical definition of such a storm. This type of word use is typical in other
areas as well. We usually do not need a
precise scientific or formal definition of things. But there are some occasions when you do--you
do not need a scientific definition of the weather when you are chatting with
the neighbor but you may need such a definition when you are doing a formal
study of the weather.
Technical
Meaning Of Language In Church Documents
Part
of what happens in official Church documents is that words which in principle
could be used more widely are given more technical meaning and at least as far
as the Church is concerned, these words are going to be used in one way and not
in another. Even though rather
abstractly [???] analysis of the etymology of the language the word could have
other meanings (they have been used with other meanings in the past and can even
be used in other contexts at the present time).
Those decisions on the part of the Church are not saying that there has
always been one right meaning and [for example] four wrong reasons. It is saying that we are establishing this as
the way we are going to talk--a suitable way in a sentence but maybe not with
the only possible meaning of the word.
Because
at times the Church needs one language to profess its faith a particular word
or a particular phrase is regulated so that for ecclesial purposes it is to be
used with this meaning in the future and not with other meanings. When this happens it can be a kind of tricky
thing--it is not that two hundred and fifty people sat down at Nicea and said
this afternoon we are going to devote the session to regulating the
language. The council fathers did not
think about regulating the language--they simply did it. They did it mixed in with debate about
Christological issues. If you asked them
if anyone ever used a particular word in different fashion many would agree
that others had (e.g., homoousios). They
established that this is the language that the Church would use in discussing a
certain question and that it would be used in this particular way.
Rahner
thinks that this "regulation of language" is an important element
that sometimes people neglect [in interpreting Church dogmatic
statements]. This explains in part why a
group like an ecumenical council can address an issue in a way that an
individual can not. If an ecumenical
council says that the word homoousios will be the reference point for
discussing this issue and it will be used in the fashion implied in this creed
that is something to which the Church is always committed. If you come out this evening with a better
formulation on a Christological issue which is quite conceivable there is no
particular reason to think that the Church would knock that--at least I hope
not. There is almost an element of
Church law in this regulation of language so it is something that can not
simply be done by a theological reflection of the subject.
I
have two other observations for you.
Notice that in the case of Nicea the word homoousios is an unusual
word--it is not a biblical word. It is
not a word that is used very often in the context of every day language and I
think that as part of the Christological disputes it was probably not used very
much as part of every day conversation in Constantinople at the time
either. It is easier to regulate a word
like that than it is to regulate every day words. If someone tells you how to use an everyday
word [and it is different than what you are used to] there may be a
problem. The Church's ability in effect
to regulate language is limited and it may be in more respects in some ways
than in others. The regulation is pretty
much limited to the ecclesial sphere.
But that is alright as long as the word does not have much of a life of
its own elsewhere. It is more difficult
to regulate the language within ecclesial use if people [???] of the church
argue in the same language also in other contexts. That is something we will come back to.
At
this point we have been talking about regulation of the language by ecumenical
council--adoption of a use of a term. I
think that also a broader notion of the regulation of language is something
that is not done at one particular moment by one particular authority but
rather in a more complex process over a longer period of time and [???]. And there I think the best example of a word
whose meaning is thus regulated is the word "Christ." Over a much longer process the adaptation of
that word to fit Jesus, picking up on some messianic notions and shedding
others. So that is the notion of
regulation of language.
What
Are The Issues At Nicea?
What
are the issues at Nicea? Let us look at
this as seen chiefly from the perspective of Athanasius. First of all, as I mentioned, the Arian
position of the Logos (of the Incarnation) is denying both the divinity of
Christ and the humanity of Christ. The
Arians say that the Logos is not divine and the human soul is not present. But the debates of the time focused chiefly
on the divinity. That Arianism also
denied the humanity of Christ seems not to have been perceived as at least not
as much as a problem.
Athanasius'
Chief Argument
Athanasius'
chief argument is a soteriological argument.
The salvation is seen as participation in Divine life. This is a very strong theme in Greek
patristic understanding of salvation.
The argument is that unless the Logos is divine the incarnation does not
bring about salvation. For example,
Athanasius' writing on the Incarnation (the key to the reference here is to the
Logos) "he became man that we might be divinized." That we might share in the Divine life.
The
Rejection Of Arianism
The
debates continued through the fourth century.
Eventually the rejection of Arianism won general acceptance. The theological climate becomes and adequate
anti-Arian with great stress on the divinity of Christ both in theology and in
general piety. The Arianism debate had
persisted from the second to the fourth centuries. The aftermath with emphasis on the divinity
of Christ continued for centuries after that.
We will see that even when we get to the fifth century debates about
Christology there is always the suspicion that the other side is Arian.
Questions
About The Humanity Of Christ
Before
we go to the fifth century debates [allow me to say] a couple of words on the
humanity of Christ in this earlier period.
There are even from the beginning positions which reject the reality of
the body of Christ--in effect which reject the reality of the Incarnation. These positions hold that matter is evil and
therefore hold a Docetic position with regard to Christology--that is,
Jesus appears to have a body but he really does not have one. From this perspective the body is a costume
which hides Christ's true reality. Among
other things this would eliminate the reality of the crucifixion. The Logos is not effected by what happens to
this costume.
There
is a more specifically Christological denial of the completeness of Christ's
humanity in the fourth century (in the period after Arianism). This is the position known as Apollinarianism. The name here is after Apollinarius
who was a fourth century bishop. He held
that what he called the nous, the active principle of Christ with a
human soul was not present with Christ.
Instead the place of that principle was taken by the Logos (the nous
is an active element of the soul--in Christ, that is not there because the
Logos is there). Of course you can see
what lies behind that--if you have an active principle to the human soul, why
not conflict? What happens if the Logos
wants to go in one direction and the active principle of the human soul wants
to go in another direction? Then if you
rule that out, then how active is the human principle? So there are issues here and you can
definitely think in terms of human freedom as a part of the issue--the
relationship of freedom to freedom of choice and then the question of sin. If the active principle is resisting the
divine element then the issue of sin will come into the picture. So there are a number of questions that lie
behind this formulation. Apollinarius'
way of getting at it is to say that the active human element is not there--the
Logos takes its place. There is a
similarity to Arianism in that the Logos is substituted by what would otherwise
be part of the human being. The
difference though here is that Apollinarius' position is that the Logos is divine. He is not Arian in his understanding of the
nature of the Logos.
The
position of Apollinarius was also rejected.
The basic argument against it is similar to the basic argument that
Athanasius used against Arianism. The
rejection of Apollinarianism held that if something is lacking now on the human
side then the human nature of Christ is not complete--then human redemption is
not complete either. If there is
something lacking in either the divinity of Christ or the humanity of Christ
then salvation is incomplete. Salvation
that is incomplete is not salvation at all.
There is also of course another way of pushing the issue more
specifically where it is not just a question of the integrity of the human
nature (the completeness of the human nature in general) but it is rather if
you do not have specifically a human will (active principle of human knowing or
human willing) then you have a robot of some sort here. If there is not human will then there is no
freedom.
Apollinarianism
did not cause as much agitation as Arianism did, but it is not insignificant in
its historical impact. It is rejected at
the Council of Constantinople (c.381) but it does not appear to have
been the focal point of that council.
The council rejected various other heretical positions.
Behind
these various Christologies (Arianism, Apollinarianism, the orthodox
opposition, etc.) there arose a particular Christological framework. This framework has been called the Logos-Sarx
Christology (John 11:14--"the Word became flesh). This Christology is very typical of Alexandria
and the chief orthodox representative here is Athanasius.
The
issue in most of what we have seen so far has been the question: "who is
the Logos?" And more specifically:
"what is the relationship between the Logos and the Father?"
What
comes in the late fourth century is a greater emphasis on the humanity of
Christ, especially at Antioch.
The Logos-Anthropos Christology begins to develop there. This is not completely alien but what has developed
here is that "with flesh" is susceptible to different
interpretations. At least by itself it
does not serve to convey the completeness of Christ's human nature. It may well, in the framework of the prologue
of the fourth gospel, convey that, but the question is what it does in other
uses--if you for example hold that in the Incarnation the Logos takes the place
of the soul there is nothing in the word "flesh" terminology that is
going to prevent you from saying [???].
A theology which works to accent the completeness of the human nature of
Christ develops a Logos-Anthropos model.
If
you want a terminology that expresses the completeness of the human and
particularly if you want a terminology that expresses that when there are other
people denying it then you may well think that the word sarx, in spite
of the biblical precedence, is not calculated to express that as clearly and
forcefully as you would want. And so the
Antiochenes have developed what has been called a Logos-anthropos
model. That movement is in the late
fourth and early fifth centuries.
The
central early figures in this movement were Diodot of Tarsus (c.394) and
Theodore of Mopsuesta (+428).
These theologians placed an emphasis on the humanity of Christ and the
distinction of the two natures. The risk
here is that the unity of Christ may not come across clearly. These men came out of Antioch which was a
theological and catechetical center.
On
the Alexandrian side the Alexandrian tradition of Logos-Sarx Christology was
perpetuated into the fifth century. The
chief figure here was Cyril of Alexandria (patriarch 412-444). The emphasis here is on the unity of Christ
and on the divinity of Christ. In its
orthodox form (e.g., with Cyril) this is not a denial of Christ's humanity but
it is also not an accent of his humanity.
Alexandrian
Vs. Antiochene Perspectives
There
is one particular comparison that is popular in the Alexandrian perspective but
questionable to the Antiochene perspective.
The Alexandrians tend to compare the unity of divinity and humanity of
Christ with the unity of the soul and body.
From one angle we can see that that is simply an emphasis on unity, from
another angle you can see that the heresies of the previous centuries have
revived because at least to outsiders one might think that divinity is taking
the place of the soul. This is a
situation that has considerable possibility of misunderstanding. But we should allow here for the fact that
when we speak of different schools of thought we can only do that from a
distance--some of the issues have been clarified over the passing of time. But during that period there was a great deal
of misunderstanding of this period and a considerable amount of suspicion of
[???].
A
good part of what follows is that both of these schools of thought (not just
theological but also in terms of ecclesiological questions) bump into each
other in Constantinople. You are not
going to find too many Alexandrians in Antioch or vice-versa. Constantinople is a melting pot and it does
not really have an indigenous theological school of its own. It is a place where both of the conflicting
parties meet each other and see each other first hand. It is a place where each of the various
parties would like to exercise influence.
Basically
the controversy begins in Constantinople in 428 A.D.. It begins here with the rise of Nestorianism
(an example of another heresy named after an individual who was
prominent). In 431 A.D. there is the Council
of Ephesus which deals with that issue.
There was a certain period after Ephesus of relative calm which then
leads to the development of Monophysitism--the root of that comes from
the Greek word meaning one nature.
Monophysitism is the doctrine of one nature in Christ. In 449 A.D. there is an unsuccessful attempt
to address matters again at Ephesus. In
451 A.D. the resolution (more or less) at the Council of Chalcedon. We will take this up in the nest class.
Christology January 22, 1991
The
Alexandrian/Antiochene Rivalry
[Missed the first five
minutes of class]
There
were also monks in Constantinople who were Alexandrian in their theology. They were influential so that there was a
potential for conflict and difficulty there.
When Nestorius became Patriarch he initially took action against
a few Arians that were still in the city (that is a rather minor point at this
stage--a century before it had been a hot issue).
The
Theotokos
In
428 A.D. another controversy arose. This
controversy centered first around a priest named Anastasius. Anastasius preached against the use of the
title Theotokos which means "Bearer of God" or "Mother of
God" and is used in regard to the Virgin Mary. This was a title that was in popular use at
that time. Anastasius preached against
the use of this title and the dispute ensued.
Nestorius, as the patriarch, was drawn into the dispute and he also
rejected the title Theotokos. He
recommended instead that Mary be referred to as the "Bearer of
Christ" or "Mother of Christ."
No one objected to the title "Mother of Christ" but the
question was whether it is also appropriate to refer to Mary as the
"Mother of God."
Before
we go on with the historical development I think it [serves us to mention that
it] is clear why the Antiochene theology might at least have some reservation
about the title Theotokos. The
Antiochenes accented very strongly the human nature of Christ and the
completeness of his human nature. A
title like this with regard to the Virgin Mary does not necessarily compromise
Christ's human nature but it also does not say anything about it--it seems to
brush it aside [???]. In any case
Theotokos is a title that Alexandrian theology with its focus on the unity of
the person of Christ would certainly be quicker to welcome and to accept. You notice that the while the title is a
Marian title the issues that it is involved with are also christological
issues. The christological dimension of
the issue is then fought out in the years that come after that. It is also true that the struggles over this
issue led to an increase emphasis on Marian devotion.
The
Issues Here
The
christological question is whether the unity of Christ is such that his mother
can be called the "Bearer of God" or the "Mother of
God." Nestorianism is
typically [???] which does not articulate the unity of Christ clearly. Because of that failure to at least
articulate the unity of Christ it is unable to come to grips with a term like
Theotokos and accept it in an orthodox sense.
I
just add parenthetically that there are historical disputes as to whether or
not Nestorius was a Nestorian. Because
as in so many of these instances there are questions as to whether one side
accurately understood the other or whether there are completely differences in
content or simply differences in terminology that were not resolved at that
point. Remember again that the
terminology that we consider standard for discussing these matters is a
terminology which developed within that century--it was not available in 428
A.D. nor was it available by 451 A.D..
In
any case the word Theotokos itself, like most such words, is ambiguous--at
least when taken out of context. To call
Mary Theotokos is certainly incompatible with Nestorianism. [This is true] in the standard definition
because Nestorianism did not so accent the unity of Christ. It is also incompatible with Arianism--if you
do not consider the Logos divine you will certainly will not say this with
regard to the Virgin Mary. But it is
always necessary to keep in mind that Mary herself is not divine and that she
is not source or principle of Christ's divinity.
Chalcedonian
Terminology
If I
put this in Chalcedonian terminology for a moment just for the sake of
clarifying the issues: The justification
for this in Chalcedonian terms we think that person and two natures is that
motherhood is a personal reality and that Mary is the mother of one who is
truly God and truly man. It is because
of this that it is possible to use the term Theotokos with regard to Mary. However it is also true that Mary is the
mother of Christ because of his human birth and that in that sense there is you
might say more direct connection with the human nature than to the divine. That it drawing a little bit on at least on
the Chalcedonian terminology--saying it is one person who is still divine and
that motherhood relates to the person.
But that is precisely using vocabulary that was not agreed to in 428
A.D..
The
Controversy
And
so when the dispute arose over Theotokos the word itself immediately became the
center of controversy and stayed at the center of controversy for the next
several years--particularly the next three years.
What
happened? Nestorius had sided with
Anastasius in not using Theotokos and in preferring to speak of Mary as the
"Bearer of Christ." The
Alexandrian monks in Constantinople opposed Nestorius. The monks defended Theotokos which was in
popular use and had a certain popular following (there was a certain devotion
to this in prayer). The monks who
opposed Nestorius took excerpts from his writings on christological questions
and sent them to Alexandria and to Rome.
This brought Cyril of Alexandria (patriarch 412-444) into the
dispute. Cyril had been a major
theological figure in the history of the Alexandrian school (this implies a
certain political focus and style in operation in theological matters). Cyril then exchanged letters with Nestorius
about christological letters. In these
letters Cyril provided a commentary on the Council of Nicea and urged Nestorius
to change his views. Part of what
happened here was that Nicea had become a reference point (but inevitably there
will be a recognition that Nicea did not have all the answers for the fifth
century). Cyril's commentary was done
from the perspective of Alexandrian theology and Alexandrian terminology. Nestorius received the letters and wrote back
that Cyril misunderstood Nicea.
Condemnation
Of Nestorius
Both
Cyril and Nestorius wrote to Rome (to Celestine I). In 430 A.D. a local
synod in Rome took Cyril's part and condemned Nestorius' teaching and then
(perhaps unwisely) authorized Cyril to obtain from Nestorius a repudiation of
his position. Notice that at this time
Rome functions as a sort of "court of appeals." Rome had a considerable amount of prestige
(at least theologically) and also had the advantage that it is not part of the
dispute--it is away in the West and is not the source of either of the
conflicting theological terminologies and in that sense is a bit of a neutral
party to which each side can appeal in a matter of this sort.
A
Synod At Alexandria
Nestorius
refused to comply with Cyril's request for repudiation (which was not
surprising) and so at that point Cyril decided to conduct a synod of his own in
Alexandria. This synod produced a
christological confession and it also produced a list of twelve anathemas (see
DS 252-263) which they then sent to Constantinople for Nestorius to sign (which
of course he did not do).
Allow
me to mention a couple of major elements in the confession and anathemas that
came from the synod. The text referred
to Mary as Theotokos. It speaks of a
natural union in Christ and compares the union of his divinity and humanity to
the union of soul and body in all human beings.
In any case this Alexandrian synod and sending off to Constantinople did
not produce the desired results.
The
Council At Ephesus
As a
result of this Emperor Theodosius II convened a council to meet in
Ephesus on the seventh of June, 431 A.D..
Now this gets a little complicated at this point. On the seventh of June over two hundred
bishops were present including both Cyril and Nestorius, but a great number of
the Anthiochene bishops had not yet arrived.
They waited two weeks and then Cyril insisted that they begin without
them. So on the twenty-second of June
the council opened despite the protests of at least sixty bishops and the
representatives of the emperor. The council
on its first day listened to a reading of the Nicene Creed, listened to Cyril's
second letter to Nestorius and to a reading from Nestorius' reply to
Cyril. They then approved of Cyril's
letter and rejected Nestorius' response as contrary to Nicea. They also received favorably the twelve
anathemas that had been previously adopted by the Alexandrian synod. Then they deposed Nestorius. Four days later the Antiochene bishops
arrived. When they found out what
happened they immediately met and condemned Cyril on two grounds--the first was
for going ahead without them and the second was for favoring Arianism and
Apollinarianism. In a way of course they
were condemning Cyril for being against Nicea--really the same objection that
had been raised against Nestorius. In
the early part of July the Roman legates arrived (they of course were already
committed to Cyril's position because of prior Roman actions). The Roman legates confirmed the condemnation
of Nestorius. Then Cyril's party
excommunicated the bishop of Antioch. At
this point the emperor's representatives ended the council. Eventually the emperor Theodosius took
Cyril's part and exiled Nestorius from Constantinople (he was sent to
Egypt). Cyril was in this sense
completely successful with Ephesus.
The
Results Of The Council Of Ephesus
What
happened at Ephesus? Keep Nicea in the
back of your mind. Ephesus did not
produce a new creed or a new christological statement (in the sense of
homoousious). Ephesus had basically
three accomplishments. (1) It affirmed
the legitimacy of the title Theotokos.
(2) It condemned Nestorianism.
(3) In accepting Cyril's second letter to Nestorius as an interpretation
of Nicea. Again think of Nicea as a
reference point--Ephesus is almost like Nicea in that it condemned a particular
heresy and its advocates and it is unlike Nicea in that it did not produce a
creed. Given the division of the two
groups at Ephesus it would have been almost an impossibility to produce a
creed--if they had tried to probably each group would have produced its own
which would have been unacceptable to the other. The climate at Ephesus was not such that a
joint articulation of the creed could have been worked out. The council of Ephesus was a complete victory
for the Alexandrian school but that means that it was not an basis of
reconciliation. That takes us up to 441
A.D..
I
include Nestorianism under Antioch as a representative school although the
actual start of it was in Constantinople rather than Antioch itself. It is possible to see Nestorianism as an
extreme tendency within the Antiochene school.
It would not be accurate to think that every Antiochene is a Nestorian. But it is accurate to see Nestorianism that
something that would arise in that context and that it would not have arisen in
other contexts.
Ephesus
in 431 A.D. is a victory for the Alexandrian school but at least at this point
what Ephesus did is not only unacceptable to the Nestorians it is also not
acceptable to the moderate Antiochenes.
The
Creed of Union
What
happens after the Council of Ephesus? As
you might expect there are efforts at reconciliation. The leading Antiochene figures and Cyril were
both anxious to restore unity (here John
of Antioch should be mentioned). In
433 A.D. Thedoret of Cyrrhus, who is the leading Antiochene theologian
of this period proposed a Creed of Union (see DS 271-273) and an
explanation of christological category.
This creed was drawn up by an Antiochene theologian and was intended to
be something that would be acceptable to an Alexandrian as well. The creed was in fact acceptable to
Cyril. The creed speaks of two
natures in Christ (this accents the constant Antiochene concern for the
full humanity of Christ). The creed also
says that there is one Christ, one Son, one Lord (so the Alexandrian
concern for the unity of Christ is emphasized).
The creed accepts the title Theotokos as a title for Mary. The creed also goes back to the council of
Nicea and takes the key word homoousios and uses it twice. Nicea has spoken of Christ as being
homoousios with the Father. This Creed
of Union teaches that Christ is homoousios with the Father according to his
divinity and homoousios with us according to his humanity. So it is taking what had become a decisive theological
linguistic reference point and now uses it for a new issue as well as
continuing its use for the older issue.
This Creed of Union was widely accepted but not universally adopted. Some Alexandrians thought that reference to
two natures introduced [???] that was unacceptable (although that was not
Cyril's position). None-the-less if
Cyril said that the creed was acceptable in Alexandria it was acceptable.
The
Death Of Cyril And The Rise Of Dioscoros
There
was a relatively peaceful period until 444 A.D. when Cyril died. Just as the problems had arisen in 428 A.D.
with one group of Antiochenes so to now in the years after Cyril's death
problems arise with one group--this time with a group of Alexandrians. Cyril was succeeded in Alexandria by a man
named Dioscoros. Dioscoros had
been an arch-deacon but he was a foe of the two natures terminology. He thought that Cyril had been too
conciliatory with the Creed of Union.
Eutyches
And The Monophysites
At
first nothing happened, but then in 448 A.D. problems broke out again in
Constantinople. This time around a man
named Eutyches. Eutyches was the
leader of a group of monks who like monks in the earlier period were oriented
toward Alexandria in their theology. At
this point Eutyches rejected the formula of union and said that those who
accepted it were guilty of Nestorianism (of course Cyril is dead by this time
but it is odd to think that something that he accepted would be suspect of
Nestorianism). Eutyches taught instead
the presence of one nature in Christ and that anything else introduced division
within Christ. His position is known as Monophysitism
(sometimes in older manuals you find it called Eutycheism but that in no
longer common).
Eutyches
took his position and promoted it in Constantinople which of course was a focal
point of controversy (if he had done this in Alexandria perhaps not much
attention would have been given to it--but in Constantinople it would not just
slide through). The local patriarch Flavian
conducted a synod which condemned Eutyches and supported the Creed of Union
that had been established. But Eutyches
found the support of the emperor and also from Alexandria. Dioscoros and Eutyches were now working
together against the Creed of Union. The
emperor Theodosius called a council (a new general council) and designated
Ephesus as the sight and appointed Dioscoros to preside. There was also some Roman involvement with Leo
the Great (440-461) who was opposed to the convening of a council but who
did send legates once it was convened.
A
Failed Attempt For A Council At Ephesus
On
the eighth of August in 449 A.D. the assembly convened. The Roman legates were there from the
beginning and brought with them a letter from Leo (the Dogmatic Letter On
Christology, also know as "The Tome of Leo"--see DS
290-295). The letter stresses the unity
of Christ but also speaks of the presence of the two natures. In its own way the letter is along the line
of the Creed of Union in that respect.
The legates were not permitted to have the letter read. Instead, Eutyches defended his teaching and
was declared orthodox by about eighty percent of the bishops in attendance
(there were only about 130 or 140 bishops presents unlike Nicea where there
were about 300 present). Then an effort
was made to have Flavian deposed as patriarch of Constantinople. The minority of bishops protested against
this. Dioscoros then brought in the
imperial soldiers and a crowd of monks to break up the assembly. Later another meeting was held which the
Roman legates refused to attend. This
later meeting condemned all the major Antiochene theologians. This was a complete Alexandrian triumph, but
much more extreme that what had been done before--and it marked the end of the
union that had been established in 433 A.D.
However the meeting won no general acceptance. Flavian and the Papal legates protested to
Rome and Leo responded by saying that the assembly had been a gathering of
robbers rather than a council and Leo insisted that a new council be held. Leo came to the conclusion that only an
ecumenical council would be sufficient to address the issues (a shift in his
tactics because you will remember that earlier he did not want the council at Ephesus
convened).
The
Anti-Monophysites
In
July of 450 A.D. the emperor Theodosius died. This important because consistently
Theodosius took the Alexandrian side in these matters. Theodosius had a sister by the name of Pulcheria
who was anti-Monophysite. She
quickly married a man by the name of Marcian (not to be confused with
the earlier heretic by the same name).
Marcian was a former military commander and Pulcheria aided his assent
to the imperial throne. The new emperor Marcian
exiled Eutyches from Constantinople and agreed to convene a new council
originally intended for Nicea (a deliberate imitation of what had gone on
before--this is the new Constantine calling the new Nicea). The council however was eventually held at Chalcedon,
a town in the vicinity of Constantinople.
The council met there in October of 451 A.D.. From the very beginning this contrasts
greatly what had gone on at Ephesus (not only what had happened in 449 A.D. but
also what had happened in 431 A.D.).
The
Council Of Chalcedon
Chalcedon
was the biggest of the ancient councils.
There were approximately three hundred bishops in attendance. All but seven of the bishops were from the
East. Of course it was in the East that
this issues were being disputed--so the number of bishops from the East is not
surprising. The Roman legates and
imperial representatives were influential at Chalcedon. The early sessions of the council reaffirmed
the Nicean creed and heard and approved Leo's letter (the Dogmatic Letter On
Christology of 449 A.D.).
Dioscoros was then put on trial and deposed as patriarch of
Alexandria. What we have basically up to
this point can be compared with Ephesus, which had rejected the extreme
position of the Antiochene school--now Chalcedon is rejecting the extreme
position of the Alexandrian school (opposing Dioscoros and the Monophysitism).
A
problem arose however in the fifth session.
The imperial representatives insisted that the council adopt a new
creed. Basically they took the position
that Nicea had eventually proved successful because it had a creed--they feared
that if they did not have a creed their work would disintegrate. They had both Alexandrian and Antiochene
representatives present for the council who had rejected the extremes on both
side. It was the emperor's position that
it was now the time to work out a commonly accepted statement of christological
thought. I should note also of course
that unity in a manner of this sort has a considerable political utility--as an
element of unity within an empire in general.
In addition to the religious motivation there is also a great political
value to preventing half of the provinces of the empire of being at odds with
the other half.
The
first draft of the new creed was found unacceptable and ambiguous. Then a commission of bishops drew up an
acceptable text which became a classical formulation of christological doctrine
(see handout). The purpose of this is to
profess both the unity of Christ and the completeness of his divinity and
humanity. It is the first time in this
time in history that a council has made an effort to take into account the
concerns of both schools. In that sense
it stood very clearly in the tradition of the Creed of Union of 433 A.D.. The difference however between the Creed of
Union and the Chalcedonian creed is that because there was an assembly at
Chalcedon there is a more formal adoption of the creed which gives it a force
that the earlier effort at union did not have.
Important
Points Within The Chalcedonian Creed
I
would like to refer to a couple of points in the Chalcedonian creed (see DS
301-302). Some of the creed is put in
very simple, non-technical language. You
will note first of all that they did not simply pick up the Nicean Creed and
make additions to it (the nature of what they tried to do did not make that
possible). What they produced was not a
creed for liturgical use. It does not
have the same Trinitarian structure usually found in a liturgical creed, it
simply has a christological focus to it (as far as I know this creed has never
been used liturgically).
The
creed teaches first of all that the Lord, Jesus Christ is one and the same
Son. That represents a theme that is
repeated several times in the text--the unity of Christ (they keep going back
and saying "one in the same" or "the same" at different
points throughout the text). This is
drawing on the Creed of Union, but is non-technical as far as the vocabulary is
concerned--it does not use words like nature or person at this stage. That is the reception of the Alexandrian
concern but the text also reflects the Antiochene concern about the
completeness of the humanity of Christ.
The
creed uses the term homoousios twice--once with regard to the divine
nature and once with regard to the human nature. You will note in the English translation
(given in the handout) there are certain words that they do not
translate--precisely because they are the disputed terminological issues. Do not allow the use of the word homoousios
twice confuse you because they are not used in the same sense in the two
instances. When homoousios is used with
regard to the divinity of Christ there is a notion of numerical identity--there
is only one God (it is not saying that there are two Gods). On the other hand, when it is used with
regard to the human nature of Christ there is a recognition that there are many
human beings--the point here that the human nature is present in each instance
(not that there is only one instance of a human nature in the same way that
there is only one divine nature). That
is a beginning of a somewhat more technical explanation, but that point must go
a bit further.
You
notice that the word Theotokos is used with reference to Mary. Then there is an explicit choice of a two
nature vocabulary--Christ exist in two natures not out of two natures (as if
the two somehow coalesce into a third or into one). Then there is a listing of what in Greek are
four adverbs--each beginning with the letter Alpha which is not simply for
rhetorical reasons (it is the same idea that we also have in English that
"A" sometimes at the beginning of the word has a negative primitive
connotation--e.g., ahistorical, etc.).
It is difficult to put these four adverbs into English and so the
translation here uses "without confusion, without change, without
division, and without separation."
This listing has acquired a certain classical quality as a vehicle for
expressing the balance of the Chalcedonian formulations. The first two of these adverbs, "without
confusion" and "without change" are directed against
Monophysitism--in other words, against a position which merges the two natures
into one.
Christology January 24, 1991
The
Chalcedonian Creed
In
the Chalcedonian creed the first two references about Christ's two natures
"without confusion" and "without change" are
directed against the Monophysite position.
The second two references "without division" and "without
separation" are directed against the Nestorian position. So once again in this section the
Chalcedonian definition is more balanced than some of the material that has
been seen in earlier stages--that which reflected the extremes of each of the
schools. What follows is a slight
explanation of this--explanation at least in the a verbal sense of the
affirmation (it does not claim to be an explanation of how this takes
place). The difference of the natures is
not removed by the unique properties of each preserved. The natures concur into one person--one
hypostasis (we will come back to this).
They are not parted or divided into two persons--this is another
re-affirmation of the unity of the natures.
There is a repetition of the reference of one and the same Son.
The
concluding section of the Chalcedonian creed refers back to the prophets of
old, to Christ's own teaching and as Symbol of the Fathers--the
reference here is to the Nicene creed.
In one sense the council of Chalcedon is insisting that its teaching stands
in continuity with those other texts (earlier creedal statements). The creedal statement obviously does not
claim that the formulation of Chalcedon itself can be found in Isaiah, or in
one of the gospels or complete within the Nicene creed either (if that had been
true they would not have had to come up with another formulation)--but they are
pointing back to other reference points and are saying that this is the context
and these are the sources according to which this compressed document is to be
interpreted.
The
Use Of Prosopon And The Regulation Of Language
I
would like to draw attention here to the more technical use of the word "one
person" (prosopon) and "one hypostasis." We speak in English on one hand of the one
person and two natures which is a picking up of the prosopon through the Latin personae. We also speak in English of hypostatic
union which is a picking up of the word hypostasis. You will notice that both of those terms are
used with regard to the unity of Christ--that with which there is one (they are
different words getting at the same reality).
The
problem that must be kept in mind that again has bearing on what we said
earlier about the regulation of language. The difficulty is more present in the text
(and in that sense, more present in the fifth century) than it is to us fifteen
centuries later. There are different
problems present now. The difficulty is
that the word prosopon has its own background and its own meaning. One part of that background is that prosopon
can be used as a mask--the mask that an actor uses to play a part. We speak of a person in a play (playing a
part) and we know that the actor is not really Hamlet but speaks in the person
of Hamlet. The point with the use of
prosopon in the creed is not at all that Christ "seems" to be one but
really "is not." It is not
that there is an appearance of oneness but in reality a duality.
The
word prosopon left by itself was not considered quite sufficient for the
creedal formulation. That is why they
introduced the word hypostasis as well--it indicated that there is a
reality to the oneness as well as a reality on a different level to the two
natures. To a certain extent, what
happens in the reception of this language (first into Latin and then into
various modern languages) is that the content that is suggested by both
prosopon and hypostasis were floe into the word person. When we speak of one person in Christ, by
itself that does not suggest a notion of mask.
It does not suggest the idea that this is the reality and this is the
appearance. So in English we really do
not have to ward off that misunderstanding (in the way that is was necessary to
ward it off in the fifth century).
[Question
from the class: "Does the term prosopon (person) also come from Nicea
with regard to questions about the Trinity?" Answer: It is a term that is used in
Trinitarian theology--of course there with a different numerical sense (the
sense of one nature, three persons). Question: "Does the sense of person conjecture
that there are three (i.e., what is the correlation between the three persons
in the Trinity and the one person in Christ)?" Answer: First of all it should be said that there is
development in the form of a more explicit attention to Trinitarian theology--particularly
as far as the Holy Spirit is concerned (that has taken place between Nicea in
325 A.D. and Chalcedon in 451 A.D.).
What we have been talking about in class has simply focused on the
Christological dimension of theological discussion in that period. But also in particularly in the late fourth
century, especially in the East (but you can also think of Augustine in the
West) there is a lot of attention to the development of Trinitarian theology. Part of the reason for that is simply that the
Arian dispute with its direction of attention to the relationship of the Father
to the Son (or to use the word person, the relationship of the First Person to
the Second Person) almost inheritably leads into the further question, what
about the Holy Spirit. So that line of
thought has also been pursued [???]. But
we have been focusing here on the Christological, and in that sense the
Incarnational aspect of the doctrine.
The idea here is that the Second Person of the Trinity has become
Incarnate and so the person here is the same as the Second Person of the
Trinity--and in here you can think of all the references to "without
change" ("without change" here in the sense of without
diminution of divinity or anything of that sort). The difference is of course is that you would
not be able to use vocabulary like "our Lord Jesus Christ" unless you
were speaking specifically with reference to the Incarnation. [???] to the presence of the true nature
rather than simply the divine nature.
Does that answer your question? . . . So the point of it is that this is
the Second Person of the Trinity but in getting at their Christological point
did not introduce him in specifically Trinitarian vocabulary right here because
the Holy Spirit is not at the vocal point of tension. Nor were they only concerned with the
relationship to the Father--I say only concerned because they repeat material
from Nicea (they repeat the homoousios and other contents of that sort) but
they do so in the consciousness that this is something that they are
repeating. This is not the issue that
was being debated at that particular time because rather than participants in
the fifth century debates dispute the divinity of Christ--their question is how
can one affirm, or how can one find a terminology for affirming, the unity and
the completeness of Christ.]
Nicea
Recalled
That
is the focus of the text. Let me say a
couple of further words about it before we go on with the history of it
all. I repeat here what was said earlier
about Nicea with regard to the element of regulation of language as
present in the conciliar texts. It was
thought at Nicea, especially with regard to the word homoousios and the
decision that this was to become the key reference point for discussing the issues. We see to a slightly reduced extent here
(again with the word homoousios) that that is repeated from Nicea and applied
also to the humanity of Christ. But the
places where we particularly see regulation of language in Chalcedon are with
the terms person and nature.
You can put [???] together with person in that context. Person is the term used for articulating the
unity. Natures is the term used for
articulating the completeness of divinity of Christ in the completeness of the
humanity of Christ. One of the dangers
with any of the vocabulary is that there is going to be that an audience will
take one of these affirmations to be only on the surface level (only on the
level of appearance--e.g., really God looks like a human being or really human
but only superhuman or looks to be one reality but is really two realities in a
kind of schizophrenic sense).
The
Problem Of Words And Associated Schools
There
are certain words or combination of words that are associated with one or the
other Christological school. Two
natures, for example, is associated with the Antiochene school. Different types of one nature terminology is
associated with the Alexandrian school.
The problem for a council like Chalcedon is what to do with the words
that are associated with one school more than the other or with one school
rather than the other. Theotokos, for
example, is not a problem with the Alexandrians--in fact it is a bit of a
slogan for them. But it was a term about
which, historically for a period of about thirty years, the Antiochenes had had
their doubts--even though there had been points like the Creed of Union
where the Antiochenes have found this acceptable.
One
of the potential problems with the word Theotokos is that it may seem to some
to undercut the humanity of Christ. It
might also seem to some to suggest the divinity of the Virgin Mary. I am not suggesting that that was the intent
of those who used the word, but if you say "Bearer of God" why should
one who bears God be God? What in the
word "Bearer of God" suggests the humanity of Christ? There is always the concern of the Antiochene
side that the Alexandrians do not really take the humanity of Christ
seriously. I think that one of the
reasons for putting this word (Theotokos) in here is to balance it off with the
previous reference to "begotten of the Father before ages as to his
Godhead" with "in the last days . . . [born] of Mary the
Virgin [now] as to his manhood."
The point then is to say that you can speak of an eternity as far as the
one person is concerned, but also as far as the divine nature is concerned, but
not with regard to the human nature.
The
Words Person And Nature
Let
me go back to the words nature and person.
Just for a minute I would like to jump out of the fifth century context
to a later context. The implication of
the council in speaking of the two natures is that one nature is divine and the
other nature is human. Obviously one
must make allowances for the difficulties of including the divine nature and
the human nature in one breath. Those
complexities must be allowed for in this type of [???]. The implication with regard to the one person
is that the person is divine. That is
the divine person who has become Incarnate.
In a sense that points back to the Trinitarian issues about which we
spoke earlier. From the perspective of
Chalcedon, person is a word associated with the unity of Christ and with the
divinity of Christ. Nature is the chosen
term for speaking in reference to both the divinity and humanity of
Christ.
Now
here we come to an issue that is not a fifth century problem but what has
become a problem for twentieth century authors.
If you go out on the street and say to someone that Christ is not a
human person it is very likely that person to whom you speak will take that and
[???] Christ is not a human nature. In
other words, the terms person and nature are used a Chalcedon in a technical
sense--not that they give a precise dictionary definition to them but they used
them in a way that defines them in context.
Our words do not have the same connotations in modern usage that the
council sought to give them. To say the
least that means that great care must be used with this type of terminology in
twentieth century usage.
There
is another concern that also comes into the picture here [these days] because
another common formulation of Chalcedonian teaching is to quote the earlier
part of the document and to say that for Chalcedon Christ is truly God and
truly man (see first few lines of the text). At the present time many people prefer not to
use the term man in the generic sense and therefore look for some alternative
formulation of this. I just want to note
the problem with one alternative formulation that some like to use--some say
"truly God, truly a person."
My point is not the purpose behind the change, but rather the linguistic
problem with the change. If the word
person is used instead of "human being" then it is no longer
available for use in the same way it was used at the time of Chalcedon. It may be that the only solution for that is
to avoid the use of the word person altogether in this context (and I do not
mean to avoid its historical usage).
We
need to be conscious of the fact that some of the words that are quite central
to the historical discussion are not readily understood at the present time but
are readily misunderstood--perhaps in whole variety of ways by one and the same
audience and that care should be taken in that regard. There are a few theologians who are prepared
to say that Christ is a human person in a sense that differs from the use of
the word person by Chalcedon. Those
theologians who do that typically explain their reasons and intentions in the
process of saying it. That in context
may be legitimate but it seems to me that cannot be done either unless the
explanations are always repeated (which is a bit cumbersome) because otherwise
almost inevitably and audience is going to take that as a denial of the
divinity of Christ (even if that is not the intention). Because the word person is not used to
express the unity and divinity of Christ (it is not quite clear what word is
being used as a substitute). I think of
the example of a homily I heard recently where the homilist said that Christ
became a person at the time of the Incarnation--I knew what he meant but
such a use may confuse Trinitarian theology.
Problems
of Language--"Personal" And/Or Non-sexist
There
are two problems with this language question--they are the question of not
being specifically personal and the opposition of feminist who believe such
language may be sexist. On the question
of not being specifically personal is not with reference with the word
"man" as much as with the word "nature." The word nature sometimes does not have
personal connotations--sometimes when people hear "one person, two
natures" they tend to suppose that the human nature lacks freedom or lacks
an intellect or does not really need one and so one. There can be a tendency to think that the
word nature is sub-personal (in the modern sense) or lacks a personality or
lacks human characteristics. This is not
likely to be spelled out in so many words but there is a bit of a presumption
that human nature is somehow abbreviated by all this.
The
question with regard to feminists authors is an English concern--it is not a
concern within other languages such as Greek or with regard to various other
modern languages. These feminists
believe that the word "man" suggests "male" and they desire
a more generic term. The creed does not
intend to focus on the maleness of Jesus (although he was a male) but rather it
intends to focus on the completeness of the human nature. I personally believe that in a lot of cases,
even apart from this context, people who do not want to say "X"
sometimes spend more attention to avoiding "X" than to deciding what
is critical.
I
give one concrete example of this: Karl Rahner did an article in which
he refers to Jesus as a Mensch (a human being--that is generic in
German, it is not a masculine term). If
you read Rahner's writings in the older volumes (and I am referring
specifically to Christological writings--such as the older volumes of Theological
Investigations) you find the word Mensch translated consistently as
"man." If you refer to later
volumes of Theological Investigations you will find the same word
translated as "human person."
A reader of the English, without recourse to the original language, is
very likely to conclude that at a certain point Rahner began to speak of Christ
as a human person probably to accent the completeness of Christ's
humanity--which is a concern that Rahner long had. I checked many of those references and I have
never found a place where "human person" is used in the original
texts. There are other modern
theologians who do use the term "human person" but to the best of my
knowledge Rahner never did, despite translations to the contrary. I think Rahner's reason for not using the
term "human person" (and this is something that I cannot establish)
despite his interest in accenting the fullness of Christ's humanity is
precisely this notion of "regulation of language". Rahner considers himself ecclesially bound
not to violate this regulation of language.
I put it negatively "not to violate" because he does not
consider himself bound to use only this vocabulary--he sees no reason why you
could not speak Christologically in different vocabulary. He does seem to think that it is not proper
(and you might even say "canonically proper") to use the ecclesially
regulated terminology in a contrary way.
It need not be heretical to say Jesus is a "human person"
(this does not have to be meant as a denial of the divinity) but it is somewhat
schismatic--because it departs from the ecclesially recognized language.
Support
Of The Chalcedonian Position And Further Clarification
At
this point I would like to do two things--first to say a word about
argumentation that has often been used in support of the Chalcedonian position
and then secondly to give a further clarification of what sort of issues this
material is coming to bear. The term
that is often used here is communication of idioms or exchange of attributes. The idea presupposes that biblical language
about Christ is legitimate and argues that both divine and human attributes are
predicated in one Christ. The argument
is basically that for that to be true you must have both divine nature and
human nature present in the one person.
I
will give a couple of examples of biblical texts that are sometimes appealed to
in this regard (although I am not at this point [???] with regard to the
historical origins of this texts--whether they can be traced back precisely to
those who speak the words presented in the scripture--the issue is rather the
content itself). The first example is
from Acts 3:15: "You have killed the author of life"--this is
one of the early sermons (that is perhaps a little less ecumenical in its
expression that one might desire at the present time). Notice here the "the author of
life" does suggest divinity. The
reference to "death" of the author of life is possible only if the
divine and human characteristics are present in one figure. The second example is taken from the gospels
John 17:5: "Father glorify me with the glory which I had with you
before the world was made." So
it is Christ speaking of himself yet at the same time is speaking of something
pre-Incarnational (although I would not be willing to defend this passage as
historical--but that is a separate issue).
It is the combination of the divine and human attributes in the one text
that is a stake in this type of identification.
Those are only illustrations of the types of passages that are referred
to in this respect.
Next
I would like to read a short passage from Bernard Lonergan. What I am getting at here is an effort to
clarify the sort of question that Chalcedon was concerned with--the sort of
questions that Chalcedonian terminology is useful for getting at (when I say
"useful for getting at" I do not mean to suggest that it resolves all
questions but that it does provide a good vocabulary for at least clarifying to
a certain extent). The background in
Lonergan's case is that he wrote a work on Christ as subject. An article which was originally published in Gregorianum
has to do with speculative questions concerning Christ's knowledge and related
material. He published a small book on
this subject (An Ontological and Psychological Constitution of Christ)
which was then subjected to criticism by another Jesuit theologian named A.
Perego. Lonergan decided to reply to
that priest.
I
would like to read one section of that reply found in Longergan's collected
essays under the title Collection.[3] I am interested in this not precisely as a
defense of Lonergan's views of this particular speculative question nor as a
criticism of Perego--this just sets the context for our discussion. Lonergan writes: (See Photocopied section of reading). I think that you can see what he is getting
at there and why at a certain point in this explication of the Apostles creed
he finds it helpful to point to the terminological distinctions of Chalcedon
and to say with regard to the question "Who?" (in this case "Who
suffered?") meant the answer to the "Who?" question is the one
person and that the answer to the "What?" question have to do with
the two natures which are united in the one person but the human nature is not
identical to the one person.
[Question
from the class: "Under
Chalcedonian terminology we can say that there is one person and it is a divine
person and that divine person suffered but not in the divinity but only in the
humanity--but when we say that a divine person suffered, what happened to the
divinity? (i.e., the divinity is part of
the constitution of the person taken as a whole and also he suffered and he was
divine)" Answer: I guess I would say this, and I do not think
that you can get into the psychological [???].
I am speaking here specifically to the traditional understandings of
God. I think the first thing to say is
that the main thing that is being said here [is?] with regard to the
Incarnation. This is unusual for human
beings but it is also unusual for God.
This is a unique situation. [???] How can you say that one of the Trinity
suffered? How can you say that God
died? Now it becomes a further
complexity when you try to ask the question in almost a psychological
sense--the problem there would be the danger of taking the one divine person as
somehow detracting from the human nature of Christ. I think what Chalcedon has done and what
Lonergan keeps here is a kind of terminological clarification, but not a
psychological explanation. It is
certainly not right to think that the suffering has taken place and somehow the
divine person steps back [???]. At the
same time I think there is a validity to not locating the suffering within the
divine nature (or a danger of saying something like that too quickly). What is at issue here is the effort to define
the terminology for getting at certain questions. If you therefore also want to get at other
questions--including questions of how did Jesus approach death or more concrete
questions about his suffering in death--then I do not think that this
perspective is a helpful one for getting at those questions. I think there you must look for more specific
historical information--some of which we
may have but much of which we simply do not have and refer not to the creedal
framework but rather whatever you might be able to get out of the Passion
accounts. When you do that, this
terminology may be useful to have in the background but it is not [???] that is
at issue in the text.]
The
Fifteen-Hundredth Anniversary Of Chalcedon
In
1951 the Church observed the fifteen-hundredth anniversary of the Council of
Chalcedon (this was a mile-stone). This
anniversary led to a number of observances (e.g., Pope Pius XII issued a
Christological encyclical and the publication of a very important three volume
work entitled The Council of Chalcedon).
The
three volume work The Council of Chalcedon comprised mostly the work of
French and German theologians (published between 1951 and 1954). Two of the long essays in that project have
attracted particular attention. One is
an essay by Karl Rahner under the title "Current Problems in
Christology"[4]
(the original title of this essay was "Chalcedon: End or
Beginning?") The second major
contribution to this work is a long historical study by Aloys Grillmeier
entitled Christ In Christian Tradition.[5] One of the underlying points in Rahner's
contribution is relevant to our topic at the moment. Rahner says that he detects in Christianity a
kind of hidden Monophysitism. He
detects this (Monophysitism) in the sense that it tends to absorb the humanity
of Christ into the divinity and that it tends then to abbreviate his humanity
in some way. It is a hidden
Monophysitism because the people who do this do not stand up and say "I am
a Monophysite," and they do not explicitly disavow the humanity of
Christ--they simply can undercut it even without realizing that that is what is
being done. One element of Rahner's
theological program is to seek to overcome that hidden Monophysitism. Rahner is not the only one to speak in terms
of the need for accenting the humanity of Christ (although the reference to it
in terms of a "hidden Monophysitism" is characteristic of
Rahner). We will come back to this
discussion, but I want to alert you to the possibility that one can [claim to]
be brutally orthodox in adherence to Chalcedon and yet not follow through on
it).
After
Chalcedon
What
happens after Chalcedon? (For an in
depth study see Grillmeier's work Christ in Christian Tradition (Vol
2)--he was a major historian of Christology of that period). The teaching of Chalcedon was not at first
universally accepted. This should be not
surprise as this seems typical of every council up to this point. Some of the Egyptian bishops the two
nature terminology a betrayal of Ephesus.
Nestorians found Theotokos unacceptable. However Chalcedon did eventually become
widely acceptable. It received very
strong support from the emperor and received, as far as its Christology was
concerned, very strong support of Pope Leo (a qualification is made because
Chalcedon also has an ecclesiological decree--Canon 28--with regard to the
standing of various churches which Rome did not accept). The following is a brief paragraph from one
of the imperial documents (from 452 A.D.) which is directed against Eutyches
and his Monophysite followers after the council:
".
. . the possibility of teaching this unfortunate heresy, as has been stated in
previous edicts issued by our highness, anyone seeking to teach illicit
doctrines shall be punished with the supreme punishment [i.e., executed]. Those, however, who listen to such criminal
teachers with the intention of emulating them, shall be penalized with a fine
of ten thousand [coins?]. Thus all forms
of sustenance are taken away from error and [???]."[6]
For those who wrote against
Chalcedon (as Monophysites), their works were to be burned and the authors of
the works were to be [put to death].
There is some good literature of monks who protested (recall that the
monks were Alexandrian in focus). They
were told by the emperor that this was none of their business and that it had
been decided by the bishops.
Groups
That Did Not Accept Chalcedon
There
remained, however, groups that did not accept Chalcedon. That is true on both the Monophysite and
Nestorian side of the theological debate.[7] The Monophysite churches are found today
mostly in Egypt and Ethiopia. The
Nestorian churches are found today mostly in Iraq, Syria and India. In recent years there has been a great deal
of ecumenical discussion with these churches on the part of both the Roman
Catholic and Orthodox Churches. The
ecumenical discussions have tended in the direction of saying that
Christologically the differences are matters of terminology but they have also
found that ecclesiologically there are substantive problems that cannot be
readily addressed (an important point here is the development of the Papacy in
the West). These are groups that were
cut of from the mainstream of Christianity of both the East and West a long
time ago and have continued in what today are mostly non-Christian environments
of the Middle East.
Christology January 29, 1991
The
Aftermath of Chalcedon/Contemporary Approaches
Today
we will continue with a study of the historical development of the early
centuries. We reach something of a peak
of development with Chalcedon, and that still serves as a basic reference point
for official Church teaching at the present time.
Efforts
To Reconcile The Monophysites
There
is one issue in the aftermath of Chalcedon that deserves a little bit more
attention. This is the development of an
effort to reconcile the Monophysites who were not prepared to accept the two
natures terminology of Chalcedon. I am
sure you can see the pattern here that mirrors that of other councils--that no
matter how much of a union has been established, there are groups on one side
or another which do not find the conciliar decisions acceptable. While there may be a period of great
controversy [after a council] there is also usually an effort at reconciliation
somewhere down the line. In these
particular circumstances there are political for wanting reconciliation (think
of later centuries of the growth of Islam and the threats to the empire). There is effort made to reconcile the
Monophysites. One of these efforts
acquired considerable significance--that is an effort that was associated with Sergius
of Constantinople (Patriarch 610-638 A.D.).
Sergius desired to reconcile the Monophysites.
Two
Natures, One Operation Of The Will
Remember
that the great concern behind Monophysitism is the unity of Christ--that
is the doctrinal point of the Monophysites see endangered by references to two
natures. This issue of the unity of
Christ comes to bear particularly when one raises questions about Christ's
freedom and thus about the will of Christ.
[Questions such as:] Although it
is true that in the Agony in the Garden Jesus says "Your will, not
mine," but do you then get competing wills within the one Christ? Is there a possibility of misuse of human
freedom and therefore resulting division in Christ? Is it a possibility that something will
happen to fracture the unity? Sergius
took the position that while there are two natures in Christ, there is only one
operation of the will--and that operation of the will is both divine and
human. Many of the Monophysites found
this acceptable. You can see how this
was intended to appeal to them and in fact does appeal to them, but at the same
time the two natures terminology of Chalcedon is preserved. This brought about reconciliation with Egypt
and the provinces of Egypt and that in turn brought the support of the emperor Heraclius
(610-641 A.D.). There is always a problem
with any kind of empire that the border areas are not firmly grasped--the
adherence of Egypt to Constantinople is less firm that say the adherence of
Turkey (although that eventually collapses)--religious reconciliation of these
provinces with Constantinople is desirable from a political point of view.
Monotheletism
In
638 A.D. the emperor issued a decree referring to one will of Our Lord Jesus
Christ. The movement that this
generated was called Monotheletism.
The terminology of Monotheletism parallels that of Monophysitism with
the words "one" and "will."
There is a certain ambiguity to that vocabulary. One way of taking it is to say that
"whatever Christ did is the act of one person--that in fact there is not a
division or a going off internally of cross purposes." Another way of taking it is saying that there
is no human will present (or I suppose you could say that there is no divine
will present, but that is not a direction that they take). When they are thinking of one will they are
either thinking of a divine will or some type of fusion of the divine and human
will. If you think of it in terms of
fusion then you are back in the direction of Monophysitism (at least as far as
the will is concerned). If you think of
it as simply being the divine will then you do not have a true human
nature--you may verbally still be asserting two natures but you are still
taking something significant out of the human nature. That is the first step in this.
Monotheletism:
An Abandonment Of Chalcedon?
The
matter was brought to the attention of Rome where Pope Honorius (625-638
A.D.) had no particular objection to the teaching (see DS 487-488--this becomes
a rather famous historical reference for later discussions of Papal
infallibility). Honorius, however, was
not the only one concerned with the problem.
There were various other theological leaders who did object [to
Monotheletism] and saw in this development a betrayal of Chalcedon. Sophronius of Jerusalem and the most
important of these leaders, Maximus the Confessor, were two such
theological leaders. Maximus insisted
that Monotheletism was an abandonment of Chalcedon (in his eighties at the time
(c. 640), he was brought to Constantinople where his right hand and his tongue
were cut off in order to prevent him from opposing the officially approved
doctrine--and he died shortly thereafter).
Sergius and Honorius died and they actually drift out of the picture,
but the position of Monotheletism is maintained initially--at least as the
imperial policy.
Two
Wills In Christ
In
649 A.D., however, a local Roman synod (a Lateran synod--not an ecumenical
council) condemns Monotheletism (see DS 510).
This synod teaches the existence of two wills in Christ--one divine, one
human--but the synod also states that these two wills are harmoniously
united.
A
Question Of Christ's Freedom
There
is a further underlying theological issue here which is a question of Christ's
freedom--and perhaps even beyond that the question of what is meant by freedom
in the first place. That is one way of
getting at the question, the other way of getting at the question is in more
abstract terms--simply in terms of the integrity of Christ's human nature. All these factors play a role. One background element that we will see in what
follows is that in many conceptions of salvation (the salvific significance of
Christ) the human freedom of Christ sometimes does not play a significant role
(it does in some and does not in others).
If you have a conception of salvation in which the human freedom of
Christ is not in the foreground, then you are not going to be as intensely
engaged in an issue of this sort as you would otherwise.
The
Council of Constantinople
By
649 A.D. there is a rejection of Monotheletism which is then picked up again at
the end of the century. Toward the end
of the century there is an ecumenical council at Constantinople (The Council
of Constantinople 680-681 A.D.--see DS 553-559). This council cites the Council of Chalcedon
as a reference point and that is significant as reflecting what is happening
here (just as Chalcedon pointed back to Nicea but developed various additional
points, so too now Constantinople cites Chalcedon but then develops one point
further). Constantinople teaches the
existence of two wills and two operation of the wills in Jesus. The council then discusses the submission of
the human will to the divine will (the sinlessness of Christ as being the
underlying issue).
That
is the last of the historical developments in the Patristic period--although
this council is not of the same historical importance as earlier developments. To some extent Constantinople was simply a
working out of one particular detail of the Chalcedonian teaching, but it was
an example of how at various times specific questions have come into the
forefront. This particular council has
not received an enormous amount of attention, but what it did really was to
indicate that the path that had been taken in effort to bring about
reconciliation had been a false path (a path that had been a betrayal of
Chalcedon). Constantinople, however,
does not really have another way of reconciling the Monophysites--all that it
does is to say that the human will and the divine will are not at cross
purposes (that the division that the Monophysites feared has not occurred in
Christ). There may have been a gesture toward
the Monophysite concerns at Constantinople but it is not a position that the
Monophysites find acceptable. The
Monophysite churches in fact have not been reconciled.
A
Soteriological Problem
The
Council of Constantinople said that there are two wills and that the human will
is subordinate to the divine will. If
you put this into Biblical terminology we could say that "Christ is
obedient to the Father." The
soteriological problem is that if you cannot speak in some sense of free act on
Christ's part, then there is no human significance to what he is doing--then
Christ is something of a puppet. In
fact, the defense of the human will is very closely linked to this defense of
human acts on the part of Christ. It was
not always argued out from that basis--it was argued out more philosophically
as to the completeness of the human nature (that is the issue that is at
present). You cannot take the divine
will because [???].
Mysterium
Filii Dei
That
takes us basically through the developments as far as the person of Christ is
concerned. Since that time, there is no
significant advance in official Church teaching on the subject. Mysterium Filii Dei[8]
is a more recent document that reflects this.
In 1972 the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith issued this
declaration. It is presented as a
defence of traditional Christological teaching against contemporary
errors. I mention it here not so much
because of that context but if you read the text you will notice that the
thrust of this document is simply to repeat the teaching of the early councils
and to insist on their continued validity.
This is not a text which advances matters further. This is an indication of the fact that
Christological development in this sense (official teaching about the person of
Christ) is basically concluded by the end of the seventh century. But even to say that is to obscure the fact
that it reaches a peak in the middle of the fifth century and then basically
trails off after that point.
Modern
Assessment
There
are two other types of comments to make with regard to the Christology of the
person of Christ. The first is just to
sketch different ways in which modern authors have assessed this development
((the second point can be found beginning on page eight of these transcribed
notes)). One way of looking at the
development is the perspective that Avery Dulles termed the Dogmatic[9]
approach to Christology (the first of his five models). The development is valid. It is a movement from the New Testament
Christology to greater precision and perhaps even greater depth in the
articulation of Christology.
One
specific way of thinking about this (still within this same model) is to say
that in the New Testament we have a kind of Functional Christology which
talks about Christ in his significance for us.
And so you typically have in the New Testament a very close linking of
Christology and soteriology--you do not find a kind of stepping back to look
simply at the person of Christ, but you find it interwoven with the treatment
of Christ's significance.
The
people within this Dogmatic framework often see that [New Testament
Christology] as a first level of Christological statement and then see the
development in the Patristic period as a movement to a more ontological
Christology (the thinking of Christ in himself). Obviously that is not intended to deny that
Christ is significant for us--that would not be the purpose at all. But it is saying that instead of looking at
things from our point of view, take a step back and take a look at Christ in
himself which is what makes it possible for him to accomplish the various
things that he has accomplished.
When
we look at it in those terms, those people are not only saying that this change
has taken place, but they are also saying that this is legitimate movement and
that there is a sense in which this type of movement is inherent in the nature
of the case (that there would be such a step at some time). They will always say that the specific stages
(Nicea, Ephesus, Chalcedon) are closely linked to the development of one heresy
or another. They know that this is due
to certain historical circumstances and various developments that ought not to
have occurred. Still, they tend to take
the position that there is a certain logic to [such developments]. These questions would have risen even though
the specific circumstances in which they arose are coincidental historical
events.
That
often can lead to the position that when we do Christology today we should
start where the councils left off--because a major step has already been
taken. A good bit of clarification has
been achieved and the point would now be to go further in seeking to understand
what the councils said and what the implication of their teaching is. The key point there would be the reference to
the implication of their teaching as the material that Christology should
concern itself in the future.
Going
Back To The New Testament?
Should
you go back to the New Testament? You
are not going to find Christian theologians saying do not go back to the New
Testament--that is not part of the vocabulary that one uses. But you go back to the New Testament within
this framework--partly to see what the roots of the later teaching are (to show
that there is continuity), and partly because the New Testament has a certain
concreteness and richness to it that is recognized, but to go back to the New
Testament with the sense that this is a fuzzier, less developed and less
clarified way of speaking about Christ.
And so the real point of theological reference for people within this
[Dogmatic] mentality is the conciliar vocabulary. That is one perspective (the Dogmatic
framework)--and it is one that is not particularly in favor at the present
time, but you will find occasional examples of it.
Liberal
Prostestantism
The
second perspective that is diametrically opposed to that [the Dogmatic
framework] is the perspective of Liberal Protestantism (which is not
restricted to liberal protestants but is classically identified with that
movement of the nineteenth century).
One major figure within this movement is Adolph von Harnack
(1851-1930), a German historian of dogma.
He was very strongly opposed to dogma (although that did not prevent him
from tracing its history). Harnack's
position is that a development of this sort did indeed occur--a move from the
approach of the New Testament (and particularly the approach reflected in the
Synoptics) and into the world of the early church (the world of the early
councils). [Harnack saw this as] a
movement from a Semitic world to a Greek world--a movement from a very concrete
way of speaking to a more abstract, speculative way of speaking. For Harnack that was a false step. [He saw it as] a movement away from Gospel to
dogma--and what happens after that is a false preoccupation with doctrine for
its own sake. That is, a movement from a
Gospel which proclaims the coming of God's Kingdom (which appeals to personal
conversion and faith) to a movement that eventually is simply concerned with
orthodoxy in the sense of the reciting of the appropriate creedal
formulas). [This perspective may also be
found in the following books: Leslie Dewart's, The Future of Belief
and Hans Kung's, One Being A Christian.]
A
Third Intermediate Position
There
is a third intermediate position which is probably more fair to the historical
development and certainly more widespread among major theologians at the
present time. Which is to say that this
development is a gain in some respects and a loss in others. In that it is a more complex, a more nuanced,
perspective. This third position
considers the Patristic-Conciliar development legitimate in its Christological
teaching and also in its efforts to produce a common vocabulary for Christian
use. But the third position also holds
that this development reflects a certain narrowing of Christological
questions. It is effective in addressing
questions of the divinity and humanity of Christ but precisely in order to
address those questions it found it necessary to abstract from other
Christological questions of great significance.
So this third position would have in common with Dulles' Dogmatic
approach a recognition of the validity of the conciliar teaching but it would
not be prepared to say that that teaching is the starting point future
Christological thought. It is one piece
of the picture among many that when you go back behind it into the Biblical
material you do not have simply a more rudimentary expression of the same
things but you have an immensely rich development in Christology which is not
exhausted by the development of certain strands in later centuries. That is what you will find reflected by just
about all prominent theologians at the present time.
The
Jesus Of History And The Christ Of Faith
We
will see some of the examples of that later but let me give just one particular
illustration. You are familiar from
exegetical and other courses with the question of the historical Jesus. The people who fall into the dogmatic
category in this typology tend not to be interested in question about the
historical Jesus--they are not opposed to the historical Jesus but they do not
think that they need to worry about it too much because [???] with the
Chalcedonian teaching and its vocabulary.
People who fall into the category with Harnack are quite interested in
the historical Jesus but see the historical Jesus as opponent of the Christ
of Faith--there is an opposition between the Jesus of history and the
teaching of the early councils. [There
is a recent encyclical of Pope John Paul II on the theme of missionaries
entitled Redemtoris Missio (December 7, 1990). There is a statement in the early part of the
encyclical arguing against the separation of the Jesus of history from the
Christ of faith. It reads:
"Jesus
is the incarnate Word--a single and indivisible person. One cannot separate Jesus from the Christ or
speak of a 'Jesus of history' who would differ from the 'Christ of faith.' . .
. Thus, although it is legitimate and helpful to consider the various aspects
of the mystery of Christ, we must never lose sight of its unity."[10]]
The third category, the
broader category, will be interested in the historical Jesus--not as an
opponent of the dogmatic picture of Christ, but partly as foundation, partly as
reference point of understanding what the conciliar teaching means.
The
Question Of Christ's Human Knowledge
The
second issue that I would like to put in here ((the first point is discussed
beginning on page five of these transcribed notes)) is a little bit out of
place--but it would be a little out of place at any point in the course (and is
less out of place here than in other contexts).
This is the question of Christ's human knowledge. I would like to say something first about the
Scholastic understanding of this and then of the contemporary
understanding.
The
Scholastic Approach/The Beatific Vision
The Scholastic
position developed over the course of various centuries parts of which have
roots in the Patristic period. There are
variations on this position from one Scholastic author to another. In its fully developed form, a Scholastic
theology attributed to Jesus three types of human knowledge. This is knowledge in his human intellect (the
existence of which is already guaranteed by Chalcedon). The question here is what does Jesus know in
his human intellect. Secondly this is
largely abstracting from the question of time (I say largely because obviously
there is a starting point with reference to Incarnation--and there is an ending
point with the Crucifixion as far as this goes--we are not really focus on
knowledge after death). But this is not
primarily a conception which is talking about what he knew at one stage as
distinguished from other stages in his life.
We will see with regard to at least much of this that what he knew as a
two year old he knew as a twenty-eight year old (although that is not entirely
the case). The three types of knowledge
are Beatific Vision, Infused Knowledge and Acquired Knowledge.
1
Corinthians 13:12
The
first type of knowledge has to do with Beatific Vision. This type of terminology is mainly used in
association with eschatology. The origin
comes from 1 Corinthians 13:12 (on love). In this particular line Paul says "we
see now as through a glass darkly, then we shall see face to face." What Paul has in mind is the difference
between what we see in our present life and what we will see in the future
after death (face to face with God).
This particular imagery of face to face vision of God is one that
particularly attracted the Scholastic and so the vocabulary of the Beatific
Vision becomes the chief vehicle for articulating the joys of eternal
happiness. Strictly speaking, the
passage in Paul says "then we shall see face to face." The Beatific part of it is another story but
clearly Paul has in mind eternal fulfillment and eternal glory. So this is not a falsification of the
passage.
The
Scholastic understanding of the Beatific Vision is that when we see God face to
face we will also participate through that in God's knowledge. It is not that our knowledge will become
infinite because there is always some sort of limitation [???] because we are
finite, but our knowledge will be far expanded beyond what it is now. The Scholastic understanding of that is that
it will include knowledge of all past, present and future realities. The idea is that only God knows not only all
past, present and future knowledge but also what could have been. Our participation in divine knowledge is
restricted to reality (we are always finite).
Notice that it is in a sense a kind of indirect type knowledge--because
it is through knowing God that we know what God knows.
As
far as we are concerned the Beatific Vision is something that it hoped for
(looked forward to after death). The
Scholastic position is that Jesus' human intellect enjoys this face to face
vision of God from the time of the Incarnation onward. You can appeal here (and the Scholastics do
appeal here) to the Biblical passages, especially in the John's Gospel in which
Jesus speaks of his intimate knowledge of the Father. There is a claiming on Jesus' part to a knowledge
of God that goes beyond general human knowledge of God. You can also think of Biblical passages in
which Jesus makes statements with regard to the future. Obviously we do not find places in the
Gospels in which Jesus makes reference to the Beatific Vision but the
Scholastic position is that the type of face to face knowledge that Jesus is
speaking about with regard to himself is a kind of advance occurrence of the
Beatific Vision. There is no reason why
it should not (they think) take place during his life time. There is every reason why it should in
keeping with his dignity, his mission, etc.
With the Beatific Vision goes this type of knowledge of all created
reality.
Mystici
Corporis Christi
I
will come to the second of those points in just a minute but before I do so I
would like to read a fairly recent reference to the Scholastic understanding of
the Beatific Vision. There is no formal
point at which one could say that a council taught this (so it is not enshrined
in that type of dogmatic sense). This
citation is taken from Pope Pius XII's encyclical Mystici Corporis
Christi (June 29, 1943). This is an
encyclical on the Mystical Body of Christ, it is not an ecclesial document, but
given its focus it is not surprising that something is said about Christology
in it, however this is not a document that is setting out to address
Christological questions and that must be kept in mind. Secondly, this reference is from the section
of the encyclical that speaks of the union of the faithful with Christ, and the
purpose is simply to make the Christological reference while underlying a
different type of ecclesiological point.
The passage reads as follows:
"The
only begotten Son of God embraced us in his infinite knowledge and undying love
even before the world began [this is a Trinitarian reference] that he might
give a visible and expediently beautiful expression of this love he assumed our
nature in hypostatic union, hence Maximus of Turin remarks: 'In Christ our
whole flesh loves us' [so far, this is perfectly good Chalcedonian
Christology], but the knowledge and love of our divine redeemer, of which we
were the object from the first moment of the Incarnation, exceed all that the
human intellect can hope to grasp. But
hardly was he conceived in the womb of the Mother of God than he began to enjoy
Beatific Vision, and in that Vision all the members of his Mystical Body were
continually and unceasingly present to him and he embraced them with his
redeeming love. For marvelous
condescension of Divine love for us. For
inestimable dispensation of boundless charity--in the crib, on the cross, in
the unending glory of the Father, Christ and all the members of the Church
present before him and united to him in a much clearer and more loving manner
than that of a mother who clasps her child to her breast, or that with which a
man knows and loves himself."[11]
This text immediately trying
to get at Christ's knowledge. It does
not mean that general knowledge of the Church it means that individual
knowledge [that Christ has] of each one of us.
It is said here directly, given the focus of the encyclical, only with
regard to future Roman Catholics--the members of the Church. [It is from this perspective] because the
earlier part of the encyclical has insisted on Church membership in the strict
sense (meaning being related to Catholics), however it is not meant to exclude
others. It is not meant to say that that
knowledge is not present (it simply focuses on Christ's love for the future
members of the Church). That's the first
part (through the Beatific Vision, even prior to birth, the human intellect of
Christ knew . . . ).
Infused
Knowledge
The
second type is Infused Knowledge.
Infused Knowledge is placed directly into the intellect by God. One must think here of the epistemology that
underlies that--normally we come into contact with something through mental
processes of abstraction and these things come into our intellect. Through infused knowledge, what would usually
come about through standard human intellectual activity is simply received into
the intellect directly from God. This is
a conception that has direct relationship to the Scholastic understanding of
prophecy--this is how prophets know what is going to happen in the future
(after all they cannot see it directly because it has not happened yet). The prophets are "told" in a sense
by God about it through the placing of these things into their mind. Infused knowledge is not limited to Christ in
this respect but given in various degrees to different people at different
times. This infused knowledge of the
prophets is supernatural rather than preternatural. Infused knowledge can also be attributed to
Christ. Medieval Franciscan authors
particularly promoted this. The
Franciscans promoted this perspective about Christ did so with the idea that
since it is possible for God to do this [for the prophets] that it is
appropriate that it be done here [for Christ] so that Christ is not in any way
lacking in comparison to the prophets.
There
are two observations I would like to make at this point. This does not add anything as far as content
is concerned because everything that is made known in this way is already known
through the Beatific Vision--however it rounds things out a bit. It rounds it of in the sense that the idea
that underlies it is not only that Christ should know everything but that he
should know everything in every possible way (not adding to the content but
introducing an additional way of knowing something). The last reference that I will point out in
an official document in reference to this is from Haurietis aquas (May
15, 1956), an encyclical by Pope Pius XII on devotion to the Sacred
Heart. We will continue with this point
in the next class.
Christology January 31, 1991
On
The Questions Of Knowledge
Types
Of Knowledge Attributed To Christ (Continued)
I
would like to continue taking a look at the types of knowledge attributed to
Christ. I mentioned in the last class
that the second type of knowledge is infused knowledge implanted
directly into Christ's human intellect.
I mentioned that there was a reference to this subject in Pope Pius
XII's Haurietis Aquas (May 15, 1956). In the following passage, the encyclical is
really talking about Christ's human intellect in the context of devotion to the
Sacred Heart (but it makes remarks about knowledge in connection with
willing). The encyclical reads:
"It
is moreover the symbol of that most ardent love which, infused into His soul,
sanctifies the human will of Christ and whose action is enlightened and
directed by a twofold most perfect knowledge, namely the beatific and
infused."[12]
This thought is not developed
further in the encyclical but there is a reference to Thomas Aquinas' Summa
theologiae in which there is a treatment of Christ's knowledge and where
this type of material is developed.[13] So that is the second type of knowledge.
Acquired
Knowledge
The
third type of knowledge is what is known as Acquired Knowledge. This is the type of knowledge that we are
more familiar with in personal experience.
The idea here is that in addition to the two type of knowledge [???]
that are present from the start, Christ also acquired knowledge during the
course of his lifetime. What is known in
this way is not all unlimited--it is certain things and not others. If you think of it in personal terms you will
notice that in the Beatific Vision [???] Christ knows all people in all times
and places. Similarly, infused knowledge
can also be extended to the same scope.
Acquired knowledge is more limited [than the other two type of
knowledge]. The acquired knowledge is
going to be a knowledge of the disciples or various other people in [Christ's]
own time and place, but no one would say that Christ has acquired knowledge of
us [or people in generations after his earthly life].
Luke
2:52
There
are two answers as to why theologians attribute acquired knowledge to
Christ. One is a Biblical reference in
Luke's infancy narrative. Luke
2:52 reads: "And Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature, and in
favor with God and man" (RSV).
For the major theological questions from this particular perspective,
the growth in stature (age) is not a problem; growth in wisdom and favor
(grace) is trickier (not trickier in the estimation of human nature, but it is
tricky in reference to God). [Growth in
wisdom] is taken to mean knowledge.
Since you cannot have growth with respect to the first two types of
knowledge, the position that is generally taken is that this acquired knowledge
is the only way that growth is still possible.
So this must be the type of knowledge that the Biblical text has in
mind. You can perhaps also think here of
the various places in the Gospels where Jesus asks questions and he gets an
answer. On the one hand he could have
been doing that as a pedagogical technique on his part (i.e., he really does
not need to know the answer) but if you take it in another sense you could say
that he is now learning with through acquired knowledge things that [he already
knew without form??]. That is a Biblical
argument for acquired knowledge.
Jesus
Fall Behind The Prophets?
The
other argument [in favor of acquired knowledge] is parallel to the argument for
infused knowledge. The basic point of
this second argument for the existence of acquired knowledge is the appeal to
the general principle that Christ is supposed to know everything in every
possible way. That just as there was the
idea that if he did not have infused knowledge that he would somehow fall
behind the prophets (which is inconceivable), so too there is the idea that if
he did not have acquired knowledge he would fall behind human beings in
general. And so since acquiring
knowledge is a good thing, it is attributed to Christ.
Let
me give you a concrete example of this third type of knowledge. Although Jesus certainly spoke Aramaic (and
perhaps Hebrew), there is a question about whether he also knew Greek. Without claiming to be able to settle the
issue, there a many exegetes who take the position that Jesus probably did know
some Greek (people in that type of situation had certain dealings with the
Roman authorities who spoke the public language of commerce). Contemporary scholars would hold that Jesus
had to learn whatever Greek he knew.
Those coming from the Scholastic perspective would say that Jesus
definitely knew Greek (but he did not "learn" it--in fact he also
knew English and Ukrainian, and all languages, as well). For the Scholastics, for someone to even
question if Jesus knew Greek borders almost on blasphemy--they would see such a
question as a rejection of the threefold knowledge as well as a rejection of
Christ's divinity.
Raymond
Brown And Modern Approaches
Those
are the three types of knowledge. Allow
me to give you a few Biblical passages that have a bearing on this material
(and at the same time raise questions with regard to it). First of all, there is obviously a tension
between this view and the view particularly held by contemporary theologians
(who are also exegetes of Biblical material).
Raymond Brown in an article that we will come to later in the
semester, observes that all modern Christology is based on the theory that the
human knowledge of Jesus was limited.[14] You can always find exceptions to this, but
in substance Brown's comment is correct--certainly this is true of typically
modern approaches. Modern (or rather
contemporary) approaches to Christology may disagree on the precise scope of
Jesus' human knowledge, yet [they do agree that] there is some type of limitation
that is much more significant than the what was conceived by a Scholastic
understanding of Jesus' knowledge.
We
will now examine a few of the items in the Gospels that give rise to the
questions about the knowledge of Jesus.
Bear in mind that from the perspective of the past authors of this
subject [that] the Gospels are seen as a rather direct record of what Jesus
said--that is not realistic or reasonable to expect Patristic or Medieval
theologians to say this is [???] redactional material. Those theologians were aware of differences
from one Gospel to another but they did not think in terms of modern
redactionary methods. However, even when
you take the Gospels as a direct record, you still run into opposing
tendencies. On the one hand, there is
New Testament material which attributes to Jesus extraordinary knowledge.
Some
Scriptural Examples
Allow
me to give you a couple of examples [of this] which are taken somewhat at
random. According to Mark 2:8,[15]
Jesus knows the secret thoughts of the Scribes.
In Mark 3:29,[16]
Jesus knows what sin will never be forgiven.
There are countless passages in the Gospels that attribute to Jesus an
extraordinary knowledge of God and a familiarity with God. You can think here not only of John but of
lots of places in the Synoptics--anytime that Jesus steps forward as a teacher
he is presented as someone who has something to say that is not commonly known.
Predictions
Of The Passion
Then
there are two specific types of material that should be mentioned
explicitly. The first type of
knowledge are predictions of the Passion. In other words, Jesus had a kind of advance
knowledge of his own personal fate.
See Mark 8:31,[17]
9:31,[18] and
10:33-34[19]. These
passages are located as Jesus begins his journey to Jerusalem and they mark
certain stages of development, in each case, during that journey. There are parallels of these passages in the
other Synoptic Gospels (the instinct in contemporary Biblical scholarship is to
look to the Markan text--the Scholastic approach was to look to Matthew). Mark 10:45[20]
is also a prediction of the passion. So
that is one type [of knowledge] on the part of Jesus--his advance knowledge of
his own fate. We should be a little more
precise on this point. These are
generally referred to as the Gospel Passion predictions, and they are that, but
most of them are also predictions of the resurrection (not necessarily
of the word "resurrection" but of some type of indication of
it). So the first type is that of Jesus'
advance knowledge of his own fate.
Eschatological
Statements
The second
type of knowledge are found in the eschatological statements. See Mark 13 and Matthew 25
(although this type of example is not restricted to those places in the
Gospels). Mark 13 is the Apocalyptic
Discourse and Matthew 25 is the account of the King coming on the clouds
to separate the sheep from the goats.
Mark 13 also contains the statement "even the Son does not know"
(see verse 32) but bracket that.
Abstracting from that, there is in all of this material revelation about
the end time--even if no specific dates are given. There is in this material a type of
prediction about what lies ahead in the future.
The
Church
There
is one final example (a third example, but not as significant as the two
examples just cited above) that also has to do with the future, but not the
distant future. There are very few
references that are explicit with regard to the Church. One example of such a reference is found in Matthew
16:17-19[21]. This passage is a prophecy in a sense, but
implies on Jesus' part extraordinary knowledge of what lies ahead. The aspect in this passage that is important
is that "the powers of death shall not prevail against it." This statement presupposes extraordinary
knowledge on the part of Jesus (a prediction of what is going to happen). The segment that reads "you are Peter
and on this rock . . ." is a statement of future intention (we all
make statements like that--"I'm going to do such and such") and does
not presuppose any extraordinary knowledge in itself.
With
a lot of this (examination of the knowledge of Jesus portrayed in the
Scriptures) you can raise various historical questions with regard to the
individual texts, but this body of material as has been mentioned so far
(examples of extraordinary knowledge on Jesus' part) would have to be accounted
for in some way.
A
Limitation Of Knowledge?
The
other side of the coin is represented by Biblical texts which suggest a limitation
of knowledge [on the part of Jesus].
The best examples here can be found in the apocalyptic discourse
of Mark 13:30-32[22]
where there is really a juxtaposition of extraordinary knowledge about the
future and certain limitations in knowledge about the future. This passage has a combination of different
things in it. [Abstract here for a
moment from a modern critique of the passage]
Jesus
says in verse thirty that "this generation will not pass away before
all these things take place."
Although this statement perhaps did not pose problems at that time, it
does nineteen-hundred years later. You
can evade this problem in two ways. The
first avenue of escape is to say that "this generation" refers
to the whole human race in all of human history (although it is doubtful that
you could sustain such a theory in light of the rest of the chapter). The second avenue of escape is to relate
verse thirty simply to more immediate events such as the destruction of
Jerusalem and not the end of the world (but when taken in context of
chapter thirteen it is difficult to propose this theory). The difficulty that we face with verse thirty
is what at least appears to be an error on Jesus' part.
When
you get to verse thirty-two, Jesus says "not even. . .the Son." This verse is a self reference clearly
present in this verse. The sense that
not even the Son knows the day or the hour clashes somewhat with verse thirty
where it seems that Jesus does know the day and the hour. But even taking verse thirty-two by itself
[we find] an assertion of a lack of knowledge on Jesus' part. The way that has sometimes [been suggested]
as a way out of this [lack of knowledge] is to propose that this is some type
of "mental reservation" on the part of Jesus. I would note that in verse thirty-two, the
way in which the formulation is put, "no one knows, not even the angels
in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father," implies that the Son
knows more than the angels in heaven--though still not this. So even in this statement of not knowing,
there is an extraordinary claim to knowledge in general.
Modern
exegetes are likely to say that in this passage we have some influences of the
early Church and that we may have a bringing together of different strands of
eschatological material. [We can see one
example of this] in verse thirty, which is oriented on the immediate end of the
world. The second [example of this] in
verse thirty-two, an uncertainty about the time of the end of the world. This is one place where these types of
tensions might come together rather [???].
John
And The Synoptics
John
attributes more knowledge to Jesus than the Synoptics do. We can see this when the Evangelist reminds
the reader from time to time that Jesus does not really need to ask the
questions because he already knows the answers.
If
the reader goes through the Synoptics comparing parallel passages, he will
often find that the later texts modify this material--so that the overall
picture of Jesus' knowledge is more enhances in Matthew and Luke than it is in
Mark.
So
far we have raised the question [about knowledge of Jesus] in terms of specific
Biblical texts. We see that some texts
point to extraordinary knowledge and some texts point to a certain limitation
of knowledge.
Jesus
As Revealer
What
meaning does all this have theologically?
There are a couple of ways of getting at this, but I think that the
simplest way is to think of the basic Christian idea of Jesus as one who
reveals God (one cannot very well drop this from Christian understanding of who
Jesus is). A revealer who does not know
what he is talking about is not much of a revealer and if Jesus' knowledge of
God is no different from what you or I would know about God apart from Jesus,
then Jesus really is not of that much significance. Some sort of a sense in which Jesus is aware
of God, and a sense in which Jesus has a message to convey, seems to be
essential to Christian understanding of who Jesus is.
In
connection with what we have discussed above I would like to specify four
particular areas of question (although this is not an exhaustive list) about
Jesus' knowledge.
The
Question Of Jesus' Self Knowledge/Messianic Consciousness
First
of all, the question of Jesus' self knowledge. What did Jesus think of himself? The term that is often used for this (and it
is perfectly legitimate) is Messianic Consciousness. When we speak of Messianic Consciousness we
are considering if Jesus was aware of himself as Messiah. Very often you find literature on this
subject formulated in terms of the question of the self knowledge and
consciousness of Jesus (consciousness in the sense here of Messianic
Consciousness).
Do
not take Messianic Consciousness as restricted to the word in itself--that
would be the danger of limiting it too much.
But the question is rather, did Jesus think of himself as the
decisive salvific figure? How did
Jesus see his own position with respect to salvation?
There
are a handful of places in the Gospels where the question of the Messiah comes
up explicitly. The classic reference to
this is in Matthew 16:13 and Mark 8:27 where Jesus asks the
disciples in varying language "Who do people say that I am?" Jesus gets varying answers to this before
Peter gives the confession, "you are the Messiah!" Jesus does not like the way that Peter
understands that but in principle he accepts the terminology.
There
is a whole body of exegetical literature which questions whether Jesus really
thought of himself in Messianic terms, or if the early Church attributed the
title Messiah to Jesus and then read back into his lifetime in passages of this
sort. It is because of that type of
issue that the terminology, Messianic Consciousness is what is used in a good
bit of this discussion.
Jesus
As The Decisive Salvific Figure
My
caution is to say that it is not just this title that is at stake [i.e., when
we question whether Jesus thought of himself in Messianic terms]. Suppose, for example, that Jesus never used
the word "Messiah" but thought of himself as "the Son of
man" as the decisive, final prophet like Moses, or Lamb of God, etc.,
(even without specific titles being invoked).
In the sense that one would think of those titles (etc.) theologically,
they would all fall under [the category of] the Messianic Consciousness (which
is a consciousness of being the decisive salvific figure). I think it is perfectly legitimate to think
of this [???] consciousness, but do not just focus on the word. The problem with using terminology like
"decisive salvific figure" is that you are not using Biblical
language, but the advantage to it is that you are not tying yourself so closely
to one particular term among many.
The
other side of the coin is that there were many different conceptions about what
the Messiah would be like. There are
ways of understanding [the concept of] Messiah, particularly political senses
of that term, which are not appropriate to Jesus. Jesus certainly did not think of himself as
Messiah in those senses. So to have a
Messianic Consciousness, in some respects would again go on a false
[???]--would be something that you would rather not have Jesus have (at least
from a Christian point of view). It is
no coincidence that when we speak of someone having a "messiah complex"
that that is not a compliment. This is
the danger with this type of terminology.
The
key issue (I think) is did Jesus sees himself as a definitive figure in God's
relationship with at least Israel, (if not the whole human race) or did Jesus
see himself in some much lesser category?
This is an historical question and I would offer the first of those
formulations (as definitive figure) [as an answer].
Did
Jesus Know He Was God?
Another way of asking the question "what did
Jesus think of himself" is "did Jesus know he was God?" This question pops up popularly. This is taking the same basic question and
putting it not in the Messianic category but in specific reference to the
Divinity. Biblically, this is definitely
not the best way to raise the question, because it does not use the terminology
that is appropriate for discussing the issues.
Also it seems to me that when the question is put in that form, that
there may be some Monophysitism floating around in the presupposition of the
question (how did he think of himself?).
There is there a historical problem.
There is no reason why [???] use Chalcedonian terminology but there is
also no reason to think that Jesus used Chalcedonian terminology to think of
himself. In a way here we are back at
the root problem. Someone coming at this
from the perspective that is summarized by Raymond Brown, (but not
limited to Brown) that Jesus' human knowledge is limited, is not likely to put
the Chalcedonian formulation in the content of Jesus' knowledge but a Scholastic
would. If you hold, as Brown does, that
Jesus' human knowledge is limited, then you would agree that Jesus did not know
in advance what Nicea, Ephesus and Chalcedon would teach (in this case, it
would be difficult to proclaim that Jesus knew that Mary was the Mother of
God). If you take this from the
perspective of the Scholastic position, you would say that of course Jesus knew
all of this because it is all true (Jesus did not speak in these terms, but
there is no reason why he could not have done so). But the question "did Jesus know he was God"
does not let you get at the issue accurately.
Jesus'
Knowledge Of His Own Personal Fate
The
second area (after the first area of Jesus' self knowledge) but closely
related, is what of Jesus' knowledge of his own personal fate? (i.e.,
his death and resurrection). You can
think here concretely of the passion predictions. You can also think here in more general
terms--did Jesus start out his public activity knowing what the end would be
like? Should we think of Jesus saying
"the Kingdom of God is at hand" [meaning that it will happen
after he is crucified and rises from the dead] and that the Kingdom will not
come until after those things have happened?
Did Jesus mean "repent and believe in the Gospel, and if you all do
repent I will not be crucified?"
Are there conditions to the to coming of the Kingdom that Jesus does not
mention (if indeed he has such things in the "back of his
mind")? Most people do have a
certain amount of foreknowledge about self--we have a sense of what we will be
doing later this day or even about a big expectation that will occur about a
year from now, etc., but at this moment we probably do not know what we will be
doing on, say, January 31, 1998 (the further away the date the fuzzier the
foreknowledge). Was this also true of
Jesus or was it the case that Jesus knew precisely what was going to happen
right up to the end? The Scholastic
position is the latter (Jesus knew precisely what would happen right up to the
end). The position typically taken by
contemporary theologians is that Jesus did not know what would happen (but this
does not mean that he was ignorant of what must happen--his sense was
comparable to my knowledge of what must happen). Jesus knew that what he was doing was
dangerous, but that is not the same thing as saying that he knew he would be
arrested at such and such a place on such and such a day. From a modern point of view, you might not
want to say that Jesus' advance knowledge is constant throughout his life
because it is quite possible that his knowledge of his own fate grew as time
went on and as he developed. This is a
second area where the question of Jesus' advance knowledge has theological
significance.
Jesus
And The Eschaton
The
third area (the one from which most of the illustrations so far have been
taken) is taken from eschatology.
Here the question is: "What did Jesus think about the end of the
world?" Or "what did Jesus
think about the Kingdom of God with is various [???] dimensions?"
The
fourth area asks the question: "What did Jesus know about the Church?" This question is not asked in the sense of
Jesus' gathering of followers during his life (he certainly did that) but
rather, did Jesus think in terms of a society of some sort that would continue
after his death? Was this question within
his frame of reference? This question
about the Church is closely tied to Jesus' possible questions about death (on
the one hand) and the end of the world (on the other hand).
Karl
Rahner And The Question Of Jesus' Knowledge
To
address the questions above concretely would require looking at individual
texts (this is something that we will come back to later in the course). At this stage I would simply like to sketch a
general framework. In the following
section we will take a look a contemporary framework taken basically from Karl
Rahner[23].
Before
I get to the specifics of Rahner's position I want to point out a commonplace
issue in Rahner that tends to be overlooked sometimes. It is important to remember on this issue
that we are not faced with the alternative of saying that Jesus knew everything
that the Scholastics attributed to him, or of saying that Jesus knew nothing
more than what the average person knew in Jerusalem in the first century. There is a rather large middle ground and that
is what is significant in this discussion.
Sometimes, particularly at a popular level, when people come to the
conviction that the ideas that they have had (perhaps even since childhood) are
not accurate they tend to jump to the opposite extreme and think (for example)
that Jesus was a rather dumb person who knew nothing and that words were
attributed to him with no real basis in his life. That tendency to jump from one extreme to
another should certainly be avoided.
There is a large middle ground.
What
does Karl Rahner have to say about the subject Jesus' knowledge? First of all, he has some remarks on
knowledge in general. This is not an
exhaustive epistemology, it is just a reference to three points that Rahner
makes.
Rahner's
Critique Of The Scholastics
The first
point that I would like to mention is Rahner's critique of one aspect of
the typical Scholastic understanding of knowledge. He says that the presumption in much of this
discussion is that one speaks best of knowledge by thinking of knowledge of
individual things or individual persons.
This is done in such a way that you either have knowledge or you do
not--it is a yes or no situation (Rahner criticizes this view--which says that
you either know the answer to the question or you do not know the answer to the
question). When thought of in those
terms, Rahner says that the tendency is to think of knowledge in a rather
quantitative fashion. When one who holds
such a view makes the shift to Christological questions he will attribute to Jesus
the complete range of such quantitative knowledge.
Degrees
Of Knowledge
Rahner's
general point is that knowledge is more complex than this type of view
suggests. He would say that there are degrees
of knowledge and that it is not always a yes or no situation. He holds that you can have a general sense of
something. Rahner holds that there is
even a sense that something can be known and unknown at the same time.
Let
me give you two examples of this. The first
example is something that we run into all the time--think of a situation in
which you are trying to express something but are finding it hard to say
exactly what you want to say (you cannot find the right words)--not just that
the person with whom you are speaking is having difficultly understanding, but
you are having trouble articulating what you want to say. Rahner's position is that in a situation like
that you have the knowledge of something, but you also do not have a fully
clarified knowledge of it--you struggle to find a way to formulate your
knowledge. In this example the effort to
formulate is also not just a matter of communication but also a matter of
clarifying things in your own mind. You
can see this sometimes when you try to write something down and you cannot do
it--if you eventually manage to struggle through and get it on paper you will
have a much clearer picture of things in your mind as a result. That is one example, that there can be
degrees of knowledge and that you can have a general sense of something about
which you do not yet have explicit knowledge. Very often Rahner will speak of an explicit
or thematic knowledge--that latter is distinguished between un-thematic or
more global awareness. That is the first
example.
The second
example is one that Rahner seemed to always use. Although it is not entirely clear why, he
would use the following example whenever he spoke about our knowledge of
God. Rahner always spoke about learning
something about God on the one hand and the opposite example was of a school
child who learned something about Australia.
In the instance of Australia, it was Rahner's position that at first the
child simply did not know of the existence of Australia at all, then he learned
it and from then on knows it. That is a
transition from lack of explicit knowledge to explicit knowledge. In the instance of knowledge of God, Rahner's
position is that that is not the same thing (as learning about Australia). It is not that you learn about another item
of information that you never had anything to do with before, but rather there
is introduced a greater clarity and a greater explicit knowledge than was had
in the past. In the instance of
knowledge of God, one does not move from complete ignorance to a new item of
information, but rather are coming to a greater degree of knowledge (or a greater
degree of clarity). A similar point
might be made with regard to knowledge of self.
From time to time we may learn things about ourselves that we did not
know before hand (e.g., items of information from childhood or more personal
information about how I react in certain situations such as crises). Unless you imagine a very unusual
psychological condition, it is not that at some point at the age of twenty-five
I suddenly learn that I exist. This is
not a movement from complete ignorance to thematic knowledge--even with regard
to the more personal things. That is
another example of the fact that the explicit thematic knowledge is not the
only type of knowledge that there is and that in at least some instances, the
opposite of explicit knowledge is something other than total ignorance.
Self
Knowledge Is Complex
The second
point which really goes with the first is that personal knowledge of the
self is also quite complex. There is
an awareness or consciousness of self that goes along with knowing and doing
things. This is not the same as
introspection or trying to make myself the explicit object of knowledge. From time to time, we may have the occasion
to make ourselves the explicit topic of our attention, and there is nothing
wrong with that (as long as it is not a preoccupation), but that is not the
only or most basic form of self knowledge.
This knowledge of self as subject (knowledge of self as knower--as the
agent) is always greater than what we can say about ourselves. There is always a consciousness there that we
cannot put into words--either to ourselves or to others. Some people are more adept at putting this
into words than others are but no-one can completely convey one's self knowledge
in explicit, thematic statements. This
is probably true with regards to knowledge about other people. In a sense, the more important thing is the
basic self-awareness. Putting this into
words can be very important in certain situations (such a thing is not to be
dismissed) but efforts to put this into words always draws on self
consciousness that is deeper and greater than what can be put into words. You always know more about yourself than you
can say to another person. You certainly
know more about yourself than you ought to try to say to another person (and
the degree to which you would want to speak about this to another depends
enormously on who the person is, what the setting is and etc.). Transfer this to the person of Jesus. There would have to be a sense of
self-knowledge on his part that cannot be put forward in words and certainly
cannot be reduced to the words that might be used to express it.
We
will pick this up from here in the next class.
Christology
February 5, 1991
Rahner's
Treatment Of The Human Knowledge Of Christ
Let
us look at the human knowledge of Christ from Karl Rahner's
perspective. I have mentioned certain
aspects of Rahner's theory--the last one is that we have a certain knowledge of
ourselves as subject, as knower and as self awareness that is not restricted to
our explicit knowledge about ourselves.
We can and do try to express that in explicit form, but there is always
a greater depth to what we know about ourselves than what we can put into
words. That difference between what we
know and what we put into words, is the difference between a kind of unthematic
knowledge and an explicit knowledge. It
is not really a difference between ignorance and knowledge. The explicit, thematic knowledge is something
that can grow or decline over the course of a lifetime. It is influenced by events in life which may
facilitate or impede such expression. It
is dependent on the vocabulary and language that is available (this is a bit
tricky because it is always possible to modify the vocabulary and language and
use it in new and creative ways--but even when one does that he is dependent on
what is culturally available). You can
take a certain step with it (even a significant step with it), but a person
does not start off with a blank slate.
That is true of all of us and would also be true with regard Jesus. Another way of saying this, specifically with
regard to Jesus, is that the Biblical heritage and the broader cultural picture
of the day was very influential. These
influences did not determine exactly how he thought about himself but they
provided a storehouse of ideas and concepts which could be used creatively both
in his self understanding and his [???] about himself to others. We will come back to this point.
Limitations
Are Not Imperfections
The
last of the preliminary points (the third and final point) that Rahner makes is
the idea that limitations of explicit knowledge are not necessarily an
imperfection. What Rahner is getting
at here is the principle underlying much of the Scholastic argumentation (that
this sort of thing is good, therefore more of it is better and since Jesus is
perfect, he must have had all of it).
Rahner's point is that lack of knowledge about some things, including
lack of knowledge about what lies ahead in our own lives, can be a factor in
creating meaning for the exercise of freedom.
Allow me to flesh this out a bit in a way that Rahner does not develop
here but that he does develop in some of his other essays in more general
(i.e., Rahner's reflections on freedom).
Rahner
makes the point that whenever we exercise our freedom in the sense of making
some specific choice, we always do more than what we foresee--that the effects
of our acts always have repercussions that are beyond our vision and beyond our
control. We see some effects,
particularly the immediate effects, but a lot of the long-term effects we
simply do not know and can never foresee completely. From Rahner's point of view this is a
limitation that is inherent in being human, but it is not an imperfection as
far as being a human being is concerned--it is not wrong, or it is not a
deficiency that we as individuals do not know precisely when we are going to
die. In the same way, it is not a
deficiency that we do not pin down the day or the hour of the end of the
world. If you ever had a situation where
you could pin it down precisely, then the sense of expectation (the sense of
always watching or of always being prepared) vanishes. The nature of human living, the nature of the
human being's individual history would be altered. You may get some circumstance where an
individual [is effected because he is] aware that he is going to die in the
very near future because of health or some other threatening situation (this
was true even of Jesus when he neared the end of his life). A person aware of an imminent death is not
the same as a three year old who knows that "eighty two" years from
now he will die in Florida etc.[--such a three year old would not live out a
normal human life if he had such knowledge].
Rahner's
Challenge To The Scholastic Theory
Rahner
challenges here one of the philosophical presuppositions of the Scholastic
theory which led them to attribute to Jesus something that they considered
good, but which Rahner thinks would cut at other human values (in the sense
human [???]).
God's
Foreknowledge Vs. Human Foreknowledge
The
difference between God and the human person with regard to God's foreknowledge
is precisely that--it is God's (not yours and mine). If I already know in advance what I am going
to choose, then I would get to a point where I do not choose anymore (because
it is all laid out). This is so because
my foreknowledge of myself has an effect on my choice. My choices would become more like playing a
part in a play. In a play, an actor
chooses to recite the lines appropriately--in such a case, not only does he
know what he is supposed to say, but also what he actually will say. The actor, in such a case, does not have the
ability to depart from his predetermined lines.
The
Gospels remind us that we know not the day nor the hour (i.e., the end
of the world)? The fact that God knows
the day and the hour does not undercut the situation of eschatological
tension. If we know the day and the
hour, then history loses its meaning (and I think something of the same sort
would apply to individual knowledge).
The
Less You Know, The Freer You Are!
Rahner
does not take the position that the less you know, the more free you are. If you do not have a certain degree of
knowledge, then you are not really in the position to exercise your
freedom. On the other hand, suppose that
you knew (not in a general sense, but very explicitly) what you are going to do
and what will happen at every single moment in your life. It seems to me that such a situation borders
on the definition of "hell" (if such were the case, then there would
never be any element of surprise, and probably there would never be any sense
of humor because humor is so linked with surprise and there would never be
anything that would catch you unexpectedly).
It
seems that there is a certain element of moving into the unknown which is part
of the exercise of human freedom--not into a blank void, but rather of stepping
into something with trust--there is an element of faith involved in this which
is left in a vacuum if everything is known in advance. I think that, in general terms, is what is at
the root of this.
I
think that you can go at this from a couple of different angles--I think Rahner
is rather certain that Jesus did not know all of this stuff and so he wants to
come to terms with that theologically and argue that this is not a
contradiction to the idea of Jesus' perfection--if you understand perfection
correctly.
Jesus
Developed Like Other Humans
[Allow
me to] put it in more abstract terms.
Basically the people about whom we have spoken from the Patristic period
(the orthodox theologians) made the point that there is nothing lacking in
Jesus' divinity or humanity. [Lets stick
to the humanity question here] The
traditional emphasis has been that Jesus is not lacking any of the items that
go together to constitute a human nature (he is not lacking a human body or
even portions of anything human--such as the will, etc.) because in the
Incarnation the Word of God assumes a human nature and from then on remains
united with the human nature. Rahner
generally holds that that is true, but he says that we should also think of the
historical dimension of a human being.
He says that not only about scope of human history from beginning to end
but also about the present also. We
should take into account the fact that human beings are not born as
adults. There is in every human life
(provided it is not cut short) a process of growth and development. There are very significant differences
between a child and an adult, between a young adult and a senior citizen. What would be viewed as an appropriate
situation (as even a perfection) at one stage of life is not a perfection at
another stage of life. We do not expect
someone seventy-five years old to behave like a teenager, and if that would
happen we would say that something is wrong (i.e., a failure to mature). Conversely we do not expect a teenager to
behave like someone seventy-five years old.
Rahner says that the Scholastic perspective lacks the sense that Jesus
developed like other humans (and not just physically but also in a sense
spiritually).
One
piece of the picture for Rahner, when we talk about this question of knowledge,
is that explicit knowledge ought to be something that grows--not something that
is already in place from the beginning.
A five year old should have a self-awareness, but should not have the same
self-awareness that a forty-five year old should have (or a seventy-five year
old should have). When we put this in
Christological terms, that is Rahner's concern with regard to explicit
knowledge as far as self is concerned.
The
Vision Of God/The Immediate Vision Of God
Those
are the general principles. What does
Rahner say on that basis? First of all,
he does something terminologically which may confuse us somewhat (because he
uses terminology in a slightly different way than most people). He sticks with the word vision (or visio)
and says that there is a sense that we can attribute the vision of God to Jesus
throughout his life. I think what he
Rahner tries to do is stay as close as he can to the traditional vocabulary
(although he does not have much interest in infused knowledge). Rahner makes the point that immediate vision
of God need not be Beatific. If you
think, for example, of the crucifixion or as Jesus approached death (e.g., the
Agony in the Garden) that immediacy to the Father under these circumstances
(knowing what lies ahead and knowing that, at least in some sense, this is a
doing of the Father's will) can be quite a terrifying situation. And so, Rahner prefers to speak of immediate
vision rather than Beatific vision leaving open the question of just what the
effects of this vision are in particular circumstances.
A
Consciousness Of Unsurpassable Proximity To God
Secondly,
he says that you can mistake the Beatific vision as a kind of "face to
face looking" (in a too objectivized sense of looking at another
object). Rahner is not talking about
vision here in the same sense that the Scholastic theologians talked about
vision. What he means rather is a basic
consciousness on Jesus' part of immediacy to God. He means this in the sense of consciousness
of unsurpassable proximity to God. In
this sense, God wants Jesus persist in what he is doing despite the
consequences. This, however, as Rahner
understands it, does not provide explicit knowledge of individual events. It is a context in which individual events
are understood. It certainly can effect
the understanding of individual events in various ways (e.g., it can be a
source of confidence on Jesus' part despite what is happening). It does not give a piece by piece account of
what lies ahead. And so it leaves room
for growth in explicit understanding and articulation of these things. It leaves room for growth and knowledge about
self and growth in knowledge in what lies in store for him. That is another instance of another situation
with regards to self in which one is not going from ignorance to explicit
knowledge but rather developing some more explicit knowledge within a context
of a basic self awareness.
Does
Jesus Think Of Himself As Messiah?
We
can back to some specific Christological questions that this leaves open. Rahner takes the position that Jesus has this
consciousness of his relationship to God.
Does Jesus therefore think of himself as the Messiah? Rahner's position is that we must go to the
texts and see if there is historical information to sustain such a view (maybe
he did or maybe he did not, maybe he came to that type of understanding, maybe
he gradually found the title Messiah suitable with various modifications, maybe
because of the [???] of such modifications he did not). One way or the other, this question can only
be resolved by an historical investigation of the Scriptures and not by a kind
of deduction from Jesus' relationship with God.
I should add that in a lot of instances we are not in the position to
trace this type of development because the nature of our sources are such that
that is not possible--we do not have the kind of historical information we need
to trace all of this out. But the reference
point for Rahner is this immediacy of God rather than individual Biblical terms
or titles.
Vision
As An Aspect Of The Hypostatic Union
Let
me add in one further comment here that relates it more directly to some of the
things about which we have been talking.
We talked earlier about the hypostatic union and we also talked
about the vision. To most
Scholastic theologians, these are two distinct things. There is the hypostatic union and then in
view of who Jesus is (in view of his unsurpassable dignity as the Incarnate
Word) Jesus also receives you might say as a king of grace the advanced
Beatific Vision during his life.
Rahner's position is against that.
Rahner's position is that the vision, understood in the sense of
consciousness of immediacy with God, is simply an aspect of the hypostatic
union. His argument is that you cannot
conceive of the hypostatic union and yet say that the human nature is the
completely ignorant of that (this would reduce it out of the personal level
inappropriately). Instead of asking what
is appropriately added on (but still as a kind of extra), Rahner's question is
rather what is entailed in this? And so
he has a different kind of reference point for his argumentation (rather than
the principle that this is a good thing and so therefore Jesus ought to have
it). It is rather that this is part of
the unusual situation that is created by the hypostatic union.
Contemporary
Theologians Accept Rahner's View
If
you read contemporary theologians on this subject, you will find that most
Roman Catholic theologians take a position very similar to Rahner's point. They do not necessarily use his distinctive
terminology. They quite possibly do not
speak of vision and they may not say something like immediacy to God,
but they do speak of some sort of distinct consciousness on Jesus' part of a
relationship to God. Some, to a greater
extent than Rahner, prefer to put this in Trinitarian terms (they speak of relationship
to the Father) and Rahner tends not to do that and that has been criticized
with regard to his point. The basic
point about Jesus' awareness of immediacy to God (without solving all questions
of individual items of knowledge) is why many theologians accept Rahner's
view.
Schillebeeckx
And Jesus' Abba Experience
As
an example of a similar position, but with quite distinct terminology, we can
study Edward Schillebeeckx's idea of Jesus' Abba
experience. There are three places
in the New Testament where the word Abba appears (in Greek
letters but an Aramaic word) which is an intimate word for
"Father." There are countless
places in the New Testament where Jesus uses the word Father for God (which
becomes Christian vocabulary for the first person of the Trinity). Many scholars have argued that Jesus' use of
this word is something very significant and perhaps even distinctive about
Jesus to use this form of reference with regards to God. There are a few places in the New Testament,
where the Aramaic is used, and this has led some authors (Schillebeeckx in
particular) to adopt that as a way of characterizing Jesus' specific
understanding of his relationship to God.
Schillebeeckx has his own way of fleshing this out--and it must be
remembered that his argument on this point is not an appeal to a handful of
texts (particularly since there are only a few of them). Schillebeeckx effort is to try to say that
this is a shorthand way of expressing something that is reflected throughout
the whole of Jesus' life--that he has an awareness of who God is and how God
contrasts with the evil of the present situation. The focus on evil that is reflected in
Schillebeeckx is not as strong in Rahner, but the first half of that--Jesus
awareness of who God is, in a kind of pre-thematic sense that is then
articulated in various ways fragmentarily throughout Jesus' life--is something
that is common in the perceptions of both theologians.[24]
Biblical
Language Vs. More Abstract Language
Allow
me to note something here with regard to Schillebeeckx and Rahner. Notice how with the issue raised above
Schillebeeckx opts for more concrete Biblical language than that used by Rahner
to express his point. We will see this
again in other places. There is an
advantage to Schillebeeckx's choice. His
choice sounds more appealing [or more down to earth] (at least if you can by
the use of the Aramaic). Schillebeeckx
is not likely to use a Rahnerian phrase like "Jesus had a consciousness of
unsurpassable proximity to the whole mystery who he called Father" (to
many, such a phrase seems distant and unspiritual). On the other hand there is also an advantage
to Rahner's use of language. Rahner
language is less closely tied to one specific Biblical term and less likely to
suggest reliance on an individual passage or individual line of
interpretation. Schillebeeckx, in the
issue raised above, was not necessarily doing that, but the danger of being
concrete on matters of that sort is that the concrete terms favored by exegetes
today may not be the concrete terms favored years later. [The language that] is operative in a
particular exegetical context now is likely to sound dated more quickly than
the more abstract language. In any case,
in the example cited above, we can see that there is basic agreement on the
question of the scope and nature of Jesus' knowledge.
Criterion
For Testing Various Positions
How
do we choose [between the] positions like Rahner's or Schillebeeckx's and the
positions traditionally upheld by the Scholastics? If you give a fair hearing to both, sometimes
it is not that easy to choose. The
criteria that one would want to test are the following. The first would be faithfulness to
Chalcedon and the second would be the ability to account for the
Biblical data. It is tricky to
account for the Biblical data because different people interpret that in
different ways. You can ask which of
these alternative positions (although I am not distinguishing here between the
relatively slight differences between Rahner and Schillebeeckx) do justice to
the whole of Jesus' life. Can you, on
the basis [of the particular approach], produce a reasonable account of what went
on? The test would be in the exercise of
trying to do that. I think that it is
largely on the basis of the second criterion that most contemporary authors opt
toward some variant of this modern position--often with explanations that this
is not contrary to the Chalcedonian teaching.
On
the specific question of Christ's human knowledge most authors at the present
time (including Rahner and Schillebeeckx) would be inclined to say that the
traditional position (the Scholastic position) is not faithful to Chalcedon
(though it claimed to be) because it produced an unauthentic picture of the
humanity of Jesus (i.e., a kind of false divinization of his humanity). The question to be asked of the Scholastic
position is also can they make sense of the Biblical material on that
basis. Is it, for example, sufficient to
speak of a mental reservation on Jesus' part [with regards to his knowledge].[25] For the Scholastics, much of the Biblical
material is seen as an obstacle to be gotten around.
[In response to a question from the class] In
speaking of two natures in one person (divine nature and human nature) we must
avoid thinking in terms of what Paul Tillich has called "the two
blocks of granite." I think
that this is a first step (i.e., not to think of divine knowledge as a somewhat
large human knowledge). Secondly, I
think that this particular question with regard to limitation of knowledge is
parallel with other questions with regard to Jesus (e.g., how can he really
die, how can God become flesh in the first place, etc.?). In some ways, I do not say that you start
initially with the assertion [???], but you have reasons to say that this is so,
but in the process of saying it you do not forget other things that you have
learned about Jesus. I am saying that
you start with this figure who has a certain history and you confess with
Chalcedon that this person is the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity and so
on. But when you say that, you do not
forget what you know already--what you know in other ways about him. We speak in our own sense about relationship
to God and through grace a certain participation in God's life. Through revelation we speak of a certain
sharing in God's knowledge but without using a sense of limitation--it is not
quite the same thing with regard to Jesus.
There is always the danger of seeing the human nature and divine nature
as competitive--and then somehow the divine nature with supercede the human
nature rather than unite it together. Let
us leave this question for now--we may in some respects come back to it later
with some very concrete questions such as Jesus approach to death.
An
Initial Discussion Of Soteriology
Let
us move on here to at least start with our discussion of soteriology. There are a couple of differences here
between the situation in soteriology and the situation in Christology. First of all, we do not have here in
soteriology anything comparable to the official teachings of Nicea and
Chalcedon. It is certainly possible to
find affirmations that Christ's work was salvific and so on, but we do not have
kind of canonization or dogmatization of an individual understanding of
soteriology. As a result, historically
there has been a greater variety here than with regard to the person of
Christ. That may certainly be due to the
nature of the situation [???].
There
are developments in the Patristic period, but also developments in the Middle
Ages with regards to soteriology. During the Medieval period, the development
with regard to the person of Christ the was less significant (than with
soteriology) for representation of the Patristic thought.
Patristic
Soteriological Thought
Let
us take a look at the Patristic period.
What follows is somewhat unsystematic because there is no single
systematic position. Much of the
Patristic thought on this subject is developed in homilies that are related to
particular occasions and it is possible that the same author draws on different
themes and different imagery at different times (a great deal of the imagery is
taken from the Bible).
Rejection
Of Gnostic Dualism
The
first point here is a common theme against Gnostic thought. It is an objection of Dualism so that
there is the insistence that creation, in principle, is good. [Although this stance is against the
Gnostics], we can see the idea that there is a struggle between God and the
devil which results in a Divine victory.
In this sense, there are themes of conflict and opposition (thematic
themes), but not the idea that the world itself is evil in principle. So there is not a metaphysical dualism
(not that the spirit is good and matter is evil).
Salvation
Of, Not Escape From, The World
The
Patristic theologians did speak in terms of a struggle, but in speaking of the
struggle [they noted] that it is not a struggle between a good god and an evil
god (they held that the world is not the creation of an evil force). The implication, then, for redemption or
salvation, is seen in terms of salvation of the world, not escape
from the world (not release from some sort of imprisonment in the
world). [The Patristic theologians
believed that] there may be opposing forces, but they held that they are not
equal forces or anything approximating equal forces.
These
theologians had a sense that through sin the devil has achieved some sort of
false dominion in the world, but only in the sense that (in the Johanine terms)
"He came to his own home, and his own people received him not."[26] In this sense we see that although there is
opposition and conflict, when the Word became flesh he came into his own and
not into the sphere of a hostile divine or supernatural force. [We see then, that the Patristic theologians]
held an underlying anti-dualist position.
[The
discussion above focuses on] one of the various ways in which one of the issues
in soteriology is the relationship of creation and redemption. [In the argument presented above], redemption
is typically seen as an improvement--so it is better in some ways than things
were or would have been otherwise. But
the difference between the two is not the difference between evil and good, it
is between good and better. That is why
God, and particularly the Father, is spoken of as the Creator of Heaven.
The
Relationship Between The Old And New Testaments
The
second illustration [under this argument against the Gnostic position] is the
Patristic concern with the relationship between the Old Testament and the New
Testament. The Patristics held that the
New Testament is a fulfillment and is superior in a variety of ways than the
Old Testament, but they reject the idea that the Old Testament is the work of
another, different God. Many of the
Fathers struggled to try to express the unity of the two Testaments.
So
that is the first point--an anti-dualist position that states that while there
is a struggle, the struggle always takes place on the level of conviction that
creation is God's work and therefore good.
Allow
me to give a couple of more specific examples of soteriological positions. These are listed in arbitrary sequence and
different modern interpreters place different degrees of emphasis on one or the
other.
The
Notion Of Recapitulation
Let
us look at the notion of Recapitulation.
One important individual and key Patristic author here is Irenaeus of
Lyons (130-202 A.D.). There is also
Biblical foundation here in Paul.
The
Pauline Sense Of Recapitulation
Paul
sees Christ as the New Adam (see Romans 15 and 1 Corinthians 15). In Galatians 4:4 we read: "But when
the time had fully come, God sent forth his Son. . ."[27] This in a sense sums up the whole of
creation. The central Biblical text for
this is in Ephesians (note that several contemporary exegetes tend not to
attribute Ephesians to Paul). In
Ephesians 1:9b-10 we read: ". . .according to his purpose which he set
forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him,
things in heaven and things on earth."[28] This speaks of God's plan to sum up or unite
all things in heaven and earth in Christ.
The Greek word that is used here is Recapitulation which means to
give a new head to something. The
other place in the New Testament where the same theme is used is in Romans
where love of neighbor is said to sum up the law.[29] The passage from Ephesians is a different
type of reference but you can see something of the same idea behind it--that
the large body of material is recapitulated (summed up) in one. This type of approach to Soteriology [and
Christology?] places great stress on the Incarnation, but there is also
emphasis upon the Resurrection (Christ is the first born of the dead and
restores the life that was lost in Adam).
We can see how a number of these Pauline themes can readily be combined.
Reference
Points For Soteriology
Allow
me to offer a couple of comments with regard to this. Let us think first of possible reference
points for soteriology--they are: Incarnation, Public Life, Crucifixion and
Resurrection. The general thrust of this
first area, in the loose sense, is reference to Incarnation and Resurrection
with a bit more stress on the theme of Incarnation. You can see a link between this theory and
the principle mentioned earlier, "what has not been assumed is not
redeemed." The full human
nature that is assumed in the Incarnation is redeemed through that association
of Christ, the New Adam. Notice that the
terminology is not juridical here (I do not mean to suggest that juridical
terminology is necessarily bad, I am just noting that it is a kind of
ontological transformation that is envisioned).
Notice also the understanding of salvation that is present. We can describe this understanding of
salvation as divinization or participation in divine life. In this sense, overcoming death and conferral
of new life in the sense of participation in God's life is the focus--it is not
a focus primarily on forgiveness of sin.
You can link it with sin, in the sense of overcoming the consequence of
sin, but the vocabulary in the foreground is one of participation in God's life
rather than forgiveness of sin and guilt.
Christology
February 7, 1991
The
Theology Of Salvation/Why Did God Become Man?
We
were talking the other day about different themes in Patristic
soteriology. We saw that Patristic
soteriology was not really incorporated into a strict theory at that stage.
The
Notion Of Ransom
The
third theme to mention with regard to Patristic soteriology is the idea of
Divine triumph over the devil as a particular development of the notion of ransom. This notion is found in the Gospels. The theory then developed that this was a
ransom offered to the devil. The idea
behind that was that the devil had acquired a type of dominion over the human
race through sin and that the devil was willing to exchange that for
Christ. In this sense, the devil seemed
to be victorious at the time of the crucifixion (that is the point where the
ransom is offered) but then was surprised to find Christ rise from the dead on
Easter Sunday. According to this theory
the devil is completely overcome by the Resurrection. This theory is perhaps a little tricky, but
it is never-the-less a popular explanation of salvation. Although a good number of the Fathers of the
Church accepted this view, it was not universally accepted. Gregory of Nazianzen (329-390 A.D.) in
particular, thought that it was blasphemous to think of God as engaged in this
type of deception. One more concrete way
of putting that is the imagery of Christ as the bait in which the devil swallows
and is caught. In that context, I would
like to read a bit from a homily that is contained in the literature attributed
to John Chrysostom (344-407 A.D.) but is not one of his homilies (the
author in fact is not known). In the
homily the author envisions Christ speaking to himself planning out what he is
going to do. The texts reads:
"The
devil saw me perform many signs, how I healed illnesses with a mere gesture,
how I expelled legions of demons with a word.
From such deeds he must have known that I am God's Son and must realize
that my death on the cross would mean his destruction. What shall I do? Like a skillful fisherman, I will present
myself as cowardly, pretend to be afraid of death, and say `Father if it be
possible, let this cup pass by.' If a
fisherman casts his line into the sea, but does not bait the hook and from time
to time cause the worm to wiggle by moving his hands fish will not strike. I will conceal the hook of my divinity with
the worm of my body. I must behave like
a worm and say `I am a worm and no man.'
He will swallow me as a man and in his stomach he will find in me the
power of God."[30]
You can take this passage in
one sense as a kind of popular presentation of a certain theme, but if you
start pushing those themes more strictly, the Incarnation becomes basically the
vehicle of concealment--the humanity's way of allowing the divinity to be
present surreptitiously. In such a case,
the Agony in the Garden can be viewed as role playing between Jesus and the
Father (the whole thing being that someone who is not supposed to be
overhearing [the devil?] will in fact overhear it). According to this theory, Divine action in
Christ, and Christ's own action, is basically designed to deceive. It stops short of an outright lie (because
you cannot have that) but it is an effective deception. It is only through the effective deception
that salvation is brought about.
Although popular, this is a questionable line of thought. Later this particular theory will be
criticized very strongly. The criticism
of this theory does not question the ransom notion itself, but rather the
conception that the devil has a just claim, and that ransom is rightly offered
to the devil in a deceptive way to overcome the devil.
Deception?
Explanations
that use this type of vocabulary are not necessarily deceptive but those that
are deceptive typically do not see the ransom or expiation as offered to the
devil. It is when the offer to the devil
comes into the picture that somehow then the deception becomes part of the
picture. In such a case, there is
deception because the devil takes the bargain but does not get that for which
he bargained (or he seems to get it at the Crucifixion but then that is undone
by the Resurrection). It seems to me
that there must be some element of deception here as long as the reference
point is the devil.
Divine
Education In And Through Christ
The
fourth point is from a rather different perspective. This point is the idea of Divine education of
the human race in and through Christ.
Now here the orientation is more on the public life of Christ--his
teaching, his example. Let me give two
illustrations, both taken from Against Heresies, a work of Irenaeus
of Lyons.[31] Irenaeus writes that Christ wanted to become
our teacher so that through imitation of his works and performance of his words
we might have communion with him. The
second reference is somewhat similar. Had
the truth already been known, then the coming of the redeemer into the world
would have been superfluous. Notice in
that second passage how closely salvation and revelation are linked. The revelation of the truth is salvific. The revelation of the truth is identified
here as so decisive of what Christ does that if it were not for that there
would be put into this text something more [awful?].
I
must emphasize again that this fourth theme is not an isolated theory by
itself. The same people who talk in
terms of Divine education through Christ, also speak in terms of recapitulation
and perhaps also in terms of the ransom.
They do not raise the question, how often can these three things be tied
together into one unified conception.
The important contribution of this fourth point is that it can help
prevent the idea of recapitulation from seeming to be an automatic
process--because if there is a need to act on the basis of what Christ has
revealed (i.e., on the basis of what he has taught).
A
Diversity Of Approaches To The Theology Of Salvation
There
are differences of judgement among different historians of soteriology as to
just how much emphasis should be given to one or another of these themes of the
Patristic period. At this point, we are
not particularly interested in trying to adjust those competing
assessments. We are simply discussing
the diversity of approach to the question here.
[We have observed] a lack of one comprehensive theory, and the fact that
different approaches to the theology of salvation accent different aspects of
Christ's life in their perceptions.
Anselm
Of Canterbury
We
turn then to the Middle ages. We come to
one major figure in the history of soteriology in the person of Anselm of
Canterbury (1033-1109 A.D.). Anselm
has become the dominant figure in the history of Western soteriology. Anselm was a Benedictine who later became the
Bishop of Canterbury. His chief work on
this subject is Cur Deus homo (Why God Became Man).[32] Cur Deus homo is written in the
form of a dialogue and develops the notion of satisfaction. Cur Deus homo is not a
homily--it is a more technical and argued theological book. Anselm is interested in the theme of ransom
which was popular at the time in the West.
He picks up the idea of satisfaction (taking this terminology
from penitential practice and from theology of the sacrament of penance). Anselm rejects any notion of ransom being
offered to the devil. He emphasizes the
importance of Christ's human freedom and the importance of Christ's work as
man--to an extent, such an emphasis was not typical, at least in general, prior
to that time. Anselm, like the major
Patristic authors, also affirms the divinity of Christ (this is not disputed
and in fact is essential to his argumentation).
In his work, Anselm places an emphasis on what Christ does, whereas the
emphasis in at least many of the Patristic themes of thought is on God's
presence (i.e., God's presence is what is salvific). For Anselm, it is important that God be
present, but it is still also important that the human freedom of Christ be engaged.
Gustaf
Aulen/Gisbert Greshake
Before
I sketch the argument that Anselm presents, let me note that this shift is
fairly widely recognized but not always assessed from the same
perspectives. A Swedish Lutheran
theologian, Gustaf Aulen, the author of an [???] history of soteriology
in which he distinguishes various periods in the history of soteriology.[33] Aulen is very favorable to the Patristic
conceptions. He [believes that] the
Patristics accent the theme that salvation is God's work. Aulen seeks to revive that for contemporary
use. From his perspective, Anselm
represents a decline--a movement away from what ought to be. On the other hand, Gisbert Greshake,[34]
a contemporary German Catholic theologian, finds great value in Anselm (Gisbert
has treated questions similar to those of Aulen). Greshake thinks precisely that Anselm's
emphasis on the human freedom of Christ is an important contribution to the
history of soteriology. [Greshake
believes that this emphasis on the human freedom of Christ] has sometimes been
underestimated because people in later periods get lost in the specific [???]
form of Anselm's argumentation.
Anselm's
Desire To Answer Post-Chalcedonian Questions
What
does Anselm have to say for himself? The
form of the question in which he raises in his reflection is entitled "Why
did God become Man?" (Cur Deus homo?). So the question has to do with the reason for
the Incarnation. Now you notice in a
formulation like that, that Anselm very much stands in the tradition of Nicea
and Chalcedon--that line of reflection is assumed as valid. But Anselm is also aware of objections (by
non Christians) to Chalcedon--that this doctrine is unworthy of God, that it
improperly brings God down to our level.
Anselm is aware that further questions remain (post Chalcedon) that need
to be answered. He says, for example,
that he wishes to consider the objection of infidels who despise the Christian
faith because they believe it to be contrary to reason (the infidels, i.e., the
Muslims, think that the idea of birth, of suffering, of death, is unsuitable to
God). So what does Anselm do? He seeks to argue that far from being
contrary to God's dignity, the Incarnation is the only appropriate thing for
God to do.
Anselm
divides Cur Deus homo into two books. The first book deals with the argument that
without the Incarnation salvation is impossible. Secondly, in book two, he makes the point
that salvation is God's intention for the human race (and so it is quite
appropriate that God do what is necessary to bring about the desired goal). Let me sketch through the basic points of the
argument. Anselm tends to go into
certain side issue from time to time, which are interesting but which do not
concern us here (e.g., he has a section on whether the number of human beings
who will be saved will be equal to or exceed the number of fallen angels).
At
First, Anselm Desires To Leave Christ Out Of His Argument
The
starting point for Anselm is in some ways difficult to specify. He says, first of all, that he is going to
proceed in the first book leaving Christ out of view (as if nothing had ever
been known of him). The first book then
proves the impossibility of salvation without Christ. The second book, likewise as if nothing were
known of Christ, proceeds to argue the Divine plan of salvation and the fact
that this can only be brought about through Christ. The catch to this is that, while he is
leaving Christ out of view, he also knows what he has left out of view (i.e.,
he knows what he is looking for in the long run). Anselm does not hesitate to draw upon certain
Christian doctrines (particularly the doctrine of sin). So leaving Christology out of view is one
thing, but it is not the same as stepping completely out of a Christian
framework--though he does think that others might also be brought to accept
other parts of his [diagram?].
A
Disrupted Order In The Universe
Concretely,
Anselm advances the position that human nature is fallen and must be restored
if salvation is to come about. He says
that there is something wrong with the order of the universe. This problem has come through sin which
disrupts the order of the universe and which places on the human race an
infinite debt. If this situation is not
rectified, then there is no possibility of salvation. On the other hand, the human race, left to
itself, is unable to restore this situation--it is unable to repay the
debt. This is the negative side of the
argument which is basically the argument of book one of Cur Deus homo.
The
Quality Of Sin
What
is at issue here for Anselm, and is thrashed out in question and answer form in
his presentation, is that the way to measure the debt is to ask who has been
offended, who is owed something? There
are two ways of looking at sin. One is
to look at the material content of the misdeed.
When sin is looked at from this perspective, then in many cases the
issue might be something trivial (e.g., eating just a small piece of fruit in
the Garden). So if you look at it from a
material, and almost quantitative point of view, the real gravity of sin does
not come into the foreground. But if you
look at sin from a more formal qualitative perspective (a different perspective
than simply focusing on the content), and see that sin is an offense against
God, then the enormity of the misdeed becomes clear. Anselm keeps repeating throughout this stage
of the presentation that if you do not see what he is getting at, then you have
not yet grasped how serious sin is.
Because of the reference to God, sin and the consequent death and the
disruption of public order are infinite.
Anselm draws in part here from leading conceptions available during his
own time in history (e.g., to offend the king or ruler was a greater offense
than to do the same thing to someone else--and those who were not of the same
public standing, were not in the position to make good what had been done wrong
and had caused offense). These same
concepts are taken here and applied to God but then with the usual higher and
more complex level [of understanding].
Who
Can Restore The Situation?
The
question posed is, "why can't the person who caused the problem restore
the situation?" The answer here
is that while the misdeed is judged by reference to the one offended, any
effort at restoring the situation must be done by reference to the one who
authors restoration. And so, in the
personal, qualitative terms, no one who is simply a member of the human race
(who is simply a human being) is able to make the appropriate restoration. You need to add to that in this case, that we
do not really have anything that we do not owe to God anyway (so what could we
possibly do?).
As
long as the debt stays unpaid, the public order of the universe is disrupted
and salvation is impossible. Here it is
important to note that salvation is impossible in that situation not simply in
a sense of an extrinsic legal situation, but rather because as long as this
disorder exists, salvation simply cannot be present--it would be a
contradiction in terms. The
contradiction is to speak of salvation outside of restoration of order.
What
are the possibilities at this stage?
Below are a number of the questions that Anselm raises.
Can
God's Plan Be Frustrated?
What
about God letting things go? (e.g., things did not work out too well with
a lot of the angels nor did they work out well here). The problem with that for Anselm is that that
would mean that God's intention in creating the universe would be
frustrated. The purpose in creating
human beings has been to bring them to what Anselm calls "a happy immortality." It is not conceivable for Anselm that God
would set up to do something that does not work out.
Can
God Forget The Debt?
What
about the possibility that God would simply forget about the debt? In this case,
God would leave aside the question of justice and simply forgive. That, according to Anselm, does not work
either, because God's mercy is always a just mercy. A mercy that does not actually restore the
situation is not of much value. So the
question of justice cannot be pushed aside.
We
are left then with either punishment or satisfaction. Punishment is not going to be able to restore
the situation anyway, but there does not seem to be anyone who could provide
satisfaction.
How
can you bring about a situation in which order can be restored? Anselm's answer is that it can only be done
through the Incarnation. God must
become man in order to repay the debt.
It is here that, having become man, there is a certain solidarity with
the human race in which Christ participates.
And so Christ is able to act on behalf of others. [Because of this] the incarnation takes
place.
What
Is To Be Offered As The Satisfaction
Then
the question comes up, "what is then going to be the satisfaction?" or
"what act of Christ will be offered as satisfaction for sin?" Here we come to the idea that death is a
consequence of sin (Paul speaks in such terms).
And so since Christ is sinless, in principle he is not forced to die,
however he is still a human being who is able to die. Because of this, Christ can and does offer
himself in death to Father freely as satisfaction for sin. The principle that has been offered from the
beginning is that whatever is offered in satisfaction for a debt is measured in
quality by reference to the person who does the offering. Here the only time that you have someone who
is active in behalf of the human race, but who none-the-less is of infinite
value because the person is Divine. And
so, the death of Christ brings about the necessary satisfaction.
Let
us go back to the original question: "Is the Incarnation, and more
specifically the crucifixion, unworthy of God?" Anselm's answer is (on the contrary) that
this is precisely the Divine thing to do under these circumstances. This is God's way of bringing about the
original plan for the human race. That
is basically Anselm's theory.
Anselm's
Influence In The West
Anselm's
theory has been extremely influential in the West. It is not something that he had come up with
all on his own--obviously there are antecedents to that [in earlier stages of
Biblical and Patristic thought]. [What
is distinctive about Anselm's approach is his way of] working out in this form
and with this rigorous development of an argument. His theory caught on in the West and has been
the chief reference point for understanding soteriology since that time. There have been some criticisms and some
modifications and some in modern times who reject the whole theory. We will come to the modern criticisms
later. Perhaps it did not catch on the
East because of the lack of communication during that time (e.g., it was
written in Latin). Also, salvation as
forgiveness of sin and restoration of disturbed order is not the typical
Eastern perspective.
An
Objection To Anselm's Theory
One
objection that has often been raised about Anselm's theory is that it isolates
Jesus' death from everything else. It
seems that although Anselm links Jesus' death clearly to the Incarnation, it
does not link Jesus' death clearly to his public life. This raises the questions, "what is the
point of Jesus' life and why did he not simply come and die?" According to this critique, the rest of
Jesus' life does not seem to be intrinsic to the argumentation. We will come back to this later.
Development
After Anselm
A
word or two about the developments after Anselm. Thomas' position is important--he is in
general a supporter of Anselm. That, in
turn, was a factor in the propagating of Anselm's theory. But Thomas held that this is only one way to
argue why God became man--it was [an] appropriate way, but it was not the most
appropriate way (although we should be careful here with our use of
superlatives). Thomas' position is that
if God insists on full satisfaction, then you do need the Incarnation (because
there is no other way of gaining full satisfaction). But Thomas says, why God does require full
satisfaction--it is precisely through Christ's death (that is left as a mystery
of Divine freedom). The emphasis upon
freedom is carried even further in the thought of John Duns Scotus
(1266-1308 A.D.)--this is a concept characteristic of Scotus' thought in
general.
Thomists
Vs Anselmians
[Response
to question from the class] Anselm's
position is that the only way to [acquire restoration of a disturbed order] is
through the Incarnation--there is a certain necessity to all that. There are some conditions to that assessment
because there is nothing that compels God to create in the first place (it is
not a necessity from the start). Once
things get going, and once sin comes into the picture, then it is necessary
that the situation be restored. Thomas
does not think that Anselm's position sufficiently safeguard's Divine freedom
(and Scotus is even more convinced of this).
Thomas' position is that if God requires full satisfaction, then the
Incarnation and death of Christ are needed to accomplish that, but the
Thomists' say that that is only if God requires full satisfaction--as is
in fact the case, but there is nothing in the nature of the situation that
makes that necessary. Anselm, however,
was of the opinion [and I will put this anthropomorphically] that God must
require full satisfaction, because otherwise, the order is never restored and
God would be closing his eyes to something and that is not acceptable. Thomas does not think that God can be pinned
down to one particular way of operating--we cannot say that this is the
way that God must operate.
Allow
me to give a couple of examples of things that are considered questionable as
far as later developments are concerned.
There has been a tendency, in some modern (i.e., neo-scholastic or
popular) Catholic thought on the subject, to focus on the one hand very
exclusively on the crucifixion (and seeing that in isolation) and then
paradoxically on the other hand to say that because of the dignity of Christ's
person anything he did (any human act of his) could have been the decisive
redemptive act had God so willed it.
The
Significance Of The Crucifixion In Soteriology
The
first example, that I would like to give, is an illustration of the focus on
the crucifixion taken I think in a [???] way.
The example that follows is from twentieth century theologian, and
popular author, Karl Adam. In The
Son of God, Adam's popular work on Christology, he writes:
"His
ultimate object in coming was not to heal the sick, nor to work miracles, nor
to preach the Kingdom of God. These were
all only the externals of his Messianic activities. The true essence of his redeemership lay in
the purchase of our life by his death."[35]
There is a thrust behind this
that wants to say that it is not all the public life of Jesus--this is a
critique of liberal conceptions which brush aside the crucifixion. To the extent that this is that type of
critique, I think that Adam's point is valid.
But it is still a mistake to play two up against each other that way,
and to devalue everything that goes before the crucifixion as nothing but a
prelude to the Messianic act.
The
second example, in more technical Scholastic terminology, is taken from the Pohle-Preuss
textbook on Soteriology from the early 1900's.
The textbook reads:
"The
sole cause of our redemption is the Saviors' death on the Cross. Considered from the distinctive viewpoint of
soteriology, the Resurrection of Christ is not the chief cause, or even a
contributing cause of our redemption."[36]
Just as the passage from Karl
Adam has separated the Crucifixion from the public life of Jesus, in the Pohle-Preuss
textbook (from roughly the same period but in a different style of language)
the Resurrection is brushed aside (at least from this perspective). Pohle-Preuss go on to say:
"Each
and every one of Christ's actions, even the most insignificant, would have been
sufficient for purposes of the atonement.
Each and every action is by its very nature infinitely
meritorious."[37]
That is the odd
situation. On the one hand, there is an
exaltation of the Crucifixion in isolation as the salvific event. On the other hand, they are saying that the
Crucifixion, in principle, could have been replaced by even the most
insignificant act of Christ's life.
Because of the extreme abstraction, focusing on all of this as deeds of
Christ, the content is lost. You do not
find conceptions like these much in the present time. A contemporary publication by Daniel
Helminiak entitled The Same Jesus, is one book which has something
of a tendency in this direction.
Helminiak takes a very clearly Thomistic rather than the Anselmian
approach on the questions of the need for satisfaction, etc..[38]
The
Motive For The Incarnation
I
would like to touch on one final issue just very briefly--the later Scholastic
discussion on the motive for Incarnation. In a sense, this has already been Anselm's
question, but it is a question that comes into the picture more explicitly in
the later Scholastic period. There are
two answers to this question (about which the Scholastics never reach complete
agreement). The way of phrasing the
question is "would the Incarnation have taken place apart from sin
or would the Word have become flesh had it been not so?" This is a contrary to the fact raising of the
question--the Scholastics know this but they do it as a vehicle for getting at
the question.
The
Thomist Position
The
Thomist position on this (based on what St. Thomas himself held) is a negative
answer: The Incarnation would not have
taken place apart from sin. It is
recognized that this precise question is not raised or answered in the New
Testament, but the Thomists appeal to the fact that the work of Christ is
closely linked to the overcoming of sin.
The clearest liturgical position is in the Exultet of Holy
Saturday--which speaks of Adam's sin as happy fault (the necessary sin
of Adam). Sin is not necessary in the
sense that Adam is compelled to do it, but rather the idea is that because of
the sin it has worked out so much to the advantage (i.e., where sin abounds,
grace abounds all the more). In this
sense, we could say that in the long run, it is fortunate that it occurred
because it led to the Incarnation (otherwise it may not have happened).
The
Scotists' Position
The
opposite position is the Scotists' position--that the Incarnation would
have taken place anyway because the motive of the Incarnation was the
perfection of creation. Very often, the
Scotists' appeal to the Hymn of Colossians which says that "Christ
is the first-born of all creation. . . all things were created through him and
for him".[39] A part of what is at issue here is how
closely Christology is going to be connected to the overcoming of sin as
distinguished from how closely Christology will be connected to themes of
creation.
Christology
February 12, 1991
The
Thomists' Position About The Incarnation
Notice
that the effect of the Thomists' position is that the Incarnation is God's
response to something that God foresees, but does not will. So obviously God freely wills that the
Incarnation take place but to put it very anthropomorphically, he wishes that
it had not been necessary or that it had not come about. In one sense then, it is not part of God's
original plan but obviously you cannot think of an afterthought with reference
to God--but it is thought from the beginning as condition of something that
ought not to have been. The intention on
the part of God was creation, and then when sin and The Fall intervened, the
Incarnation then comes into the picture later.
The point is not simply that the Incarnation takes place later--that is
clear. It is only given this
interruption, that the Incarnation is freely willed by God.
The
Tendency Of Recent Theology--A Scotists Position?
There
is general tendency in recent theology (particularly among Roman Catholic
theologians) to take in effect the Scotist position on this matter. This is not necessarily done with Scholastic
terminology, but to link creation very closely to the perfection of creation
rather than focusing on the overcoming of sin.
One example associated with this is Karl Rahner. Rahner is explicit from time to time and
prefers this position. A position more
closely linked to the traditional Thomists position is the Christology of Edward
Schillebeeckx (O.P.). Schillebeeckx
is not as explicit about this in terms of a [heated dispute?] but Schillebeeckx
does persistently discuss Christology with reference to overcoming evil. Again, I do not wish to suggest that you can
put either Rahner or Schillebeeckx completely into these Medieval categories
(there are enough differences in their theologies that requires us to avoid
that). Basically they are along those
lines of thought and these lines of thought are divergent but respectable lines
of thought.
A
Distinction Between The Grace Of God And The Grace Of Christ
A
second comment I must mention with regard to those contemporary names, has to
do with a little oddity of Thomistic terminology which is a result of this
dispute. When Thomistic theologians talk
about a theology of grace (I think that you can see clearly that the
theology of grace is closely linked to the idea discussed above) they
distinguish between the grace of God and the grace of Christ. This is not a denial of the divinity of
Christ--and it is certainly their position that anything that is called the
grace of Christ is also divine grace.
What is at issue here is the issue of the offer of grace before The
Fall (i.e., the offer of grace to Adam and Eve). And while historically that offer before The
Fall may seem insignificant, because it was a very brief period of time, still
it is important for raising questions about the theology of grace and the
relationship of grace and nature. The
Thomist position that is reflected in this terminology is that prior to The
Fall, one can speak of the grace of God but not of the grace of Christ--because
there is no reference to the Incarnation.
Whereas after The Fall, one can speak of the grace of Christ--even prior
to the actual occurrence of the Incarnation (you could do that with reference
to the Old Testament) as restoring what has been damaged by sin. That is the Thomistic position. A Scotist will not make that distinction--he
will say that all grace is the grace of Christ.
[Question
from the class: When they that there is a grace of God and a grace of
Christ, are they talking about two different types of grace? Answer: Sometimes it is difficult [to
know]. Probably they did not imply that
[there are two different types of grace].
One difference is the question of effect--that there is an effect here
of overcoming sin that is not present in the other case. The most immediate reason is a category that
we may not use as much now as they did then--the category of death. But this raises the grace of Christ because
it is merited by Christ (through his life and especially through his
death. The grace of God which is
pre-Fall is not merited by Christ, and therefore cannot be called the grace of
Christ. You see this in much of their
terminology.]
The
Connection Between Christ And Grace
I
have one last comment on this with an advance apology that this might be
complicated (we will also come back to this later in the course). The issue is the connection between Christ
and grace. The question that is
raised presumes that when speaking about grace here that we are not talking
about Christ's relationship to the Father, but instead are speaking about the
offer of grace to others. I would also
like to abstract for the moment from the question, "how many others?"
(whether it is just some or all, etc.).
It would be typically held, I think by all theologians, that the
Incarnation (the presence of Christ in humanity) implies the offer of grace to
others (at least to some extent). In
other words, if you have a world in which the Incarnation comes about, through
God's free choice, then that must be a world in which the offer of grace is
made.
Does
The Offer Of Grace Necessarily Lead To The Incarnation?
[In
light of the above paragraph] the question that must be raised is, "can
that be reversed?" [Can it be
understood that] the offer of grace necessarily leads to or entails
Incarnation? The general position of
theologians, with regard to this question is no. The general position is that both the offer
of grace and the Incarnation are pre-decisions on God's part. If I can put this anthropomorphically, they
are separate, distinct decisions. The
traditional general position has been that while you could not have the
Incarnation without the offer of grace, you could very well have the offer of
grace without the Incarnation.
The
Thomists' Position
The Thomist
must say no to idea that the offer of grace necessarily leads to the
Incarnation. The Thomist takes the
position that the Incarnation is the remedy for sin, and that you not only
could have offer of grace without any intent of the Incarnation but you
actually did have from the very beginning.
The
Scotists' Position
The Scotist
is, in principle, free to answer yes or no to the idea that the offer of grace
necessarily leads to the Incarnation.
The Scotist position is that in fact the offer of grace has
always been tied to the Incarnation, but that does not commit the Scotist to
say that there is a sense that one is entailed in the other. The general answer usually given by the
Scotist, however, has also been no because of their very strong emphasis
on Divine freedom.
Karl
Rahner's Position
I
mention this at this stage simply as something to think about--because Karl
Rahner's position is that the offer of grace and the Incarnation are
inseparably linked together. That
position, that grace entails Incarnation, is a key element in Rahner's
Christology. If you take that element
out of Rahner's Christology, then you do not have his Christology anymore--this
is not just a side point. Notice that
even in the position that Rahner takes, the Incarnation is still free, because
the offer of grace is free--but this is not a kind of second freedom over and
above the offer of grace. The effort to
link grace and the Incarnation (or the effort to see the link between the two)
is a key element in Rahner's position.
A
Discussion Of An Article By Thomas Marsh
A
discussion of Thomas Marsh's article. . .[40] Allow me to read a criticism of Marsh's
article by Laurence O'Connor--which appeared in a previous issue of The
Irish Theological Quarterly!
O'Connor states:
"The
paper was a fine explanation of one strand of Christian soteriology which has
its basis in the New Testament (Jn. 3:16, 1 Jn. 4:9). What the paper and subsequent discussion
lacked was any serious evaluation of the main tradition of Catholic
soteriology which can be summed up in the words "Christ died for our
sins."[41]
O'Connor is obviously
critical of Marsh's paper. O'Connor's
answer says that he has gone too far in the other direction--that he has
underemphasized the suffering and death of Jesus.
I
think Marsh overstated his criticism of subjective and objective
redemption. I think that as a result of
that, he was not as able to deal with the question of participation [???] to
the extent that he might have been able.
That
marks the completion of our look at classical Christology and soteriology. We are now going to go back to pre-Classical
Christology.
Pre-Classical
Christology/The New Testament
Let
me turn here to the New Testament.
In a sense, what we are doing here is going back behind the classical
Christology and soteriology. We are
looking for two things in doing this. The
first is the question of what basis there is in the New Testament for the
Classical approaches to this subject (i.e., is there continuity? and are there
developments or materials that are not present in the New Testament or are
there matters that are quite foreign to the New Testament?). But secondly, we can also look to the
New Testament for other ideas that might not have been picked up in the
Classical developments but which might still prove very fruitful for
theological reflection. I emphasize that
because the tendency in Scholastic and Neo-scholastic recourse to the New
Testament is first interested only in finding the basis for their own positions
(so that a lot of the rest is just dropped aside) and secondly to [strain to]
find any possible basis for those positions--even sometimes forcing the texts
to reveal information that they really do not contain. The second of those criticisms (i.e., the
problem of reading things into the texts--proof texting) is rather generally
recognized now as not the correct way to go.
A
Contemporary Shift In Theological Reflection
The second
point concerns a shift in the theological climate. The key questions raised in the theological
literature in the first half of this century (leading up to the 1950's and even
into the 1960's) is how do we get from the New Testament portrayal of Christ to
the Classical positions (i.e., is there a basis in the New Testament for the
teaching of Nicea and Chalcedon). There
has been a shift in the theological reflection since that time. [Below we will look at the following
questions:] Is the shift that takes place justified, and how extensive a shift
is it?
The
Legitimacy Of The New Testament Portrayal Of Christ
Today
you will find a [devaluation of Christological understandings of the past]
(e.g., that of Oscar Collmann who tended to say that New Testament
Christology is a functional Christology and what comes later is an ontological
Christology--a development that he did not see as a positive development). Others might use the same terminology (e.g.,
the Lonergan school) but do see development as legitimate. In any case, my point here is that the
framework of the question there is the legitimacy both the New Testament
portrayal of Christ [and?] the portrayal of Christ in the early councils and
what follows from them. Those questions
are still legitimate and still occupy the attention of theologians today, but
they have been replaced in the forefront of theological attention by a
different question. [The new question
concerns] the legitimacy of the step from Jesus to the portrayal of Jesus in
the New Testament. This is a question
that is, in principle, influenced by modern Biblical criticism in a way that
was not the case in the past. This is a
question that comes into the forefront in Roman Catholic writing of a relatively
recent date. This has only recently come
into the forefront because it is only now that the impact of this Biblical
scholarship is being felt in Catholic Christology (i.e., during the past
twenty-five years).
Rahner
And The Legitimacy Of New Testament Material
With
regard to that, Karl Rahner observed that this is really the key
question. And that if the legitimacy of
this step is established, then the question of the further step from New
Testament Christology to the early councils is a comparatively simple one. The New Testament says that Jesus is the
Christ (and it uses all types of other titles for him) and it presents a
picture of his life as one in union with the Father (in the descriptions of the
various deeds, etc.). It is very common,
on the part of exegetes at the present time, to say that a certain amount of
this material originated in the early Church--that it is not simply a reporting
of what was immediately visible at the time, but that it was an interpretation
of Jesus from the perspective of the faith of the early community.
The
Meaning Of Biblical Legitimacy
What
I mean by legitimacy is [the question of whether or not] that portrayal
is valid or a distortion. This is a
questioning of the Scriptures in relation to the historical Jesus. Previous to modern Biblical scholarship, the
question of the differences (or the question of what is the relationship
between the events of Jesus' life and say the Gospels) is simply not questioned. In the past, scholars believed that what is
portrayed in the Gospels are records of the events of Jesus' life (though they
would admit that there is more to the life of Jesus than what is portrayed in
the Gospels). It would never strike
Aquinas, Anselm or Luther to ask if the multiplication of the loaves and fishes
was an actual historical event, or to ask if the various discourses are actual
records of what Jesus said (and so on).
The
point that Rahner and others make with regard to this is that there is
so much Christological content in the Gospels and in the writings of Paul, that
once you get that far it is not very difficult to make the first step. There is a great deal of terminological
refinement and a raising of certain questions that [establishes a
pattern]. The question is, "is this
legitimate?" A Christian will no
doubt say that yes it is legitimate (there is no doubt about that), but that
still does not [???] it would not have to be.
What
Is In The New Testament?
The
stage that we are looking at here at the moment is really this
stage--"what is in the New Testament?" We will go back later in the course for a
further study of the question of the life of Jesus. It is difficult to get at because we only
have to be aware of the difference between what actually went on at that time
and what we can still have access to today--almost by definition, to most of it
we will not have access. But this is a
question over which we still cannot be skip.
A
Warning Against Possible Exaggerations
I
have one last remark before we come to the writings of Paul. I have tried to stress, so far, the
importance of going back to the New Testament and the possibilities of finding
riches in New Testament Christology and that are not completely [obvious to us?]. I have also warned you against possible
exaggeration (e.g., occasionally one finds the opinion that if a theological
question was not raised in the New Testament that it cannot be a real question.
A
concrete example of this found in the writings of Irish Catholic theologian James
Mackey.[42] Mackey is inclined to point out that there
are certain trains of thought, certain types of argumentation, which the New
Testament authors do not raise or do not pursue (e.g., the New Testament
authors, in their treatment of the resurrection are usually less concerned with
apologetic argumentation than some later theologians). That is a legitimate point, but Mackey seems
to want to take it a step further and suggest that if the Biblical authors were
not concerned with something, then we should not be--and if the Biblical
authors did not address a particular question, then we should not use Biblical
material in an effort to get at the questions ourselves. In my opinion (Galvin), those implications do
not follow at all.
It may simply be that certain
questions were not present at the time the Biblical texts were written, have
subsequently taken on an importance which requires us to address them more
thoroughly at the present time. I do not
see any reason why we cannot use Biblical material in seeking to do that
(though obviously one must make appropriate allowances concerning the purposes
for which those texts were written).
The
Writings Of Paul
Let
us then turn to the writings of Paul.
Paul was the oldest of the Biblical authors. Our purpose here is not to give an exhaustive
presentation of Pauline theology or of Paul's Christology in particular, but
rather this is just to pick out a few points that are important for our
purposes.
Paul
Uses Very Little From The Words Of Jesus
First, a couple of remarks on the sources of Paul's
Christology. Paul's epistles give us
very little information about Jesus' public life. They also give us very little information
about the words of Jesus. There are
occasional places where saying of Jesus are cited or to which they are alluded
(examples of this can be found in the following passages: 1 Cor. 7:10-11[43],
and 9:14[44]). There is a passage also in 1 Cor. 11:23-25[45]
which contains a report of the Last Supper and the institution of the
Eucharist, but this type of material is very rare in Paul. The kind of traditional material found in the
Synoptics or the type of stories we find in John simply are not present in
Pauline epistles. Even with regard to
the Crucifixion and Resurrection, which are central themes of Paul's
Christology, Paul does not provide a Passion narrative, nor does he provide
information about the empty grave or stories of Resurrection appearances (he
mentions them, but does not present them in narrative form). Instead of drawing on that type of
traditional material, Paul seems to have two sources for his thought. One is his own conversion which is some
experience of the presence of the Crucified Christ in God's glory. It is difficult to get at this too
precisely--on the one hand, Paul was not present during Jesus' lifetime (and so
he does not have firsthand familiarity with things at that stage), on the other
hand, he certainly knew something about Christianity and the Church before his
conversion (he had persecuted the Church).
Paul's conversion is not a first acquaintance with Christianity, but it
is an adoption of a faith that he had previously opposed and persecuted. The focus of that conversion seems to be on
the death and resurrection (or death and exaltation) of Jesus. This is, at least, the Christological perspective
that is in the foreground of his writing.
Paul's
Use of Traditional Material
Secondly, Paul also draws on some traditional material, but
not the type of traditional material that contained information about Jesus'
life and activity. Instead, Paul makes
great use of material from the early Church (i.e., brief confessions of faith,
hymns, acclamations, and material of catechetical and liturgical origin). Paul feels free to adapt these materials for
his own purposes, but at the same time he preserves them sufficiently to make it possible to detect their presence
within he texts. A couple of examples of
this are as follows: Phil 2:5-11[46]
(the famous hymn of Christ's emptying of self) 1 Cor. 8:6[47],
and 1 Cor. 15:3-8[48]
(a passage we will be coming to again).
We see in Paul examples of a combination of traditional material, that
Paul has received and passed on a couple of times (even in a fixed
formulation), and we also see Paul's willingness to add comments of his own (e.g.,
the comment in 1 Cor. 15:6 about "most of whom are still alive"). There is a concentration on the death and
resurrection of Jesus in the material that Paul uses. It may be that such a concentration comes
from tradition or that that is a reflection of Paul's interest, but it may also
be that a concentration on the death and resurrection is typical of this type
of formula of hymn in the first place.
Christology
February 14, 1991
A
Continuation Of A Discussion On The New Testament
Today
I would like to go on with our discussion of the New Testament. Our purpose here is not to do an exhaustive
study, but rather to focus on certain characteristics elements. I have mentioned the sources that Paul draws
on in his Christology as reflected in his letters. I would like to say a couple of words here
about the content of his Christology which developed from that.
A
Pauline Christology?
Paul's
Christology is marked by a very strong consciousness of history in which the
present is very sharply marked off from the past on one hand, and the future on
the other hand. A future orientation
(eschatology) is central to Paul. To
that extent, there is a very close relationship with Jesus' own preaching
(which also stresses the future), but Paul's vocabulary and form of expression
is not the same as that of Jesus. The
Kingdom of God is not the term Paul uses--he speaks instead of the Day
of the Lord.
The
End Of The Ages And The Day Of Salvation
The
Day of the Lord is a time when we all appear before the Judgement Seat of
Christ (see 2 Cor. 5:10[49]). It is a day that will come like a thief in
the night (see 1 Thes. 5:2[50]). There may be a link with the Gospel tradition
in 1 Thes. 5:2 (the imagery of the "thief," however unflattering, is
used elsewhere). Everything is judged
with reference to this future which is completely beyond the human
control. The other side of the coin here
is that the present situation is very sharply distinguished from the past--that
in some respects it is linked more closely to the future than the past (and by
"past" here is meant what to Paul would have been the very recent
past). The following are a couple of
examples of this: 1 Cor. 10:11[51]
("the end of the ages has come") and 2 Cor. 6:2[52]
("now is the day of salvation"). A new situation for the entire world has come
about quite recently, through the death and resurrection, or exaltation, of
Christ.
Paul's
Theology Implies A Christology
Notice
that Paul's theology of history, with its strong eschatological component, already
implies a Christology (even apart from the use of any titles for Jesus) because
it is Jesus, and specifically his death and resurrection, which marks the break
between the present and the past--and in a sense at least the beginning of the
future. I do not want to overstate here
the idea that the future has already begun because Paul emphasizes so strongly
that we are also looking ahead. This
understanding leads Paul to portray the situation or the human race before
Christ in rather negative terms.
I have qualified that by saying "rather negative"
because the vocabulary that is used to describe that situation is not uniform
and somehow are not as negative as others.
Law,
Sin, Flesh, Death and World
The
characteristics of the situation before Christ are the Law (an example
of something that I would put in an ambivalent category because Paul recognizes
that the Law comes from God and at the same time Paul was critical of the Law
in various ways), Sin (this is purely negative), the Flesh and Death
(both of which are closely aligned with sin--the flesh here is what wars
against the spirit) and finally the idea of the World (not world in the
sense creation directly, but rather in the sense of forces that are opposed to
God. Let me give just one example from
Galatians 1:3b-4, which reads ". . .our Lord Jesus Christ, who gave
himself for our sins to deliver us from the present evil age, according to the
will of our God and Father."[53] Sins and an evil age are characteristic of
the former state--the state that for us Christ's death has overcome.
Life,
Justice and Reconciliation
The
description of Christ's act also uses widely varying vocabulary. It describes an act of obedience (i.e., an
act of love and an act of righteousness) in contrast to an act of
disobedience. This act brings about a
situation which is now characterized by in positive terms (I will give some
more concrete instance below). Some
examples of this new situation are Justice (or righteousness), Life
rather than death, and Reconciliation.
All of this, of course, is due to God's initiative (a constant emphasis
on Paul's part).
Paul
Did Not Write A "Pauline Christology"
So
far, what I have said has been developed by taking individual themes from
different sections of Paul's letters and listing them to characterize the
different situation. Paul, of course,
did not sit down and say, "I am going to write a Pauline Christology"
(that was not his style of expression, and he probably would not have been very
good at it had he tried). Instead, Paul
undertook to address very concrete conditions (and very specific problems) in
his individual letters. And so, there is
a danger in trying to understand Paul.
[This danger occurs] when we pull out individual themes from their
original setting. When we do this, we
get a certain understanding of the themes, but we also pull back from the
immediate setting from which another level of understanding can be achieved. I would like to sketch here just two forms of
Pauline argumentation to show how [a Pauline] Christology works in
context. The two examples that I will
take are Romans and 1 Corinthians. I
take these letters specifically because on the one hand, they are the major
Pauline letters, and on the other hand, they are rather distinctive in their
argumentation.
Romans
is a distinctive work. It was sent to a
church which had only heard of Paul--a church where he hopes to go, but not a
church which he has founded or otherwise influenced significantly (he is not
writing to people with whom he has dealt in the past). In the Letter to the Romans, Paul tries to
present himself, in advance, to a group which has heard of him but has not met
him.
The
Righteousness Of God
The
basic theological problem that he poses is how one is to find the righteousness
of God. Paul's answer is that the
righteousness of God is found in the Gospel (not in the sense of one of the
four Gospels, but rather in the sense of message of Jesus Christ). This is expressed first in the letter in
chapter one, verses 16-17.[54]
The
Sinfulness Of The Greeks
What
follows after this is a further fleshing out and development of the
statement. Paul first describes the
sinfulness of the Greek.[55] It may well be that the Church in Rome [was
exposed to the Greeks]. The
characteristics of the situation of the Greek (i.e, the Greek apart from
Christ) are the wrath of God, ungodliness, and wickedness.[56] I think that it would be a mistake to
generalize this and say that this is an exhaustive description of the
situation. There are occasional positive
elements on which Paul touches, but even those are said in such a way that it
makes the situation all the worse.[57]
A
Negative Description Of The Jewish Tradition
The
next section which begins in chapter two and goes on to chapter three, verse
eight,[58]
is a harshly negative description of the Jewish situation. Although they have the Law, the Jews are
judged negatively. The specific items
criticized here are self judgement while judging others, obeying
wickedness rather than the truth, and breaking of the Law.
All
Have Sinned And Fall Short Of The Glory Of God
Then
the overall conclusion is drawn in chapter three, verses ten to eleven and
verse twenty-three.[59] Despite the differences in relationship to
the Law, we read un this passage that wickedness is universal and both Jew and
Greek are under the power of sin--no one is righteous, no one understands and
no one seeks for God. [Furthermore], all
have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
We notice in different parts of the New Testament, different tones in
the portrayal of the theology of history before and after Christ.
Texts
like [the Pauline one just cited] (and the Johannine material) are the sharpest
in their portrayal of contrasts. Some of
the other Biblical authors make the distinctions much less radical than Paul
suggests. Even Paul himself has other
positive things to say about the Old Testament that are not reflected in this
material.
The
Righteousness Of God
Then
comes the contrast in chapter three, verses twenty-one to twenty-two. There is a little bit of overlapping here
with the conclusion of the first part because Paul goes back then to reinforce
his point. The passage reads:
"But
now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from law, although the
law and the prophets bear witness to it, the righteousness of God through faith
in Jesus Christ for all who believe."[60]
This righteousness is a
divine gift through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus.
Redemption
And Expiation
I
draw your attention here to a bit of the terminology in chapter three, verses
twenty-four and twenty-five.[61] In these verses we find reference to
Redemption and reference to Expiation by his blood. This passage will be associated with some of
the later theories of the Thomists that we have talked about (though they are
not developed here in detail).
Since
Justified We Are At Peace With God
Up
to this point [in Romans] we have a negative portrayal of the situation before
Christ and the identification of Christ's death in particular as the
transition. The next section, chapters
five through eight, give the positive side of the picture--since we are
justified we are at peace with God.[62] This leads to hope. God shows his love for us through Christ's
death and we are justified by his blood.
Here I draw your attention to an implication of verse eight. The verse reads: "But God shows his
love for us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us."[63] Note that in this verse, the death of Christ
is not presented as causing God to love us.
It is quite the contrary--it is God's love for us which is shown in the
death of Christ. So the picture of
Christ's death as somehow causing a wrathful God to change his mind is not an
accurate understanding of Paul point.
Freedom,
Righteousness, The Spirit, Love Of God
The
following chapters in Romans continue to develop the positive themes. These themes are: freedom, righteousness
characterized by the Spirit and of love of God from which nothing
can separated us. This has not been a
complete outline of Romans (there are eight more chapters following chapter
eight) but it is a basic indication of the Christological
argumentation--indication how it is drawing to a theological anthropology and
doctrine of sin and grace and how it is drawing to an understanding of
history.
Past,
Present and Future
I
note in conclusion with regard to Romans, that while there is this strong
emphasis on contrasts between present and past, still sight is not lost in the
differences between the present and the future.
Here I note chapter eight, verses eighteen to twenty-five.[64] In this passage we read that even though the
human situation has thoroughly changed for the better by Christ, still there is
need for hope--all creation is still groaning and longing for the glory that is
to be revealed at the end.
A second
example is Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. First Corinthians can be presented more
briefly than Romans. First Corinthians
will show again how Paul develops his Christology in the form of a criticism of
alternative positions.
A
Foretaste Of What Will Be
The
introduction of First Corinthians contains what appears to be very simple
references of a non-controversial sort, but which in fact are an attack on
Paul's opponents in Corinth. Paul gives
thanks to God (chapter one, verses four and five[65])
that the Corinthians have received the gift of God's grace and that they have
been enriched in all speech and all knowledge.
We see that the Corinthians are not lacking in any spiritual gift (and
that is the part that is critiqued) as we wait for the renewal of our Lord, Jesus
Christ. What they have is still simply a
foretaste of what will be present more fully at the end--it is not yet the
final stage. The Corinthians have
misunderstood it as the final stage (as the Corinthians are inclined to do) and
a distorted picture results.
The
Word Of The Cross
The
fundamental error in believing that the end has already has been achieved
through the ecstatic possession of the Spirit, is that it endangers the word
of the Cross. The word of the Cross
is folly to unbelievers (both Jew and Greek), but to those who are called (both
Jews and Greeks) Christ is the power of God and the Wisdom of God. It is the crucified Christ to whom Paul
constantly appeals in this letter as he argues against any separation of the
Spirit from Christ. Let me give a couple
of references. In chapter one, verses
ten through seventeen,[66]
Paul addresses the problems of the division of the Corinthian church into
factions--each of which claims a different leader (Paul being one of those
leaders mentioned). After listing some
of the positions, Paul asks "Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you?"[67] The point here is that Christ cannot be put
on the same level as others, but the specific way of articulating that is with
reference to the Crucifixion. The next
line, "Or where you baptized in the name of Paul?"[68]
at least indirectly makes reference to the same point, because for Paul there
is a very close link between baptism and death.
This link is not developed here, but one need only to recall the passage
in Romans which reads, ". . .all of us who have been baptized into
Christ Jesus were baptized into his death. . ."[69]
Paul
And The Proclamation Of The Lord's Death
Another
example can be found in chapter eleven where Paul criticizes the liturgical
practices of the Corinthian community--partly because of divisions and partly
because of discrimination against the poor.
He incorporates into his argumentation a brief account of the last
supper, and then says at the end of the chapter in verse twenty-six, "For
as often as you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's
death until he comes."[70] We sometimes speak of proclamation of Death
and Resurrection in liturgical acclamations and sometimes use this verse as a
point of departure--that is not wrong in a Eucharistic context, but that is not
Paul's point here. Paul's point here is
the link precisely to the death.
Jesus
And The Link To The Spirit
Finally,
another example, that does not refer explicitly to the crucifixion, but which
does reflect a link between Jesus and the Spirit, is found in chapter twelve,
verse three, which reads:
"Therefore, I want
you to understand that no one speaking by the Spirit of God ever says 'Jesus be
cursed!' and no one can say 'Jesus is Lord' except by the Holy Spirit."[71] What happens here? The test of possession of the Spirit is not
the claim to posses the Spirit--the test is acknowledgement that Jesus is
Lord. Evidence that the Spirit is not
present is found in rejection of Jesus.
This particular passage does not mention the Crucifixion, on the other
hand, you have not only have Paul's overall interest in the Crucifixion, but
you have a repeated insistence in First Corinthians that it is a crucified
Christ in which the wisdom and glory of God [are found].
There
is a very clear recent expression of this idea that Jesus is Lord, put in
slightly different language and [along with the sense that] Jesus is the Christ
in John Paul II's recent encyclical Redemtoris Missio.[72] This is not extensively developed, but it is
a very clear articulation of the 'spirit' of First Corinthians. This comes through in paragraph six, which is
on the need to not separate Jesus from the Christ. One ought not to imagine a Christ figure who
has nothing to do with Jesus. That in a
sense, is closely linked to Paul's point here (though not in the same
vocabulary). What Paul was getting at is
the claim to the Spirit without brushing aside Jesus.
Those
are outlines of Christological argumentation in two of Paul's epistles. In each case, Christology developed in
connection with more general theological arguments. There is a characteristic focus on
Crucifixion and perhaps to a certain extent the Resurrection. There is not a focus on Jesus' public life
(although there may be a bit of an exception to that with the retelling of the
last supper).
Paul
And The Incarnation
Before
going on from Paul, I have two additional notes to make. The first is with regard to what we call the
Incarnation (which of course is Johannine terminology--and that is the reason I
put it this way). The hymn in
Philippians (especially chapter two, verses seven to eight[73])
speaks of self-emptying. In effect, what
this is speaking of is the Incarnation.
My point is to emphasize how quickly Paul links the Incarnation to
death. Of course this is a hymn
initially, but notice how the hymn jumps quickly over the rest of Christ's life
(see verse eight). In that sense it is a
bit like the creeds--the public life is subsumed under the heading of the
crucifixion. The idea seems to be that
the crucifixion epitomizes everything else that has occurred. This death is then linked immediately to
exaltation--"Therefore God has highly exalted him and bestowed on him
the name which is above every name."[74] We will come back to this when we treat the
Resurrection and exaltation later in the semester. That is the first added point.
Paul's
Use Of Titles For Jesus
The
second and final point concerns the use of titles. The two most important titles for Paul are
the titles Lord (Kyrios), and Christ. Against the Old Testament background, the
title Lord suggests divinity but the word "God" however is usually
reserved for God the Father. Christ is
the Messianic title--the confession of Jesus as Messiah. But there are also some places in Paul (e.g.,
1 Cor. 15:3[75]) in which it
has practically become a proper name.
The title Son is also used frequently. In contrast to that however, Son of Man,
which is important in the Gospels, is not Pauline vocabulary. Paul uses "Son," "Son of
God," but not "Son of Man."
In
regard to the use of these titles, we know that each of them is somewhat modified
in its application to Jesus. To seek to
understand the predication of these titles of Jesus, it is not sufficient to
investigate the background (Biblical or otherwise) of the term. It is also necessary to see how it has been
re-cast to become appropriate for application here. I stress that because it is frequently
overlooked, as if these titles have fixed meaning that would simply be [the
same] from place to place.
Mark
As A Starting Point
I
would like to turn here to the Gospel of Mark to begin our look at the
Gospels. Mark is not an easy Gospel to
assess theologically. None of the
Gospels are easy to assess. but Mark is a particular problem. The reason lies in part because of the nature
of the situation.
The
Synoptics Grouped Together
Up
until fairly recently (i.e., the mid 1950s), the Synoptic Gospels tended to be
grouped together for theological treatment.
The Synoptics were not often considered as significant theological
accomplishments (and this was true for many years). It was believed that the importance of the
texts rested on the fact that they give us information about Jesus. In the
past, the Synoptics were used as a kind of historical resource (critically or
uncritically), but not with the idea that each of these three authors had a
distinctive theological contribution to make (which at the present time is a
common assertion). If you look, for
example, at Rudolph Bultmann's theology of the New Testament (or other
theologies of the New Testament from the same period) you will notice that the
significant New Testament theologians are Paul and John (and possibly the
author of Hebrews). The Synoptic
evangelists are mentioned, but more as sources of background to Paul and John.
The
Development Of Redaction Criticism
In recent
years, since roughly the mid 1950s, this situation has changed. This change was partly due to the development
of Redaction Criticism, which seeks to analyze the theological
tendencies in the individual evangelists by seeing how they selected and shaped
their material (i.e., particularly in a theological direction). This change was also partly due also more
recently through studies of the New Testament as narrative. This type of study indicates the development
of "the story" in individual texts.
This development is not coincidental, but rather makes certain
theological points that would not have been made otherwise.
Form
Criticism
Prior
to the development of interest in these perspectives, one of the common forms
of Biblical criticism was form criticism (which is still practiced
today). Form criticism is a study
basically of the units within the New Testament--particularly in the Gospels,
with a view to assessing where they came from and how they can be traced back
behind the writers of the Gospels to the early Christian communities (or for
that matter, into the life of Jesus himself).
The results are going to be hesitant in some cases, but the point of
this exercise is to look back, not to raise the questions, what [are the
individual Gospel authors doing with the same material], but rather can we get
away from what the individual authors have done with it to see where it comes
from in the pre-Gospel tradition or earlier (i.e., the life of Jesus). So, you might be able to get some historical
data about Jesus out of the passage. In
so far as the Form critics raise the question, "what did the specific
evangelists do," the point is to try to "rub that off" and get
behind it.
The
second characteristic of the Form Critical method is to look at an individual
section, an individual passage, an individual story or unit within the
Gospel. The purpose is not to take the
Gospel as a whole, but it is rather to take individual stories by themselves
(i.e., fragments). The advantage to
fragmenting [like this] is that you can then study the parts quite
thoroughly. The disadvantage to
fragmenting is that you do not see the fragment in the context of the whole
thing--you are analyzing a twig instead of looking at the whole forest.
A
Caution With Regard To Form Criticism
As
long as you pursue the Synoptics from the perspective of Form Criticism (and
this perspective is more suitable to the Synoptics than to other parts of the
Scriptures because you have three parallels to compare), you are not going to
see the Gospels as anything other than a collection of such materials.
The
Gospel Of Mark As A Theological Unit
In
the 1950s [a development occurred in Biblical studies]. The first figure [in this development] was a
man by the name of Willi Marxsen (who is best known for this and
writings on the Resurrection). Marxsen
developed the principle that the Gospel of Mark could be developed as a
theological unit.[76] He suggested that the way to do this is to
analyze certain features of Mark's language and presentation of his
material. [Let us study Marxen's theory]
by taking a look at the first verse of Mark which reads, "The beginning
of the gospel of Jesus Christ, the Son of God."[77] Mark is the only one of the four who calls
his work a "gospel" (we have generalized this title for all four of
the Gospels). What occurs in verse one,
is that an ancient Christian word for the Christian message (e.g., Paul talked
about this in Romans), is now being claimed for a new literary form of
Christian presentation. This new
literary form does not just give individual stories about Jesus, but brings
them together into a whole. There is a
sense, that is reflected elsewhere in the text, that Jesus himself is present
where the Gospel is present. So this is
a way of conveying a Christology and in a sense, also an ecclesiology.
A
similar work on the other Synoptics was done chiefly by Gunther Bornkamm
on Matthew[78] and Hans
Concelmann on Luke.[79] These were done in the mid-to-late
1950s. Many of the studies since then,
developed in pursuit further by other exegetes, sometimes with modifications of
the original interpretations. The
overall theological significance is that here it is not only presumed but also
argued, from an analysis of the texts, that we should not simply lump the
Synoptics together, but that we should be alert to the differences among the
various texts, and see those differences as the key to the theological
interests of their authors.
A
Caution With Regard To Redaction Criticism
One
caution with regard to Redaction Criticism.
The following comment, like most of the work in this area, rests
completely on a two source understanding of the Gospel tradition (i.e., Mark
and "Q" are the basic sources for Matthew and Luke). The problem is that when you ask the
question, "what about the theology of Matthew," or the question,
"what about the theology of Luke," then you can go through the texts
and say that Matthew had Mark and "Q" plus some other material (and
you can say the same of Luke). So if you
find something distinctive in Matthew or in Luke you can say that at least it
appears to be the case that [those authors used] what Mark had written but
modified it in some way (i.e., Mark's vocabulary, etc.). You can develop on that basis that the
author's [particular theology] is reflected in that. This can be done with Matthew or Luke, but it
can be tricky to try this with Mark because we do not have another Gospel (by
definition) to go to as a source. And so
if you want to try to argue with regard to Mark that something is
characteristic (that something is introduced as typically Markan vocabulary),
then we must base our argument on internal analysis of the text (preconceived
usage, etc.). The danger of circular
reasoning is then very clear. This is a
reason why there is greater diversity among scholars of Mark than there is
among scholars concentrating on the other Gospels.
Great
Diversity Among Scholars Concerning Mark
The
range of this diversity can be expressed by reference to two authors, Theodore
Weeden[80] and Rudolph
Pesch.[81] On one hand, Weeden believes (incorrectly
according to Galvin) that Mark is hostile to many of the traditions on which he
draws. The implication would then of
course be that he modifies them considerably.
An opposite position, that of Pesch, is that Mark is very restrained in
modifying his material and that what Mark reported was accurately historically
(though Pesch would hold that not everything in the text is a true Markan
commentary). The overall sense on which
Mark can be relied on in material about Jesus' life is a matter of great
dispute among exegetes.
Christology
February 19, 1991
Narrative
Criticism
[Missed the first five
minutes of class]
. .
. from the Gospel of Mark. There are two
illustrations to indicate two different dimensions of this issue. The point behind narrative criticism is to
ask the question: what is the author doing in the telling of the story? It abstracts basically from the question
whether [or not] the story is factual or fictional. It is not asking what is the historical basis
for this and it is not asking directly what has this author [found as?] his
sources. It is asking simply, how is
this story being told in this situation.
And when you [???] over this methodology it is incomplete--it does not
[???].
Illustrations
From The Gospel Of Matthew
It
is not really legitimate to ask, what really went on? The question is Mark's or Matthew's picture
of Jesus and so on. [Allow me to give
you] two illustrations of this technique from Matthew. The nature of this technique is such that it
is not tied primarily in comparison to other authors. One might think it is [???] to note that this
telling of the story differs from the way that someone else told the
story. The first illustration has to do
with Matthew's gospel as a whole.
Matthew begins chapter one, verse one[82]
by identifying Jesus as the Son of David and the Son of Abraham. That is not done in those words by the other
evangelists. Just by looking at the
words you can see that Matthew is placing Jesus in the context of the history
of Israel formulation--that type of title.
Consistent with that, [Matthew then presents] the genealogies (that we
occasionally here at the Liturgy) which accent various stages in the Old Testament. Then Matthew gives an infancy narrative whose
persistent them is rejection by his own people (Herod as the King), recognition
and even adoration by the Gentiles, refuge in Egypt (which is not now the place
of slavery, but the place of sanctuary), and adoration on the part of the Wise
Men who come bearing gifts. So the
foreigners recognize who Jesus is, while his own people to whom he has come
specifically do not recognize him. In
the process of trying to bring about Jesus' death, Herod succeeds only in
inflicting damage on Israel itself. The
story then that is told after that is a story of gradual presentation of the
Kingdom to Israel but repudiation on the part of the intended audience leading
up to Jesus' death.
Aspects
of this of course can be found elsewhere--much of that material (i.e., the
events from Jesus' life) is common in the different Evangelists, but the
telling of the story as Matthew does it culminates in chapter twenty-eight with
a final scene in which the Risen Lord sends his disciples to make disciples of
all nations (they are not sent back to Israel, but rather receive a universal
mission).
Salvation
First Offered To Israel
What
Matthew has done (not just in the cited passages--but with a certain
concentration in those passages each of which is only to be found in Matthew's
Gospel) is to present Jesus' story as a way in which the story of salvation is
first offered to Israel, but then offered to the nations. There are exegetical debates about whether or
not Israel is included among "the nations." "The nations" can equal the
Gentiles or Pagan countries--even if you include Israel among "the
nations" it is simply incorporated simply as one among many rather than
[with a] distinctive position.
"A
Retelling Of The Story"
The
above example is one in which Matthew is "retelling the story"--taken
as a whole from beginning to end. Notice
you do not get this picture if you isolate individual scenes of the
Gospel. We do not view how an individual
chapter or portion of the book is written but rather we view the thrust of the
story as a whole. On the base of this
type of literary analysis, it is possible for exegetical theologians to
conclude that this is a distinctive portrayal of Jesus (and you can do the same
thing with the portrayal of the disciples).
A
Second Example
The
second example is taken with reference to an internal part of the story. It focuses on a particular scene in a particular
period. This example focuses on chapter
twenty of Matthew's Gospel (this focuses on the period just at the start of the
Passion narrative--Jesus is making his way to Jerusalem and is just about to
enter the city). The whole story here is
presented in the form of popular acclaim of Jesus as Son of David.
The
Son Of David
Son
of David is a Messianic title accented at the very beginning of Matthew's
Gospel. Some believe that it is
important to count the occurrence of words, etc., in the New Testament--the
term "Son of David" occurs nine times in the Gospel of Matthew (and
only three times in Mark and three times in Luke). This seems to be sign that "Son of
David" reflects an important part of Matthew's Christology. The section at the end of chapter twenty and
the beginning of chapter twenty-one shows a certain concentration of this.
In
chapter twenty, verses thirty and thirty-one,[83]
there is a claim and appeal to Jesus as Son of David (this is the story of the
healing of the blind). Then in chapter
twenty-one, verse nine, Jesus is hailed as the Son of David in the context of
his triumphal entry into Jerusalem. The
point that I wish to direct attention to is that fact that while Matthew wishes
to present Jesus as the Son of David, he also wishes to guard against the
interpretations of that in political, dynastic terms. One of the ways in which he does this is in
the portrayal of the actual entrance into Jerusalem, where he inserts the
comment with regard to the taking of the colt, "this took place to
fulfill what was spoken by the prophet, saying, 'Tell the daughter of Zion,
behold your king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on and ass, and on a
colt, the foal of an ass.'"[84] The point is to draw in the reference to
humility and a theme of peacefulness precisely at a stage where the titular
references might suggest something to the contrary. That citation, of course, is a point where
Matthew is quite free to introduce what seems appropriate to those [on the
scene?]--it is not something that is inherent in the telling of the story in
all circumstances.
Looking
Back To The Old Testament
It
is significant here to look back at the Old Testament passage that is involved
in a portion of the New Testament text just cited. In Zechariah, chapter nine, verse nine, we
read: "Rejoice greatly, O
daughter of Zion! Shout aloud, O
daughter of Jerusalem! Lo, your king
comes to you; triumphant and victorious is he, humble and riding on an ass, on
a colt the foal of an ass."[85] We should be alerted to what is not cited in
this passage. We see that Matthew uses
an editorial technique. [We cannot be
sure] whether or not Matthew sat down with an Old Testament and an eraser or
whether he was simply was quoting in a looser sense (as they may have tended to
do). But we can see the difference in
the language of the quotations as they are presented. This serves to tell the story of an entrance
into Jerusalem which in principle might be seen as a political claim (as was
apparently seen as such by some) but [instead] it puts it in a type of
religious, theological interpretation.
Jesus
As A New Kind Of Davidic King
Matthew
presents Jesus as a Davidic king but the fact that he accents humble, rather
than victorious and triumphant is the point where he provides an indication of
how to interpret the kingship. I would
certainly say that [Matthew's approach] is not lacking in royal symbolism but
[we need to observe] what happens after Jesus gets into Jerusalem. We read in chapter twenty-one, verses ten and
eleven that: "when he entered Jerusalem, all the city was stirred,
saying, 'Who is this?' And the crowds
said, 'This is the prophet Jesus from Nazareth of Galilee.'"[86] Matthew did not write that the crowds said,
"This is the King."
This is another way of putting it an the end which has a certain
connected function to it--at the end the accent is not on the royal dimension,
except it is reinterpreted in this section.
The
Narrative Technique And The Synoptics
The
Narrative technique can be applied to Mark as easily as it can be applied to
anything else. The technique of
comparing Gospels [???] looking at alterations in the sources, however cannot
be combined. It cannot be applied here
as readily as in some other instances because we do not have the earlier
sources to deal with--we must attempt to reconstruct them. This technique is more readily applied to the
Synoptic Gospels [but] we are at a disadvantage with regard to Mark. You have to be at a disadvantage with regard
to something.
Some
Problems
There
are two problems with structuralism. The
first is that the structuralism tends to impose a grid and then rely on the
grid so that what goes on inside does not make too much difference. The second problem is that those techniques
abstract from the historical questions.
In some cases they even go further and leave out the historical
questions (i.e., the text speaks for itself--it has a life of its own and so
one should not ask then what goes on behind the text). This is a position that exegetes on the
whole, and theologians in general, do not find acceptable because they say it
does make a difference whether a story is factual or fictional (at least at
certain key stages). It may not make a
difference in interpreting a story such as the flight into Egypt, but that is
not so with the crucifixion.
A
Focus On Mark
Allow
me to say a few words about Mark concretely.
This is not going to be an exhaustive presentation of his Christology
but just an accenting of certain points.
First of all, Mark's achievement in writing a Gospel makes it possible
for him to link together various traditions about Jesus into a more complete
and coherent picture. What I have in
mind here is to illustrate this with reference to a couple of specific
elements. First, recall what was said
earlier in the semester about the different approaches or trajectories to
Christology which may have been present in earlier periods of the Church's
history. We saw that among those
approaches was a type that concentrated on Jesus as miracle worker with the
inherent danger that Jesus would be seen only as a miracle worker. Another approach saw Jesus as teacher (a
wisdom approach) which risks, first of all, the danger that it may present
Jesus only as teacher and secondly, that if the person of Jesus recedes,y the
teaching may seem to stand by itself (after all you can have many wisdom
sayings--it does not matter who said it first as long as the saying has some
content to it). In either case you will
not get a Christology--you may end up with a number of moral principles, but
not an adherence to Jesus.
The
Notion Of The Messianic Secret
One
of the effects of Mark's work is to draw that type of material into a greater
whole and therefore to overcome at least some potential misunderstandings. One indication of this can be found in the
notion of the "Messianic secret" which is reflected at various stages
of the Gospel. [When the notion of the
Messianic secret appears in Mark,] it is very often followed by a command to
remain silent (either to tell no-one or to tell a small number of people--i.e.,
not to spread the word). [This] general
theme is [evident] when Jesus does something extraordinary (perhaps not using
the precise word "Messiah" but something that shows particular claim
to power and exercise of power on Jesus' part).
[The following are a few examples of this]. In chapter one, verse forty through
forty-five,[87] after the
healing of the leper, Jesus says "See that you say nothing to any one.
. ."[88] Then in verse forty-five, we read, "But
he went out and began to talk freely about it. . ."[89] Although this is a typical feature, such
commands are usually not observed. And
so there is a certain tension between who Jesus is, the command to keep silence
and a least a certain disobeying of that command. Allow me to give you two other illustrations
to demonstrate that this is not confined to this instance. In chapter three, verses eleven and twelve we
read about the unclean spirits. The
passage reads: "And whenever the unclean spirits beheld him, they fell
down before him and cried out, 'You are the Son of God.' And he strictly ordered them not to make him
known."[90] This passage does not reveal what happened
further in this situation. Another example
is found in chapter eight, verse twenty-six [which tells of] the healing of the
blind man. The blind man has been
brought to Jesus by a group of people.
Jesus takes him away from the rest of the crowd and tells him not to go
back to the people who had aided him in the first place. The passage reads: "And he sent him
away to his home, saying, 'Do not even enter the village."[91] There is an effort here to keep it a secret
if possible.
The
Disciples Failure To Understand Jesus
Parallel
to this theme of the secret, there is a theme of the disciples' failure to
understand Jesus--despite what they see and hear. The disciples are not presented in a
completely negative fashion on this issue because they do not go away--they
still continue to adhere to Jesus. Allow
me to give you a few illustrations of this.
In chapter six we find the following: The story of the multiplication of
the loaves (the feeding of the five thousand) and then the scene where Jesus
comes to the disciples who are in the boat having problems with the wind (in
the boat situation, Jesus walks on the water and gets into the boat). In verses fifty-one and fifty-two of this
chapter, we find a commentary on what has transpired in these two
situations. We read: "And he got
into the boat with them and the wind ceased.
And they were utterly astounded, for they did not understand about the
loaves, but their hearts were hardened."[92] The fact that their hearts were hardened may
be a bit of an excuse (it may not be their fault that their hearts were
hardened, but still the person we often think of when we refer to a hardened
heart is the Pharaoh and so this is not the nicest association as far as the
disciples are concerned). In chapter
eight, verses seventeen and eighteen, there is an allusion back to the same
point. In this chapter there has been a
second feeding of the multitudes, and for those present for the first feeding,
the second feeding begins with them wondering how can they feed the crowds.[93] In verses seventeen and eighteen we read:
"Why do you discuss the fact that you have no bread? Do you not yet perceive or understand? Are your hearts hardened? Having eyes do you not see, and having ears
do you not hear?"[94]
Not
Possible To Understand Jesus Apart From The Cross
A
theme that is rather persistent in the Gospels is that (no matter what is seen
or heard) the presentation of the accurate recognition of Jesus is blocked for
further dissemination or it just does not take hold with the audience in some
fashion. The thrust of this seems to be
Mark's position that it is not possible to understand Jesus accurately apart
from the cross. So the miracle stories
are fine as far as they go, but they do not go far enough--and the same thing
with the other pieces of the picture up to this stage. Only faith, which looks to the cross and
accepts the cross in discipleship is authentic.
We can think here for example of the conversations with Peter about the
recognition of Jesus as Messiah.[95]
Mark's
Emphasis On The Passion Narrative
A
second element, tied in closer to the first, is Mark's emphasis on the Passion
narrative. We can think of it initially
in this way: If you were writing a biography of someone, you would certainly
accent some periods of the life more than others, but would you write a
biography in which the last third or a half was devoted to the last forty-eight
hours? That is putting an emphasis in an
extraordinary way on the end. It is true
that the other Gospels put a lot of space into the Passion narratives, but they
are longer than Mark to begin with, and so they are proportionately not as
great in those instances.
In
Mark, the Passion narrative is a great part of the whole--Mark has been called,
with a bit of an exaggeration, a Passion narrative with an extended
introduction. Even apart from the length
however, there are other considerations.
Much of what precedes the Passion narratives is linked to it by
references which are sometimes quite overt and sometimes more subtle.
Jesus'
Predictions Of The Passion
Let
me start with the direct ones. There are
Jesus' predictions of the Passion which are spread at appropriate intervals
through the second part of the Gospel.
Chapter eight, verse thirty-one,[96]
chapter nine, verse thirty-one,[97]
chapter ten, verses thirty-two to thirty-four,[98]
and then chapter ten, verse forty-five[99]
(which does not take the same form as the others but is a reference to the Son
of man giving his life as a ransom for the many). These are always called Passion predictions,
but on the whole they are also predictions of the Resurrection as well. They serve to link the attention of the
reader to what lies ahead.
More
Subtle References To The Passion
But
there are also a couple of references that are more subtle, but which would not
escape the attention of a Christian reader who is familiar with the basic
substance of the story. An example of
this can be found in the first chapter, verse fourteen. Mark has no infancy narrative--he plunges
immediately into some references to John the Baptist and then moves from that
to Jesus. Verse fourteen is the
transition--there has been a brief account of the Temptation and then the text
says, "Now after John was arrested, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching
the gospel of God."[100] The reference here to John the Baptist being
handed over, serves in two ways to link the reader to Jesus' Passion. First of all, John the Baptist has not simply
gone away--he has been taken into custody, is to be put to death and the story
of his death is going to be narrated in chapter six. That suggests from the start, that the
beginnings of Jesus' public preaching take place in a very dangerous
situation. Secondly, the word that is
used here for "handed over" is a word that is going to be used
extensively in the Passion narrative (Just as John was handed over, so too will
Jesus be handed over). That is not all
spelled out in verse fourteen. If you
read it initially, it is nothing more than a little bit of digging, but
remember that the audience for which Mark is writing is an audience that knows
roughly at which points what will come later in the text--and this is enough to
alert them to it.
Other
Sources For The Passion Narrative?
Then
there is the Passion narrative itself, which Mark does not make up by
himself. Mark draws on old
tradition--probably to a great extent on very old tradition. This always gets a bit tentative, but the
Passion narrative is usually identified as one of the oldest parts of the
Gospel (though not in all of its individual pieces). The extent of the earlier Passion narratives
is very much disputed. All that I can do
here is to indicate the range.
Some
authors, particularly those associated with Rudolph Bultmann, tend to
think that a very brief Passion narrative (basically a Crucifixion narrative)
stands at the start, and that this was developed backwards to include material
on Jesus' way to the Cross. It is
believed that this Crucifixion narrative was a very brief presentation which
then grew. At the opposite extreme here
is a position developed by Rudolph Pesch. Pesch believes that the early Passion
narrative was relatively lengthy beginning even with the confession of Jesus as
the Messiah (chapter eight of Mark's Gospel).
Pesch's idea is that from the start there was included an account of the
way to Jerusalem, arrest, crucifixion and death. Pesch does not say that every item that is
currently in the Passion narrative was there from the start, but he does think
that even the very early versions were quite extensive.
The
differences between Bultmann's approach and the approach of Pesch cannot
resolved here (even if they can be resolved).
They do have a bearing on interpretation because the longer the
narrative was in an earlier stage, the more likely it is to contain viable
historical data from that period.
The
Passion Narrative As A Theological Interpretation
In
any case, the Passion narrative is not only a record of historical information,
but also a theological interpretation of Jesus' death. There is very extensive drawing on the
Psalms--particularly the Psalms of lament in which the innocent, righteous sufferer
turns to God and appeals for vindication.
The chief reference here is to Psalm twenty-two[101]
which is drawn on in the Gospel[102]
(and is also a text which is used liturgically towards the end of Lent). There are many references to the Old
Testament in the Passion narrative. The
point of using Old Testament passages is to show that Jesus' way to the cross
is a paradoxical way to glory--it fits in the context of God's past dealings
with Israel.
Focus
On The Cross
Finally,
this focus on the cross comes to a head in the Crucifixion scene in chapter
fifteen. When Jesus is crucified, he is
mocked in various ways--and finally in verses thirty-one and thirty-two there
is a last challenge from the chief priests.
In those verses we read: "So also the chief priests mocked him
to one another with the scribes, saying, 'He saved others; he cannot save
himself. Let the Christ, the King of
Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.'"[103] This is a challenge to perform a final
miracle for his own benefit. Although it
may be sarcastic in the form of its presentation, the challenge of the chief
priests does not question what Jesus has done on behalf of others--it does say
that those actions are not sufficient and that there is a need for a final
coming down from the cross at this stage.
Jesus performs no miracle and gives no direct response to this
challenge. Instead, Jesus cries out with
a loud voice,[104] and they
wonder whether or not Elijah will come and take him down in a final
rescue. Instead, Jesus dies and the
curtain of the temple is torn into two.
Then in verse thirty-nine there is a comment by the centurion who says:
"Truly this man was the Son of God!"[105] This comment by the centurion is a confession
of faith from a highly unexpected source.
The
Centurion's Confession
With
the centurion's statement, we see the first time when there really is no need
to correct the confession because this time the confession takes place
precisely within the context of Jesus' death.
It seems clear that in Mark's presentation he wants the statement by the
centurion to be understood as a confession of faith in who Jesus is as God's
Son recognized in his death. Remember
that the first verse of Mark's gospel spoke of Jesus as the "Son of
God" and throughout the Gospel Mark has told the story of the revelation
of the Son of God (which is not recognized by many, but which is recognized by
some).
Where
Did Mark's Gospel End Originally?
On
last comment about Mark's Gospel. There
is a third element after the Messianic Secret and the Passion narrative that I
wish to discuss. This element has a
connection with some exegetical issues that are disputed. The disputed question is, "Where did
Mark's Gospel end originally?" The
most widespread opinion among exegetes at the present time is that the Gospel
originally ended with what we call chapter sixteen, verse eight. In other words, it ended with Mark's story of
the visit to the empty grave and did not include Resurrection appearances. We must come back to this issue later when we
talk specifically about the Resurrection.
Those
who hold that chapter sixteen, verse eight, is the original ending refer to the
remaining verses (nine through twenty) as the canonical ending and believe that
they were written at an early date by taking together the material from the
other Gospels (perhaps by people who thought that a good Gospel should end with
a Resurrection story).
Without
chapter sixteen, verses nine through twenty, the Gospel would end with the
following words of the young man in a white robe:
"And
he said to them, 'Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was
crucified. He has risen, he is not here;
see the place where they laid him. But
go, tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before you to Galilee; there
you will see him, as he told you.' And
they went out and fled from the tomb; for trembling and astonishment had come
upon them; and they said nothing to any one, for they were afraid."[106]
The ending in this case is
abrupt (and is more abrupt in its original Greek).
What
happens here is that there is a proclamation of the Resurrection at the Tomb
(precisely at the place of burial), there is a promise that Jesus goes before
his followers to Galilee (a pointing forward in the sense that the story is
still not complete) and then there is the odd reversal of the Messianic
Secret. Before this time, people have
been told to say nothing and they have broadcast information; here, people are
told to convey a message and they do not convey the message.
We
can ask a whole series of questions about this (e.g., If they did not say
anything, how did the story get into the Gospel? Should we think that they did not say
anything right away, but later said something?). These questions are important from the view
of historical reconstruction, but sticking just to the text the way that it is
written, the effect of this ending is once again to leave the tension between
clarity and hiddenness with regard to Jesus.
In
this ending, it has become clear who Jesus is--he is the Son of God who is to
be met eventually in Galilee, but at the same time, he is still not quite fully
revealed (the message is still not presented in full directness and openness,
even to the disciples). Obviously, the
situation of the reader is such that the reader is bound to know that the
message has been presented and is being presented at the present time, but the
openness at the end, the emphasis on the cross and the orientation towards the
future seems to be a deliberate way of bringing the story to a climax in a
certain tension.
The
Gospel Of Matthew
We
will now turn our attention to the Gospel of Matthew. I wish to note that the different aspects as
presented by the different evangelists are not competitive with one
another. There may be an initial sense
in which we are attracted to one more than another, but it in not a question of
saying, "Matthew is right, therefore Mark is wrong!" The fact that each Gospel is included, tells
us that there is something of each worth keeping.
Matthew's
Influence In The Church's History
Matthew
is a Gospel that has been focal point of enormous influence in the history of
the Church. Earlier in the Church's
history, there was a presumption that Matthew was the oldest Gospel. The idea that the Gospels of Matthew and John
were written by eyewitnesses, held for a long time (a theory held as recently
as the nineteenth century and even later).
Ecclesiology,
Baptismal Theology And The Trinitarian Formula
Matthew
was also influential because it contained certain distinctive passages which
have been highly important at certain stages of the Church's history (below are
two examples of this). In chapter
sixteen, verse eighteen we read that "You are Peter, and on this rock I
will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it."[107] This passage obviously has been important for
questions concerning the primacy of the pope, but also important for more
general questions regarding ecclesiology (i.e., the word "church" is
found only in the Gospel of Matthew).
Secondly, also with regard to ecclesiology, chapter twenty-eight, verses
eighteen to twenty,[108]
contains the baptismal command which is important to the theology of the
sacraments and it also contains a very explicit Trinitarian formula. This passage seems at least, to give the
possibility not only of supporting baptismal theology, and Trinitarian
theology, but in tracing them both quite directly back to Jesus (though in this
case it is the Risen Jesus). These
elements in Matthew are three elements (primacy, baptismal theology and
Trinitarian formula) that are not found elsewhere in any other Gospel
tradition.
Matthew's
Use Of "Littleness Of Faith"
The
following is a discussion with regards to a couple of themes found in
Matthew. First of all, we find an
emphasis on faith and the presentation of a distinctive theology of
faith. As time went on, Christianity
broke with Judaism, Jerusalem was destroyed and the world showed no signs of
ending. Matthew seems to have written in
a period in which faith is under challenge and in which the fervor of the first
generation of Christians has waned (this is not an unusual phenomena). One of the ways in which this is reflected in
Matthew is the use of the term "littleness of faith" (this is a
single word in Greek). The word is not
original to Matthew--it is present in the "Q" source, but Matthew
uses it in some distinctive ways.
Matthew
Compared With Mark
The
following are a couple of examples where comparisons with the Gospel of Mark
are instructive (given the presumption of the priority of Mark). In Matthew, chapter eight, verse twenty-six,[109]
(compared with Mark 4:40[110])
we see that Jesus refers to littleness of faith on the part of the disciples
(in Mark, the reference is to "unbelief"--a harsher term). In Matthew, chapter sixteen, verse eight,[111]
(compared with Mark 8:17[112])
again he refers to little faith, whereas Mark refers to "hardness of
heart." In Matthew, chapter
fourteen, verse thirty-one[113]
(a passage to which we will return) speaks of littleness of faith directly with
reference to the chosen twelve. Notice
what that does. If the littleness of
faith (the weakness of faith) that that implies is so characteristic of
[Matthew's] own time, it means that the people in [Matthew's] own time are in
the same situation as the original disciples, even the twelve. This is not what ought to be--it is not the
complete, fuller faith that is desired, but none-the-less, it means that there
is a situation comparable to the earlier followers of Jesus and not to his
opponents (they are not characterized by the same state of mind or heart that
is in the Pharisees).
The
Relationship Of Jesus To Israel
I
mentioned already some of the elements of Matthew's Christology. I will not run through them here with the
emphasis on Son of David as has already been said in that regard, but I [will
draw your attention to an] interest in the relationship of Jesus to Israel
(even beyond the title, "Son of David"). Allow me to give you a few examples
here. In Matthew, chapter twenty-seven,
verse forty-two[114]
we see that Jesus is called "King of Israel." In chapter two, verse two[115]
and chapter twenty-seven, verse thirty-seven[116]
we see that Jesus is called "King of the Jews." This parallel with Israel (parallel, also in
the sense of surpassing) is carried out in a number of ways. Even as a child, Jesus suffers the typical
fate of Israel--his life is threatened by the king (just as Moses' life was threatened
by the Pharaoh), his birth (like the birth of Moses) is linked with
infanticide, Jesus flees [to] Egypt and is called back, Jesus fulfills the
Messianic prophesy of Isaiah (chapter seven, verse fourteen[117]),
Jesus is the representative of Israel, and then he is a representative (as
mentioned earlier) whose salvific activity extends beyond Israel's
boundaries.
Jesus
As Fulfillment Of The Old Testament
I
referred above to the presentation of Jesus as the Son of David--and in that
sense, as fulfillment of Messianic expectations. I would like to refer here to another scene
which illustrates a similar point. In
chapter twelve, verses eighteen to twenty-one[118],
Matthew cites from Isaiah a passage which speaks about the servant who will
proclaim justice to the Gentiles and in whose name the Gentiles will hope. Notice that in the very next verses (chapter
twelve, verse twenty-two and twenty-three[119])
people are amazed by a healing miracle.
In this passage we find reference to Israel's Messianic title, but the
reader has been prepared for that in the preceding verses by the reference to
the Gentile in the passage taken from Isaiah.
So we see Jesus presented as the fulfillment of the Old Testament. The fulfillment, however is strictly in
Jesus--his followers (the disciples) share in a degree in this, but still
remain characterized by weakness and littleness of faith. Whatever the disciples are able to do is
possible only by reliance on Jesus' power.
We can think here again of the climatic scene at the end of the Gospel
in which before giving the baptismal command, Jesus tells the disciples that
all authority has been to me on heaven and earth[120]
(even in that scene some doubted).
The
Stilling Of The Storm
I
would like to conclude our brief look at Matthew by running through a short
passage with a couple of interpretive comments.
The passage is "The Stilling of the Storm" (chapter fourteen,
verses twenty-eight to thirty-three[121]). This discussion is intended here as an
illustration of Matthew's thought. In a
previous class we mentioned that there has been redaction criticism of
Matthew's work and that one of the figures associated with that has been Gunther
Bornkamm. What follows below is
based on Bornkamm's exegesis. In the
cited passage, the disciples are in the boat and are going across to the other
side (Jesus was not there--he had stayed back to dismiss the crowd). The boat in a sense is a symbol of the Church
(this symbolism can also be found elsewhere).
The boat represents the Church temporarily without Jesus (the Church
when Jesus is away). This story is an
illustration of the elements both in Matthew's presentation and in Jesus'
corresponding picture of the Church.
Christology
February 21, 1991
Luke-Acts
I
would like to go on today to a discussion of Luke-Acts. We find in Luke-Acts something unique as far
as the New Testament is concerned. It is
significant that Luke-Acts is a two part work--it indicates a theological
orientation of the author who chose to do this.
The
section of Acts cited below is often taken as an indication of the way in which
Luke envisioned the situation in which he was writing. This is presented in Acts not directly as
Luke's analysis of the situation, but rather as Paul's prediction in his
farewell speech at Ephesus about what lies ahead for the Church. Paul's speech begins in verse eighteen of
chapter twenty and it concludes in verse thirty-five of the same chapter. The section that interests us here is
contained in verses twenty-eight to thirty-two.
"Take
heed to yourselves and to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit has make you
overseers, to care for the church of God which he obtained with the blood of
his own Son. I know that after my
departure fierce wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock; and from
among your own selves will arise men speaking perverse things, to draw away the
disciples after them. Therefore be
alert, remembering that for three years I did not cease night or day to
admonish every one with tears. And now I
command you to God and to the word of his grace, which is able to build you up
and to give you the inheritance among all those who are sanctified."[122]
Paul is speaking to the
elders of the Church for the first time gathered from Ephesus to Miletus. In this passage, Paul warns the Church about
problems from without and heresies within the Church. The elders of the Church are confronted by
Paul to deal with these issues.
Luke
And The "Theological Interpretation Of History"
To a
certain extent, Paul's warning in the above cited passage reflects the
situation that Luke envisions. In this
context, Luke stresses the need for moral endurance and patience. He refers very frequently, especially in the
Gospel, to the end of the world but he does not expect the end of the world to
come in the near future (the time of imminent expectation is passing). Luke does not seek to revive the sense of
imminent expectation. Instead, Luke
offers, what could be called a theological interpretation of history which
identifies the time of Jesus as the salvific center of time.
I
mentioned earlier that the redaction criticism of the theology of Luke had
initially been done by Hans Concelmann.
The following discussion basically follows his presentation.[123] There are some modifications and questions
raised about his presentation, but basically those who discuss Luke's theology
reflect similar interpretations--at least as far as the major points are
concerned. The outline of the history
that Concelmann presents has as its outer boundaries creation on the one
hand and the parousia on the other.
Three
Periods Of History
Within
the above mentioned framework, history is divided into three periods of unequal
length: The Old Testament; The
time of Jesus as the salvific center of time and thirdly, the age of the
Church (which of course is not yet complete). One indication of the importance that Luke
places on this is simply his decision to write Acts--so that there is a
theological presentation of at least the initial history of the Church. These three periods are interconnected and
this is particularly because of the link to the central period that the other
times are found to be salvific.
The
Old Testament Time
According
to this view, the Old Testament is a time of preparation for the coming of
Christ (so we see that there is a Christological reading of the Old
Testament). In that sense, Christ is
taken as the reference point and the Old Testament is interpreted in-so-far as
it points in that direction (we will come back to this). This means that Messianic themes in the Old
Testament are accented [from this perspective] than when one simply takes the
Old Testament by itself. The Old
Testament has as salvific gifts the Law and the Prophets, and
these gifts point ahead, together with the Psalms to Jesus.
The
following are a couple of passages to demonstrate this point. The first example (Luke, chapter sixteen,
verse sixteen) is a text that is often referred to with regard to Luke's [???]
of certain periods of history. In this
passage Jesus speaks to the Pharisees and says,
"'The
law and the prophets were until John; since then the good news of the kingdom
of God is preached, and every one enters it violently.'"[124]
(I am not quite sure about
what the part that reads "enters it violently" is referring). Our interest in citing this passage is to
demonstrate the break that is made: The law and the prophets were until John, then
there is a break since then which is the preaching of the Gospel. The same reference to the law and the
prophets is picked up but expanded by further reference to the Psalms in
another very instructive scene. We refer
here to the Resurrection appearance of the Risen Lord to the disciples on the
road to Emmaus. This story is found in
Luke, chapter twenty-four. Let us
examine the moment when the appearance begins to reach its conclusion (see
verses twenty-five and twenty-seven).
Jesus says:
"'O
foolish men, and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have
spoken! Was it not necessary that the
Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory?' And beginning with Moses and all the
prophets, he interpreted to them in all the scriptures the things concerning
himself."[125]
This is a kind of brief
course in the arguments of the Old Testament by Jesus according to the
understanding of Luke. This is how the
Scriptures are supposed to be read. We
find something similar, but more explicit in the same chapter of Luke (but of a
different appearance story). This is in
chapter twenty-four, verses forty-four to forty-seven. In this passage, Jesus refers the disciples
to the Scriptures. He speaks about the
fulfillment that is written about him in the law of Moses, the prophets and the
Psalms. Luke writes:
"Then
he said to them, 'These are my words which I spoke to you, while I was still
with you, that everything written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets
and the psalms must be fulfilled.' Then
he opened their minds to understand the scriptures, and said to them, 'Thus it
is written, that the Christ should suffer and on the third day rise from the
dead, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins should be preached in his
name to all nations, beginning from Jerusalem."[126]
This is a Christological
reading of the Old Testament as foretelling the chief events of Jesus'
life. Now what this means with regard to
the Old Testament is that it is being presented as a first stage of a divine
plan--the promise or foretelling of what lies in the future. Here there is a strong accent on the unity of
the divine plan. This is less a picture
of a break as Paul presents. Luke's
approach here serves to link the Old Testament with the time of Jesus and to
indicate that the Old Testament is salvific.
The
Time Of Jesus As The Salvific Center Of Time
The
time of Jesus itself is the salvific center of time. It is characterized by the presence of Jesus
and the presence of the Spirit. The
following are a couple of references to this (which are not unique to Luke, but
accented particularly in this Gospel): chapter three, verses twenty-one and
twenty-two[127], chapter
four, verses eighteen to twenty-one[128]. On the whole, Satan is absent in this
period. He is present at the temptation
(chapter four[129]) then
reappears at the beginning of the Passion narrative entering the heart of Judas[130]--this
is the point where we see that the center of time is beginning to draw to an
end.
The
Age Of The Church
Then
there is the third period--the age of the Church. The theology of the Church is a decisive
element for Luke. The age of the Church
shares in the salvific qualities of the time of Jesus because it is linked back
to that time. There are connections on
one level to the gift of the Spirit. The
Spirit was present and active in Jesus' life.
It is then promised to the Church at the Ascension, and poured out on
the Church at Pentecost. The presence
and activity of the Spirit is then reflected in the various times as unfolded
in the rest of the story found in the Acts of the Apostles.
The
link with the time of Jesus is also present on another level--particularly in
the early days of the Church there is continuity between the leaders of the
Church (the Apostles) and those who were Jesus' closest followers during his
public life. There is a great deal of
emphasis in the Gospels on the institution of the Twelve--Luke is the only Gospel
which presents Jesus explicitly as calling these people Apostles (the word
Apostle is used much more in Luke than in the other Gospels).
Criterion
For Matthias' Selection As Apostle
Let
us examine another example found in chapter one of the Acts of the
Apostles. Recall the selection of
Matthias to take the place of Judas.[131] This is an act done to reconstitute the group
of Twelve--it is important that this is done before Pentecost (one might get
the impression that that is why the Spirit "waits" ten days!). The point that is instructive is the way in
which Matthias is chosen. On the one
hand, there is involvement of the whole community in various ways, but that is
not the focus of this example. It is the
criterion that anyone to be considered eligible for this role must have been
present from the Baptism of John through the Forty days. The reason for that standard is that the
function of the Twelve is to a large extent one of witnessing to what has
happened in Jesus' public life (this is why, for example, that had Paul been on
the scene at that point he still would not have done what was needed to be
considered for this position). This
shows that one of the functions of this office is to embody a concrete link
between the age of Jesus and the age of the Church. Luke is then at pains in the rest of Acts to
link other lesser offices to those of the Seven, to those of the Presbyters and
Elders and even the position of Paul back to the fundamental office of
Apostle. We can find an illustration of
this in Acts, chapter six when it is decided that a new office is necessary
because of problems that have arisen in the community. To answer this need, the multitude chooses
Seven, then verse six says, "These they set before the apostles, and
they prayed and laid their hands upon them."[132] They are installed in this new office through
official conferral of the office on the part of the Apostles.
The
Identification Of The Church With Jesus
These
various levels of connection to the time of Jesus lead to a certain
identification of the Church with Jesus (we must be careful here in our wording
so as not to give the impression that the Church supplants Jesus). This is on the line of Paul's theology of the
Church as the Body of Christ--although this is not quite the same
terminology. The best example of this is
in Acts, chapter nine, verses four and five which is one of the accounts of the
conversion of Paul. Describing the
situation, the passage reads:
"And
he fell to the ground and heard a voice saying to him, 'Saul, Saul, why do you
persecute me?' And [Paul] said, 'Who are
you, Lord? And he said, 'I am Jesus,
whom you are persecuting."[133]
Paul himself, in his letters,
says that he has persecuted the Church of God (and this is the same material
that is envisioned here). The way in
which this is presented conveys the understanding that a persecution of the
Church is a persecution of Jesus. We see
the close identification with the Church to Jesus in the above cited
passage. This presence of Jesus in the
Church is also expressed through references to the Name of Jesus. We find examples of this in Acts, chapter
four, verse twelve[134]
and Acts, chapter ten, verse forty-three[135]. It is only in this name that salvation is to
be found. In this there seems to be the
sense that Jesus is present where his name is invoked.
Luke's
Treatment Of The Passion, Death and Ascension
To
conclude this discussion of Luke, let us briefly examine his treatment of the
Passion, Resurrection and Ascension.
There are some unusual characteristics about these events in Luke's
presentation. First of all, the Passion
is presented as part of the divinely willed plan for the Messiah. We saw a reference to this in the Emmaus
story (i.e., a reference to what "must" occur).[136] I would like to refer here to just one more
passage--Luke, chapter eighteen, verses thirty-one to thirty-four.[137] There is no explanation in this passage of
why this is the plan of God. The fact
[is] that [the situation is said to be] the plan of God [and it is given in] a
salvific context. Corresponding to that,
the Resurrection is seen as a Divine correction of the error and guilt of those
who put Jesus to death. This is
expressed most clearly in the Acts of the Apostles (note the following
passages: Acts 3:13-18, 3:30-33, 10:37-40 and 13:27-31). Chapter thirteen, verses twenty-seven to
thirty-one is presented as a speech of Paul.
He has given a brief history of salvation, and then after a reference to
John the Baptist comes to this section.
He says,
"For
those who live in Jerusalem and their rulers, because they did not recognize
him nor understand the utterances of the prophets which are read every sabbath,
fulfilled these by condemning him.
Though they could charge him with nothing deserving death, yet they
asked Pilate to have him killed. And
when they had fulfilled all that was written of him, they took him down from
the tree, and laid him in a tomb. But
God raised him from the dead; and for many days he appeared to those who came
up with him from Galilee to Jerusalem, who are now his witnesses to the people."[138]
Notice that in the first part
of that, the death of Jesus is attributed first to the leaders in Jerusalem and
then to Pilate. Notice that there is a
certain degree of excuse provided here--they did not recognize him and they did
not understand the utterances of the prophets.
When they finished with everything, however, God raised him from the
dead. We see in this, the Resurrection
as the correcting of the error.
The
Resurrection Distinguished From Ascension
The
Resurrection is however distinguished here from the Ascension or Exaltation
(which is not always the case in the New Testament--sometimes they are used
interchangeably). Luke gives a
distinctive account of the Ascension in two places. The first place is rather brief and is
located at the conclusion of his Gospel.
We find this in chapter twenty-four, verses fifty to fifty-three.[139] The scene takes place in Bethany near
Jerusalem. In the scene, Jesus blesses
them and departs while blessing them.
There is a suggestion here that the departure is a blessing (not that
they are glad to see him go, but because the implication of his departure is
that the Spirit will be sent). After his
departure, they returned to Jerusalem with great joy--an indication that they
understand what has happened. The
ascended Jesus is to remain close to the Church in what follows.
The
Ascension Event
A
more complete description of the Ascension event is found in Acts, chapter one,
verses three to twelve. The text reads:
"(3)
To them he presented himself alive after his passion by many proofs, appearing
to them during forty days, and speaking of the kingdom of God. (4) And while staying with them he charged
them not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father,
which he said, 'you heard from me, (5) for John baptized with water, but before
many days you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.'
(6) So when they had come together, they asked him,
'Lord, will you at this time restore the kingdom of Israel?' (7) He said to them, 'It is not for you to
know times or seasons which the Father has fixed by his own authority, (8) But you shall receive power when the Holy
Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all
Judea and Samaria and to the end of the earth.'
(9) And when he had said this, as they were looking on, he was lifted
up, and a cloud took him out of their sight.
(10) And while they were gazing into heaven as he went, behold, two men
stood by them in white robes, (11) and said, 'Men of Galilee, why do you stand
looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was
taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into
heaven.'
(12) Then they returned to Jerusalem from the mount
called Olivet, which is near Jerusalem, a sabbath's day's journey away."[140]
A
Study Of The Above Cited Passage
The
following is a exegetical study of the above passage.
There are a couple of things
in verse three that are worth noting.
First of all, there was a forty day period (a significant number) which
is presented as a unique time of transition between the time of Jesus and the
age of the Church. These forty days are
not the same as during Jesus' lifetime--he is not there at every moment, but on
the other hand he is regularly appearing to the Apostles and providing them
with further instruction. This
instruction is so important to Luke that presence during this period is one of
the criterion that must be fulfilled for the selection of a replacement for
Judas. In verse four (while staying with
them) Jesus tells them to wait in Jerusalem, the Holy City for the promise of
the Father. In verse five, he speaks of
them being baptized in the Holy Spirit.
In verse six we come directly to the Ascension material itself. Here we find a certain recapitulation of
Luke's position on various subjects. The
disciples ask here if the Kingdom of Israel will be restored. Jesus answers in verse seven that it is none
of their business (that the time and seasons have been fixed by the
Father). But this is not the complete
answer--the answer continues in verse eight which in effect corrects the
question (answers the question as they should have asked it). Jesus promises them the Holy Spirit. When Jesus says "you shall be my
witnesses" it is a prediction, but it is also a command. This process of being witnesses of Jesus goes
out from Jerusalem in concentric circles (a good bit of acts is a description
of this). Acts ends with Paul preaching
the Gospel in Rome which is a type of fulfillment of this prophecy (even though
Paul himself was not one of those who received it directly at that time). Then at this point (in verse nine) Jesus is
lifted up into the cloud. In verse ten,
the men in white robes provide an interpretation of what has happened--this may
again be a reflection of the idea that the proper interpretation is God's
gift. The Ascension is a promise that
Jesus has been exalted and will return, but it is not a promise that he would
come soon. The proper attitude in the
time in between is not looking up to heaven, but a carrying out of Jesus'
commands (i.e., to wait first for the gift of the Spirit and then to be his
witnesses throughout the world). So the
Christology of that point is very closely linked to ecclesiology.
Luke's
Temporal Framework Influences The Liturgical Year
I
have just one last comment on this final scene that has to do with the
liturgical year. A good bit of the
liturgical year comes from Luke (at least as far as the Paschal material is
concerned). There is forty days between
Easter and the Ascension and ten more days until Pentecost. There is a logic to this time spacing. We need to be careful, however, that we do
not transplant this temporal framework to other parts of the New
Testament. What Luke presents as
happening fifty days after Easter (i.e., Pentecost) John presents as happening
on Easter Sunday evening (i.e., to the assembled disciples). To pull these Gospels apart and to think that
they are in contradiction with one another is to misunderstand both--they are
both understandings of the presence of the Holy Spirit in the Church and the
fact that presence is derived from Jesus.
But each Evangelist has chosen to accent a distinct facet of that
link. John's presentation links it very
closely with the Resurrection. Luke
places the exaltation in the middle as distinct from the Resurrection and
provided a further period of waiting until the gift takes place. We need to be careful not to impose Luke's
temporal framework on John or on the other Evangelists for that matter.
John's
Gospel
Let
us take a brief look at John's Gospel.
Here I would like to pick out just a few points, but before I say
anything immediately about the text of the Gospel I have a comment about its
use in the history of the Church. This
Gospel is different than the Synoptics and has long been prized as a
theological Gospel (though the others are also theological!).
In
the period in which there was intense interest in finding the "historical
Jesus" (19th century Biblical criticism) John's Gospel receded from favor.
The reason this occurred was because it
was recognized that the Synoptics provided more material for the search for
historical reconstruction. In the period
roughly from the end of World War I until the early 1950s, when there was not
as much interest in the historical Jesus, John's Gospel (as well as Paul) made
a comeback as far as theological interest was concerned. This occurred precisely because of John's
theological character.
Christological
Implications Of John' Gospels
At
the present time this situation has changed in a couple of respects. The first reason for this change is one
already mentioned--there is interest in the theologies of the Gospels (an
interest that includes the theology of John as well as the theology of the
Synoptics). This is a reason for focus
on John, but not to the detriment of the others. At the same time, there is also a recognition
that, at least as far as certain pieces of information on the historical Jesus,
that John's Gospel may be a useful historical source. This can be misunderstood--no one seriously
holds that the speeches of Jesus from John's Gospel give as much information
about the preaching of Jesus as do the Synoptics. But there are a couple of things (e.g., the
dating of the Last Supper, the frequency of Jesus' visits to Jerusalem and
perhaps the length of Jesus' public life) where the material from John's Gospel
can be useful. Although some of these
things do not have earth-shaking Christological consequences, John's portrayal
of Jesus as one who goes back and forth to Jerusalem on a couple of occasions,
may well reflect the historical reality more than the Synoptic accounts which
are designed to make a particular theological point.
What
does John's Gospel have to say? The
Prologue to the Gospel, especially verse fourteen, "And the Word became
flesh and dwelt among us. . ."[141]
is a noted reference point for Christology.
The Gospel is very explicitly Christological--it has been said that in
the Fourth Gospel "the revealer becomes the revealed." In the Synoptic Gospels Jesus reveals God,
and in John, Jesus reveals himself. In
this Gospel, Jesus speaks about himself a great deal. Jesus is presented as the only revealer of
God (he is the only one who knows the Father), and in that sense as
irreplaceable. According to chapter one,
verse eighteen, "No one has ever seen God; the only Son, who is in the
bosom of the Father, he has made him known."[142]
Symbolic
Language In John's Gospel
The
position of Jesus [as the one who is revealed] is reflected in explicitly
symbolic language throughout the Gospel.
Usually this symbolism is developed at some length (presented at the
beginning of each chapter and then illustrated in the story that follows). Below are some examples of this. In chapter four Jesus is presented as the
living water (in the encounter with the woman at the well). In chapter six Jesus is presented as the
bread of life (in the discourse and also in the multiplication of the
loaves). In chapter nine Jesus is
presented as the true light (in the story of the healing of the blind
man). In chapter ten Jesus is presented
as the Good Shepherd (distinguished as such from the hireling).
The
Single Purpose Of Jesus' Mission--Double Results
In
John's Gospel, we see that all through his discourses and his actions, Jesus
reveals himself but is generally not recognized (only his own recognize
him). The purpose of Jesus' coming is
salvation, but the effect of his coming is division--we see this in chapter
one, verse eleven which reads, "He cam to his own home, and his own
people received him not."[143] This effect is spelled out explicitly in
chapter three, verses sixteen to eighteen which reads,
"For
God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him
should not perish but have eternal life.
For God sent the son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that
the world might be saved through him. He
who believes in him is not condemned; he who does not believe is condemned
already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God. And this is the judgement, that the light has
come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their
deeds were evil. . .""[144]
The point is to contrast
between the two. The purpose in the
mission is single--it is for salvation.
It is not a mission of both salvation and condemnation, but the effect
is both because the reaction of the presence of the Son is divided. Those who are evil reject the presence of the
light.
Eschatological
Implications
In
addition to the Christological implications of this (i.e., the focus on Jesus
as the revelation of God), there is also an eschatological implication. The time of judgement is now. There are some references to future
eschatology still preserved, but on the whole the focus is on present
eschatology. An example of this that
combines both of them, in somewhat of an awkward fashion, is found in chapter
five, verses twenty-four and twenty-five and twenty-eight and twenty-nine. In verse twenty-four, Jesus says,
"'Truly,
truly I say to you, he who hears my word and believes him who sent me, has
eternal life; he does not come into judgement, but has passed from death to
life.'"[145]
Notice the words has
eternal life and does not come into--these words are in the present
tense. In verse twenty-five, Jesus says,
"'Truly, truly I say to you, the hour is coming, and
now is, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear
will live.'"[146]
There is a certain tension
here--the hour is coming and now is. In the same section, Jesus goes on in verses
twenty-eight and twenty-nine to say,
"'Do
not marvel at this; for the hour is coming when all who are in the tombs will
hear his voice and come forth, those who have done good, to the resurrection of
life, and those who have done evil, to the resurrection of judgement.'"[147]
This type of passage still
points ahead further to a future eschatology, but the great emphasis throughout
the Gospel is rather on another aspect--a present eschatology.
Access
To Jesus By His Death
This
theology of Jesus as revealer, as the self-revelation of God is also very
closely linked to a theology of death and resurrection. There is a strong focus here on Jesus' words
(earlier we talked about a Christology that focuses on Jesus' words), but they
are not abstracted from Jesus' person.
All throughout, Jesus' public life is pointed toward the hour of his
death, which is the hour of his being raised and glorified. Some examples of this can be found in the
following passages: In chapter three, verses fourteen and fifteen[148]
(a reference to the serpent that Moses lifted up in the wilderness is given as
an example of the Son of man being lifted up on the Cross), chapter seven,
verse thirty-nine[149]
(a reference to the Spirit is given after Jesus has promised that anyone who is
thirsty should come to him), and finally in this vein, chapter twelve, verse
twenty-three and twenty-four which reads:
"And
Jesus answered them, 'The hour has come for the Son of man to be
glorified. Truly, truly I say to you,
unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if
it dies, it bears much fruit.'"[150]
The language here is veiled,
but after the fact the reader understands what Jesus means. In this particular case, let me be a bit more
specific about what this means for us in context. This passage comes after John notes that
Greeks were present to worship on the feast.[151] The issue behind this is the question of
access of Gentiles to Jesus. In this
passage, the Greeks had come to Philip and asked to see Jesus.[152] Jesus answered this request with the words in
the passage cited above ("The hour has come. . ."). This does not seem to be an answer to the
question of the Greeks at all. In John's
Gospel, Jesus does this with some regularity.
Usually the point is that on a deeper level there is an answer
present. The point here is that access
to Jesus by Gentiles comes about after his death--that the bearing of much
fruit is, to a large extent, the spread of the Gospel as a result of the
Crucifixion. This is one of the reasons
why the dying itself is an exaltation.
There seems also to be an implication that it is through his disciples
that access to Jesus will be obtained.
Jesus'
Death As A Glorification
When
Jesus' death is presented in John's Gospel, it is presented as a glorification,
a completion of his work--a moment of triumphant return to the Father. Jesus remains active in death. According to chapter fourteen, verse thirty,
". . .the ruler of this world. . . has no power over me."[153] According to chapter nineteen, verse eleven,
"[Pilate] would have no power over [Jesus] unless it had not been given
[to him] from above."[154] The most explicit reference in this vein is
at the end of the self-presentation as the Good Shepherd, which is found in
chapter ten, verses seventeen and eighteen.
In this passage Jesus says, rather abruptly,
"For
this reason the Father loves me, because I lay down my life, that I may take it
again. No one takes it from me, but I
lay it down of my own accord. I have
power to lay it down and I have power to take it again; this charge I have
received from my Father."[155]
The Crucifixion here is
presented as it is in Acts, nor is the Resurrection viewed as the Divine
reversal of this misdeed. Instead, both
death and Resurrection are presented as Jesus' laying down and taking out of
his life.
Jesus'
Death Is Salvific
Linked
to this is the very direct notion that Jesus' death is salvific. This is presented with a different type of
symbolism (i.e., the symbolism for the salvific significance of his death), but
the type of symbolism I would accent here is the symbolism of water. The following are a couple of passages in the
Gospel that reflect this theme. Water is
mentioned and even accented in chapter four as the salvific gift (we find here
the story of the woman at the well).[156] In chapter seven, verse thirty-seven Jesus
says, "If anyone thirst, let him come to me and drink."[157] Then further, in the same chapter, Jesus
says, "He said this of the Spirit which as yet had not been given."[158] Then in the Johannine Crucifixion narrative,
chapter nineteen, verse thirty-four, we read, "But one of the soldiers
pierced his side with a spear, and at once there came out blood and water."[159] This is a passage unique to John and one that
seems to have symbolic ecclesiological and perhaps sacramental
implications. So we see that Jesus is
more active in his death--there is theme of self-giving that is accented here
not as a dark passage to glory on the other side, but actually as an
exaltation, even in itself. The
Resurrection becomes a kind of enhancement of that--perhaps a manifestation of
that, but certainly not a correction.
Jesus
As The Revealer
Finally,
with regard to John, I not a theme that is strongly accented in the Gospel, but
which is challenged in some circles at the present time. This is the emphasis on the exclusivity of
Jesus' position as the revealer of God (or as the mediator of
salvation). We have already seen chapter
one, verse eighteen ("No one has seen God, only the Son") but
then there is also an explicit dialogue on the subject in chapter fourteen,
verses one through eleven. This passage
reads:
"'Let
not your hearts be troubled; believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many rooms; if it
were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And when I go and prepare a place for you, I
will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be
also. And you know the way where I am
going.' Thomas said to him, 'Lord, we do
not know where you are going; how can we know the way?' Jesus said to him, 'I am the way, and the
truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father, but by me. If you had known me, you would have known my
Father also; henceforth you know him and have seen him.'
Philip said to him, 'Lord, show us the Father, and we
shall be satisfied.' Jesus said to him,
'Have I been with you so long, and yet you do not know me, Philip? He who has seen me has seen the Father; how
can you say, 'Show us the Father?' do
you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father in me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on
my own authority; but the Father who dwells in me does his works. Believe me that I am in the Father and the
Father in me; or else believe me for the sake of the works themselves.'"[160]
The claim to exclusivity in
this passage is very tightly linked to the assertion on Jesus' part to unity
with the Father. If you have another
way, then it could only be a way that leads someplace else. You cannot consistently drop that aspect of
Johannine Christology without scrapping a great deal of the rest of it at the
same time.
But.
. . Light On All Human Beings
I
would however note one passage that is not narrow with regard to this. Here again, we go back to the Prologue to
look at verse nine of chapter one. This
passage notes that "the true light that enlightens every man was coming
in the world."[161] The light that comes is one which sheds light
on all human beings, not simply by a restricted circle. This stands in a certain tension with some
other elements in the Gospel. It is
mentioned here to suggest a kind of universality to the picture of John's
Gospel.
Christology
February 26, 1991
New
Testament Christology (Continued)
Just
a couple of words to complete our discussion of the New Testament section. .
. This has not been an exhaustive study
in the sense of treating all the books of the New Testament.
Colossians
And Ephesians
Today
we will take a look at two final texts--Colossians and Ephesians. These two texts go together to make the same
point. These epistles are in the Pauline
tradition, however most exegetes at the present time hold that Paul did not
write them. For our purposes, the
important thing is that they are in the Pauline tradition, yet somewhat later
than the other Pauline material.
The
element that is important for our study is the linking of Christ to creation
found in these texts. This is
particularly reflected in the hymns (Colossians 1:15-20 and Ephesians 1:10
& 20-21[162]).
In
the Colossians hymn we read:
"He
is the image of the invisible God, the first-born of all creation; for in him
all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether
thrones or dominions or principalities or authorities--all things were created
through him and for him. He is before
all things, and in him all things hold together. He is the head of the body, the church; his
is the beginning, the first-born from the dead, that in everything he might be
pre-eminent. For in him all the fullness
of God was pleased to dwell, and through him to reconcile to himself all
things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross."[163]
In this passage, we see that
to Christ is attributed a distinctive role in creation.
Linking
Christ To The Whole Of Creation
We
can say that Christ's role is not solely for redemption. If Christ is going to be the universal
redeemer, or the source of universal salvation, then there is a need to link
Christ to the whole of creation in the first place (that is what is reflected
in these hymns). This idea is not totally
foreign to earlier Pauline material. We
may compare the above noted passage with First Corinthians, chapter eight,
verse six which reads:
"Yet
for us there is one God, the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we
exist, and one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom are all things and through whom
we exist."[164]
The idea is present in
earlier Pauline letters, but the development of it and emphasis of it in
Colossians and Ephesians is something new.
The
Theme Of Creation
This
linking of Christ to the whole of creation is reflected subsequently in the
fact that many theologians who try to connect Christology to the theme of
creation (i.e., evolutionary perspectives or matters of that sort) typically
make appeals to Colossians and Ephesians as the Biblical background for what
they are doing. This is not done in the
sense that their own positions are completely reflected in those texts, but
that there is a certain affinity between the texts and those lines of
thought. This is true for those who link
the theology of creation to Christology--sometimes with the development of an
evolutionary perspective (e.g., Teilhard de Chardin). These are Biblical passages that are in at
least the remote background of such thought and provides something of a
Biblical reference point for a cosmic picture of Christ. The people that do this are not simply saying
that their ideas are a repetition of what is in the hymn.
The
Pursuit Of Other Theological Questions
I
have just a few concluding comments on the New Testament. First, everywhere in the New Testament, the
development of Christology is linked to the pursuit of other theological
questions. It is joined to a conception
of salvation. It is very closely linked
to eschatology. It is joined to
theological understandings of sin and grace.
And very often, at least, joined to a theology of the Church.
There
are reasons to believe that these links of Christology with other aspects of
theology are not accidental at all. In
the long run Christology must be pursued as one part of the greater whole. This does not mean that a theology student
should not take a course in Christology and take only a course on theology in
general (pursuing everything simultaneously).
The Biblical notion that all of this must be seen in its interconnection
is a valid one. The separations that
take place for the purpose of examining individual themes more thoroughly can
be methodologically appropriate, but only as long as such separations do not
give the impression that the issues are as isolated as they may appear.
Diversity
And Development In New Testament Christology
Secondly,
there is both a diversity in New Testament Christology and the development of
Biblical Christology that is linked to specific problems which the Church
confronted at that time. The New
Testament does not claim to be an exhaustive presentation and it does not claim
to be a completely well-rounded presentation.
Instead, in various ways, specific issues and questions are picked up
and pursued because of the immediate circumstances.
Implications
For Subsequent Questions
One
implication of this is that systematic Christology (i.e., subsequent
Christological questioning) cannot contend itself with organizing New Testament
material into a more structured fashion.
If we put all of New Testament Christology somehow together in a book
with that title, then we would have something very useful, but we would not
have exhausted the theme of Christology.
The insufficiency of New Testament Christology in the sense prescribed,
is not an excuse to throw the New Testament aside and proceed lightly on from
there as if nothing of significance were being abandoned.
The
Historical Dimensions Of Christology
Thirdly,
it is important to note something that we find in different forms throughout
the New Testament. This is the
insistence that Christology has to do with a historical event and from the New
Testament point of view, an individual from the very recent past and specific
occurrences related to his life and death.
What is important to note here is that the Biblical affirmations about
Christ are meant as comments about a figure of recent history. These affirmations are not meant as truisms
of a timeless nature--at least many of them are not of a timeless nature. They are affirmations of the significance of
one particular historical figure (e.g., this can be seen in different ways in
both Paul and Luke where there is something of a shift in history that is linked
to the figure of Christ). One conclusion
that can be drawn from this is that orientation toward history, and
particularly during the period of Jesus' life, is something intrinsic to
Christology (i.e., Christology always must combine an historical dimension with
its more speculative systematic reflection).
In
the early pages of his Foundations of Christian Faith,[165]
Karl Rahner has a very brief warning against a type of Biblicism which ignores
this. What Rahner has in mind is not
uncritical Biblicism, but what he has in mind is an approach which is quite
sophisticated in its approach to the Bible, but lacking the same sense of
nuance in locating the Bible within the overall framework of the Church's
history or history of the world. This is
one reason why this book has so few Biblical references.
[1] Avery Dulles, "Contemporary Approaches
to Christology: Analysis and Reflection," Living Light 13 (1976):
119-144.
[2] See: Karl Rahner. "What is a Dogmatic
Statement," Theological Investigations Vol. V (1961): pages?
And: W. Pannenburg. "What is a Dogmatic
Statement," Principles of
Christian Theologies (the collected essays of W. Pannenburg)
[4] Karl Rahner, "Current Problems in
Christology," Theological Investigations 1. Baltimore: Helicon, 1961, pp. 149-200. (See class syllabus for weeks of April 16 and
23).
[7] For further information about this see:
Ronald Roberson, Eastern Christian Churches. Rome, 1990.
This is a survey of Eastern Churches in general--those in union with
Rome and those not in union with Rome.
There is also a treatment of what we could call Oriental Churches (i.e.,
do not accept Chalcedon--either Nestorian or inclined toward Nestorianism
{these churches also do not accept the Council of Ephesus}, and churches of the
Monophysite variety that do accept Ephesus).
[9] See: Avery Dulles, "Contemporary
Approaches to Christology: Analysis and Reflection," Living Light 13 (1976): 119-144.
[10] Redemptoris Missio, issued by John
Paul II on December 7, 1991 (paragraph 6).
The entire paragraph treats this question.
[12] Haurietis Aquas, issued by Pius XII on
May 15, 1956. National Catholic Welfare
Conference (Washington: Ransdell Press, 1956) Paragraph 64. See also DS 3924.
[14] See: Raymond E. Brown, "'Who Do Men Say
That I Am?' - A Survey of Modern Scholarship on Gospel Christology," Biblical Reflections on Crises Facing the
Church. New York: Paulist, 1975, pp.
20-37.
[15] "And immediately Jesus, perceiving in
his spirit that they thus questioned within themselves, said to them, 'Why do
you question thus in your hearts?'"
(MK 2:8, RSV).
[16] ". . . but whoever blasphemes against
the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is guilty of an eternal sin."
(MK 3:29, RSV).
[17] "And he began to teach them that the
Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the elders and the chief
priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again."
(MK 8:31, RSV).
[18] ". . . for he was teaching his
disciples, saying to them, 'The Son of man will be delivered into the hands of
men, and they will kill him; and when he is killed, after three days he will
rise.'" (MK 9:31, RSV).
[19] ". . . he began to tell them what was
to happen to him, saying, 'Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem; and the Son of
man will be delivered to the chief priests and the scribes, and they will
condemn him to death, and deliver him to the Gentiles; and they will mock him,
and spit upon him and scourge him, and kill him; and after three days he will
rise.'" (MK 10:32c-34, RSV).
[20] "For the Son of man also came not to
be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many." (MK 10:45, RSV)
[21] "And Jesus answered him, 'Blessed are
you, Simon Bar-Jona! For flesh and blood
has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this
rock I will build my Church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against
it. I will give you the keys of the
kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and
whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.'" (MT 16:17-19, RSV).
[22] "Truly, I say to you, this generation
will not pass away before all these things take place. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words
will not pass away. 'But of that day or
that hour no one knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only
the Father.'" (MK 13:30-32,
RSV)
[23] See article: Karl Rahner, "Dogmatic
Reflections on the Knowledge and Self Consciousness of Christ," Theological Investigations 5. Baltimore: Helicon, 1966, pp. 193-215.
[24] For the best example of his position on this
is found in: Edward Schillebeeckx,
"Jesus' Original Abba Experience, Source and Secret of His Being,
Message and Manner of Life," Jesus: An Experiment in Christology. New York: Crossroads, 1979. pp. 256-271.
--After Schillebeeckx explains or portrays at length
(in a number of places throughout this book) what Jesus does or says in his
public life he then steps back and asks what the basis for all of this is. He says that you cannot explain it completely
by reference to the existing conditions [of Jesus' day] because there was
nothing present in the existing conditions that would have given rise to this
type of context. He says that the only
thing that can be a basis (if there is a real basis) is an awareness of God as
creator and as infinitely good.
[25] A contemporary defense of the Scholastic
position is found in: William Most, The
Consciousness of Christ. (Not sure of publication information).
--Most offers a defense of the traditional position on
the subject of Jesus' knowledge and strongly implies that anyone who disagrees
with such a position is heretical. Most
explains the Patristic material as a failure to come to the full appreciation
of Jesus' knowledge achieved at a later date.
Significant Biblical passages (such as the eschatological discourse) is
explained as a kind of refusal to communicate on Christ's part.
[29] The passage reads: "The commandments,
'You shall not commit adultery, You shall not kill, You shall not steal, You
shall not covet,' and any other commandment, are summed up in this sentence,
'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.'" Ephesians 1:10 (RSV)
[31] See: Irenaeus of Lyons, Against Heresies.
v, 1.1 and ii, 18.6 in: Alexander Roberts and James Donaldson, eds., The
Anti-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325 Vol.
1. Grand Rapids Michigan: Wm. B.
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1989.
[32] For complete English text, see: Anselm of
Canterbury, Why God Became Man and The Virgin Conception and Original Sin. Albany, New York: Magi Books, Inc., 1969, pp.
64-163.
[34] Gisbert Greshake is a professor at Friebourg,
Germany. Many believe that he is one of
the "stars" of German Catholic theology, however he is not that well
known outside of Germany. He has a small
book on the priesthood that has been translated into English but most of his
works on the subject of soteriology have not been translated.
[35] Karl Adam, The Son of God. Garden City, New York: Image Books, 1934.
(not sure of page number).
[36] Joseph Pohle and Arthur Preuss, Soteriology:
A Dogmatic Treatise on the Redemption.
St. Louis, Missouri: B. Herder, 1916. (not sure of page number for the
reference given).
[40] Thomas Marsh, "Soteriology
Today," The Irish Theological
Quarterly 46 (1979): 145-157.
--Thomas Marsh is an Irish theologian. This paper was originally presented as a
lecture at a conference of Irish and British theologians at Cambridge in
1978. The body of the paper is the text
of his lecture, while the footnotes were added as a further explanation.
[41] Laurence J. O'Connor, "British-Irish
Theological Seminar," The Irish Theological Quarterly 46 (1979):
57.
[42] See: James Mackey, Jesus, the Man and the
Myth: A Contemporary Christology.
New York: Paulist Press, 1979.
[43] "To the married I give charge, not I
but the Lord, that the wife should not separate from her husband (but if she
does, let her remain single or else be reconciled to her husband)--and that the
husband should not divorce his wife."
(1 Cor. 7:10-11 RSV)
[44] "In the same way, the Lord commanded
that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel."
(1
Cor 9:14 RSV)
[45] "For I received from the Lord what I also
delivered to you, that the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took
bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, 'This is my body
which is for you. Do this in remembrance
of me.' In the same way also the cup,
after supper, saying 'This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in
remembrance of me.'" (1 Cor.
11:23-25 RSV)
[46] "Have this mind among yourselves,
which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not
count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the
form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form he humbled
himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross. Therefore God has highly exalted him and
bestowed on him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus
every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every
tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." (Philippians 2:5-11 RSV)
[47] ". . .yet for us there is one God,
the Father, from whom are all things and for whom we exist, and one Lord Jesus
Christ, through whom are all things and through whom we exist." (1 Cor. 8:6 RSV)
[48] "For I delivered to you as of first
importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance
with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in
accordance with the scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the
twelve. Then he appeared to more than
five hundred brethren at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some
have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to
James, then to all the apostles. Last of
all, as to one untimely born, he appeared also to me." (1 Cor. 15:3-8 RSV)
[49] "For we must all appear before the
judgement seat of Christ, so that each one may receive good or evil, according
to what he has done in the body."
(2 Cor. 5:10 RSV)
[50] "For you yourselves know well that
the day of the Lord will come like a thief in the night." (1 Thes. 5:2 RSV)
[51] "Now these things happened to them as
a warning, but they were written down for our instruction, upon whom the end of
the ages has come." (1 Cor.
10:11 RSV)
[54] "For I am not ashamed of the gospel:
it is the power of God for salvation to every one who has faith, to the Jew
first and also to the Greek. For in it
the righteousness of God is revealed through faith for faith; as it is written,
'He who through faith is righteous shall live.'" (Romans 1:16-17 RSV)
[56] Note verse 18 which reads: "For the
wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and wickedness of
men who by their wickedness suppress the truth." (Romans 1:18 RSV).
[57] An example of this: ". . .for
although they knew God they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him. . ." (Romans 1:21a RSV)
[59] ". . .as it is written: 'None is
righteous, no, not one; no one understands, no one seeks for God. and
". . .all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. . ." (Romans 3:10-11 & 23 RSV)
[61] ". . .they are justified by his grace
as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, whom God put
forward as an expiation by his blood, to be received by faith. This was to show God's righteousness, because
in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins. . ." (Romans 3:24-25 RSV).
[65] "I give thanks to God always for you
because of the grace of God which was given you in Christ Jesus, that in every
way you were enriched in him with all speech and all knowledge." (1 Cor. 1:4-5 RSV)
[73] ". . .but emptied himself, taking the
form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form he humbled
himself and became obedient unto death, even death on a cross." (Philippians 2:7-8 RSV)
[75] "For I delivered to you as of first
importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance
with the scriptures. . ." (1
Cor. 15:3 RSV)
--This is the traditional formula (that is even
pre-Pauline)--that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures.
[76] See: Willi Marxen, Mark the Evangelist:
Studies on the Redaction History of the Gospel, trans. James Boyce
(Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1969).
[81] I am not sure of the title of Pesch's work,
but he wrote a two volume commentary on the Gospel of Mark. Pesch is a German exegetical scholar.
[82] It reads: "The book of the genealogy
of Jesus Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham." (Matthew 1:1 RSV)
[83] "And behold, two blind men sitting by
the roadside, when they heard that Jesus was passing by, cried out, 'Have mercy
on us Son of David!' The crowd rebuked
them, telling them to be silent; but they cried out the more, 'Lord, have mercy
on us, Son of David!'" (Matthew
20:30-31 RSV)
[87] "And a leper came to him beseeching
him, and kneeling said to him, 'If you will, you can make me clean.' Moved with pity, he stretched out his hand
and touched him, and said to him, 'I will; be clean.' And immediately the leprosy left him, and he
was made clean. And he sternly charged
him, and sent him away at once, and said to him, 'See that you say nothing to
any one; but go, show yourself to the priest, and offer for your cleansing what
Moses commanded, for a proof to the people.'
But he went out and began to talk freely about it, and to spread the
news, so that Jesus could no longer openly enter a town, but was out in the
country; and people came to him from every quarter." (Mark 1:40-45 RSV)
[93] Earlier in the chapter the disciples
questioned: "How can one feed these men with bread here in the desert?" (Mark 6:4 RSV)
[95] "And he asked them, 'But who do you
say that I am?' Peter answered him, 'You
are the Christ.' And he charged them to
tell no one about him. And he began to
teach them that the Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the
elders and the chief priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three
days rise again." Mark 8:29-31
(RSV)
[96] "And he began to teach them that the
Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected by the elders and the chief
priests and the scribes, and be killed, and after three days rise again." Mark 8:31 (RSV)
[97] ". . .for he was teaching his
disciples, saying to them, 'The Son of man will be delivered into the hands of
men, and they will kill him; and when he is killed, after three days he will
rise.'" Mark 9:31 (RSV)
[98] "And taking the twelve again, he
began to tell them what was to happen to him, saying, 'Behold, we are going up
to Jerusalem; and the Son of man will be delivered to the chief priests and the
scribes, and they will condemn him to death, and deliver him to the Gentiles;
and they will mock him, and spit upon him, and scourge him, and kill him; and
after three days he will rise.'"
Mark 10:32-34 (RSV)
[99] "For the Son of man also came not to
be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many." Mark 10:45 (RSV)
[101] "My God, my God, why hast though
forsaken me? . . .scorned by men, and
despised by the people. All who see me
mock at me, they make mouths at me, they wag their heads; 'He committed his
cause to the Lord; let him deliver him, let him rescue him, for he delights in
him!' . . .Yea, dogs are round about me;
a company of evildoers encircle me; they have pierced my hand and my feet--I
can count all my bones--they stare and gloat over me; they divide my garments
among them, and for my raiment they cast lots.
But thou, O Lord, be not far off!
O thou my help, hasten to my aid!
. . .I will tell of thy name to my brethren; in the midst of the
congregation I will praise thee: 'You who fear the Lord, praise him! all you sons of Jacob, glorify him." Psalm 22:1a, 6a-8, 16-19, 22-23a (RSV)
[102] Psalm 22:1 is cited in Matthew 27:46 and Mark
15:34. Psalm 22:7-8 is cited in Matthew
27:39, Mark 15:29 and Luke 23:35. Psalm
22:18 is cited in Matthew 27:35, Mark 15:24, Luke 23:34 and John 19:24.
[108] "And Jesus came and said to them,
'All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore and make disciples of all
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I
am with you always, to the close of the age." Matthew 28:18-20 (RSV)
[111] "But Jesus, aware of this, said, 'O
men of little faith, why do you discuss among yourselves the fact that you have
no bread?'" Matthew 16:8 (RSV)
[112] "And being aware of it, Jesus said to
them, 'Why do you discuss the fact that you have no bread? Do you not yet perceive or understand? Are your hearts hardened?" Mark 8:17 (RSV)
[113] "Jesus immediately reached out his
hand and caught him, saying to him, 'O man of little faith, why did you doubt?" Matthew 14:31 (RSV)
[114] "'He saved others; he cannot save
himself. He is the King of Israel; let
him come down now from the cross, and we will believe in him.`" Matthew 27:42 (RSV)
[116] "And over his head they put the
charge against him, which read, 'This is Jesus the King of the Jews.'" Matthew 27:37 (RSV)
[118] "'Behold, my servant whom I have
chosen, my beloved with whom my soul is well pleased. I will put my Spirit upon him, and he shall
proclaim justice to the Gentiles. He
will not wrangle or cry aloud, nor will any one hear his voice in the streets;
he will not break a bruised reed or quench a smoldering wick, till he brings
justice to victory; and in his name will the Gentiles hope.'" Matthew 12:18-21 (RSV).
Compare with Isaiah 42:1-4.
[119] "Then a blind and dumb demoniac was
brought to him, and he healed him, so that the dumb man spoke and saw. And all the people were amazed, and said, 'Can
this be the Son of David?'"
Matthew 12:22-23 (RSV)
[120] "And when they saw him they worshiped
him; but some doubted. And Jesus came
and said to them, 'All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to
me. Go therefore and make disciples of
all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit." Matthew 28:17-19
(RSV)
[121] "And Peter answered him, 'Lord if it
is you, bid me come to you on the water.'
He said, 'Come.' So Peter got out
of the boat and walked on the water and came to Jesus; but when he saw the
wind, he was afraid, and beginning to sink he cried out, 'Lord, save me.' Jesus immediately reached out his hand and
caught him, saying to him, 'O man of little faith, why did you doubt?' And when they got into the boat, the wind
ceased. And those in the boat worshiped
him, saying, 'Truly you are the Son of God.'" Matthew 14:28-33 (RSV). See verses 22-32 for the entire story.
[123] See: Hans Concelmann, The Theology of St.
Luke, (publication information not given).
For a similar treatment of this subject see also: The
Anchor Bible (New York: Doubleday, 1985), vol 28: The Gospel According
to Luke, by Joseph Fitzmeyer.
[127] "Now when all the people were
baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the heaven was
opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form, as a dove, and a
voice came from heaven. 'Thou art my
beloved Son; with thee I am well pleased.'" (Luke 3:21-22 RSV).
[128] "'The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me to preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the
captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are
oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.' And he closed the book, and gave it back to
the attendant, and sat down; and the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on
him. And he began to say to them, 'Today
this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.'" (Luke 4:18-21 RSV).
[130] "Then Satan entered into Judas called
Iscariot, who was of the number of the twelve." (Luke 22:3 RSV).
[134] "'And there is salvation in no one
else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must
be saved.'" (Acts 4:12 RSV).
[135] "'To him all the prophets bear
witness that every one who believes in him receives forgiveness of sins through
his name.'" (Acts 10:43 RSV).
[136] "'that everything written about me in
the law of Moses and the prophets and the psalms must be fulfilled.'" Luke 24:44b (RSV)
[137] "And taking the twelve, he said to
them, 'Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and everything that is written of
the Son of Man by the prophets will be accomplished. for he will be delivered to the Gentiles, and
will be mocked and shamefully treated and spit upon; they will scourge him and kill him, and on
the third day he will rise.' But they
understood none of these things; this saying was hid from them, and they did
not grasp what was said." Luke
18:31-34 (RSV).
[139] "Then he led them out as far as
Bethany, and lifting up his hands he blessed them, While he blessed them, he parted from them,
and was carried up into heaven. And they
returned to Jerusalem with great joy, and were continually in the temple
blessing God." Luke 24:50-53
(RSV).
[148] "And as Moses lifted up the serpent
in the wilderness, so must the Son of man be lifted up, that whoever believes
in him may have eternal life."
(John 3:14-15 RSV).
[149] "Now this he said about the Spirit,
which those who believed in him were to receive; for as yet the Spirit had not
been given, because Jesus was not yet glorified." (John 7:39 RSV).
[156] See John 4:5-42. More specifically, see verse fourteen which
reads: ". . .but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will
never thirst." (RSV).
[162] ". . .as a plan for the fullness of
time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth.
. . .which he accomplished in Christ when he raised
him from the dead and made him sit at his right hand in the heavenly places.
far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and above every name
that is named, not only in this age but also in that which is to come; and he
has put all things under his feet and has made him the head over all things for
the church. . ." Ephesians 1:10 & 20-22 (RSV).
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