GOD: IN THE EARTHLY OR THE HEAVENLY CITY
At
the cost of oversimplification, the question can be put another way: is
God's salvation effected ultimately through our resurrection out of the
world or through our involvement in secular institutions in the world?
The former option is the one adopted by traditionalists and is
consistent, it is said, with their two-layered world. The lower layer is
secular and thus provides the Christian with noting but an alien and
hostile environment. Traditionalists, progressives argue, long to escape
it since the only things meaningful to them belong in the upper world.
As they wait to take flight from the world, they begin to resemble the
nervous hermit weaving and unweaving his baskets. On this reckoning, the
plan of salvation is accomplished vertically through the Christian's
extraction from the world. This, of course, puts the options too
starkly, but it indicates how the debate is shaping up. Alternatively,
some progressives have argued that God's saving plan is partly
identified with secular life and is being realized through it.
Redemption is ultimately achieved in the world, not above it, for the
two layers of the cake have become one. No longer is the Christian a
lonely hermit in refuge from secular life. On the contrary, human
activity at all levels in our society is providing the raw substance for
God's redemptive work. Secular man, then, is becoming a co-worker with
God in redeeming human life, and the catalyst in this action is the
Christian. Thus Barnabas Ahern has explained: What
really matters is the tremendous truth affirmed by the Council that all
worthwhile human activity is part of the creative plan of God and of
the redemptive mystery of Christ who died that he might re-establish all
things and transform them into the perfect eschatological kingdom of
his Father. The whole world—the heavens and the earth, the vast
oceans and verdant fields, the tangled bush of Africa and the trampled
streets of New York, men of all colors and of all backgrounds—all that
God has made is alive with an plan to God. (Baniabas Ahern, "The
Eschatological Dimensions of the Church," Vatican II: An Interfaith Appraisal, ed. John H. Miller, pp. 296-300).
According to this view, eschatology will be realized horizontally rather than vertically.
The object of God's saving purposes is not merely the souls of
Christian people, but rather human life in all of its parts. Moreover,
in order to achieve this end, God is not extracting people out of the world, but is presently active in the world in all of its comprehensive reality. This
means, among other things, that heaven is not going to be somewhere
"out there." Rather, the present physical earth will be transformed into
heaven because it is now being prepared for God's eternal habitation. The home of man is going to become the home of God; the institutions of man likewise will become God's institutions. Edward Schillebeeckx is among those who have suggested this new approach. In God the Future of Man,
he has argued that there is a deep chasm dividing modern man's
secularity and the religious ideals of traditional Catholicism. He
traces the growth of secularity from the twelfth century onward and
concludes that Christian thought has not kept pace with secular
development. Rejecting the notion of two-layered reality, Schillebeeckx
goes on to argue that the meaning of God is internal, and its fullest realization will happen on the horizontal sphere of man's own history. Schillebeeckx identifies God with an inner sense which he says men have that the future has meaning. Man has an unshakable confidence that at the end of the road there will be good, not bad. This is God. Some of these ideas were also probed in a volume edited by Schillebeeckx and entitled The Problem of Eschatology.
It contains essays by several authors who examine the themes of death,
resurrection, immortality and the soul, on the assumption that the
afterlife is to occur on the flat plane of man's history and not in some
airy world "above."
By
removing the frontier that has traditionally divided the natural from
the supernatural, contemporary theologians are able to see reality as
one composite whole. The whole of the created world is beginning to
throb with the hidden life of God. It is this development, more than
anything else, which explains the current convergence between Eastern
and Western thought. This view has profound implications for the
doctrine of man, as we shall see, and it is these implications which are
leading Western theologians towards Eastern pantheism, mysticism and
universalism.
The
infusion of the supernatural in the natural also explains why some of
the distinctives of the Christian doctrine of God, such as his
personality, seem less tenable today than before. When the being of God
is identified with secularity and even with trees, rivers, grass,
streets, buildings and atomic bombs, the idea of his personality becomes
difficult to maintain. When this occurs, the personality of man
also becomes doubtful. He may be nothing more than a chance collation of
atoms, in which case the search for meaning in human life will probably
end in failure. Before looking at these implications more closely,
however, we must examine the extent to which the Council endorsed the
new eschatology.
The universalism implicit in the new view
emerges in several important passages in the Council documents, one of
which states: The Church, to which we are all called in Christ
Jesus, and in which we acquire sanctity through the grace of God, will
attain her full perfection only in the glory of heaven. Then will come
the time of the restoration of all things (Acts 3:21). Then the human
race as well as the entire world . . . will be perfectly re-established
in Christ [my italics] ."
Second,
the idea that secular activity is being incorporated into the divine
plan of salvation since the dividing wall between God and the world has
been partially broken down is taught in the following passage:
"For
after we have obeyed the Lord, and in His Spirit nurtured on earth the
values of human dignity, brother-hood and freedom, and indeed all the
good fruits of our nature and enterprise, we will find them again [my
italics] .... This will be so when Christ hands over to the Father a
kingdom eternal and universal." Christ's atonement, then, was aimed at restoring earthly institutions no less than broken human natures. Human
activity which makes life more genuinely human is bringing us nearer
the final consummation because it is making life more genuinely divine.
Every technical advance, every adventure into space, every effort to
rout crime and every attempt to give capitalism a conscience, if man is
really being served, have become means of God's salvation of man. The
reality of God has become identified with the reality of the
earthly city, the sacred is found in the secular, Christ is in the
world. This may give the impression that the Council endorsed the
new secular theology without reserve. This, of course, is not true.
Alongside ideas from the "horizontal" eschatology were juxtaposed ideas
from the more traditional "vertical" eschatology.
The
interpreter of the Council's theology is once again in a difficult
position. Should conciliar teaching be identified with the first option
on the grounds that a majority endorsed it? Or should it be aligned with
the second option on the grounds that this teaching seems to have papal
approval? The interpretation adopted here is that the new secular
theology will either determine the direction in which Catholic thinking
will move, despite papal disapproval, or at least it will be highly
influential within Catholicism. The reasons for taking this approach are
those which were given earlier in trying to decide which theology of
revelation should be accepted from the Council's teaching. In the new
thinking, man is the focal point of theological attention. He is, after
all, the point of integration between the orders of reality. Through man
a bridge is thrown over from the one sphere of reality to the other.
Consequently, "signals of transcendence" register
on his inner life. Insofar as this is true, religious experience does
provide basic theological information for these "insights," and
"perceptions" can be accepted as a form of revelation. The Council in
its Pastoral Constitution on the Church in the Modern World utilized
these insights and accepted man's centrality: Hence
the pivotal point of our total presentation will be man himself, whole
and entire, body and soul, heart and conscience, mind and will.
There are two ways to explain how the nature of man is pervaded by the
supernatural. Philosophically, an argument has been developed along the
lines of being. Man's being, it is said, runs down into and becomes
continuous with Being. Since Being pervades the world, man is an
important point of juncture between material and spiritual reality.
Alternatively, a more theological approach is possible. Man participates
in and is an expression of the divine, not primarily through his being
but through his humanity. His humanity is the point of connection with
divinity.
This
seems to be the explanation adopted by the Council, in one passage at
least. Speaking of the death of Christ, it was stated: "To the sons of
Adam He restores the divine likeness which had been disfigured from the
first sin onward. Since human nature as He assumed it was not annulled
by that very fact it has been raised up to a divine dignity in our
respect too. For by his incarnation the Son of God has united Himself in some fashion with every man. [my italics]
For
students living in the twentieth century and nurtured largely, if
unconsciously, on European existentialism, this statement is at least
enigmatic and probably nonsensical. It implies a view of human nature
which is alien to our Western mentality. For centuries, however, it has
been upheld in the Eastern Orthodox Church. In Greek philosophy, human
nature was looked upon as a single and universal phenomenon, a kind of
web spread over the whole earth, each man constituting a small part.
It was like a universal substance, a minuscule amount of which had been
dropped into the crucible of each body. Every person, then, is a
partial or pale representation of this total reality, and each person is
related to the whole of mankind in a far more binding way than mere
blood relationship. For the existentialist, however, this kind of
thinking spells the end of individual action and responsibility. For
him, each man is an independent island. There is no universal stuff
called human nature antecedent to the individual's existence.
Consequently the individual comes into the world with an unformed
nature. What shape it will eventually take depends on the actions of
will by which the man fashions and authenticates himself. There is no
relationship between individual men and mankind. Plato summarized the
Greek view by saying that essence precedes existence; Sartre rejected
it, saying that existence precedes essence.
At
this point, the Council showed itself in agreement with Plato rather
than Sartre. Did the second person of the Godhead join himself to Jesus
as an isolated individual or to the universal phenomenon of human nature
and hence to mankind in toto?
The Platonic view demands the latter. The Council agreed in at least one
place, saying that Christ "united Himself in some fashion with every
man." If Christ joined himself to humanity in the incarnation, rather
than to the isolated human nature in Jesus, two important consequences
follow. First, the focus of theology has plainly shifted from Calvary to Bethlehem, from the atonement to the incarnation. The
incarnation virtually effects atonement. Union with Christ is effected
not through trusting in his saving death but through being organically
joined to mankind in whom Christ's life has been released. In much the
same way as a pond will slowly become colored if a bucket of dye is
thrown into it, so humanity is slowly being divinized through the life
of Christ which has been injected into it at the incarnation. The second
important consequence is that the focus of salvation has shifted from the idea of justification to that of deification.
Traditionally in Roman Catholicism, sin has been defined in legal
terms. The Reformers also built on this idea. Sin, they argued, is law
breaking. Under the law's condemnation, man becomes powerless to release
himself. Justification, the act of release, was similarly couched in
legal terms. God the judge, they taught, releases man from his legal
offense and imputes his crime to and exacts his punishment on another.
It is true, of course, that this represents only one aspect of the
Bible's teaching; the event of being saved involves much more than these
bare legal exchanges. Nevertheless, it does not involve less than
these.
However,
some passages of the conciliar documents define sin more as a clouding
of our minds through our mortality than as a perverting of our natures
through moral disobedience. Sin, it is said, is internal "imbalance";
salvation, we conclude, consists in introducing the principle of
immortality into human life which will then reverse the effects of
imbalance in mortality. The life of Christ which is the immortal yeast
in the mortal human dough will eventually permeate every man. As this
occurs, a man becomes more genuinely human and as he becomes more
genuinely human, he becomes more genuinely divine. The new eschatology
seems to assume as its salvation-model the idea of deification rather
than penal redemption.
The attempt to give the affairs of secular life a divine significance was pioneered by Teilhard de Chardin.
It is magnificently illustrated in his account of the exploding of an
atomic bomb which he witnessed. With his customary eloquence he
described the fears and apprehensions which surrounded the event. The
potential for destruction which the explosion was about to demonstrate
was on everyone's mind. Was this bomb one day going to show how
completely man's technological abilities have outstripped his capacity
to control them? Yet, as the earth trembled under the atomic impact and
as the sky became incandescent with fire, Teilhard recalled that it was
joy, not apprehension, that filled his mind. What he saw in the flecked and shattered sky was not the possibility of destruction but of re-creation. For contained in that mushroom cloud was the omnipotent and crea-tive power of God which had been unlocked from the earth.
There are other ways of developing this new relationship between the natural and the supernatural.
As far as the future is concerned, the most important of these is what
is now called "political theology," an alliance between political
Marxism and religious conviction. A new base has now been established
for political action. If God's saving plan for the earth is being
effected through secular institutions, then political protest and social
revolution are understood as the means God is using to renovate the
world. These ideas first came to expression in German Protestantism in
Jurgen Moltmann's The Theology of Hope. Later, he visited the United
States and published the substance of his lectures. The revolutionary
ideas which are barely dis-cernible in the first volume become quite
evident in the second. His thesis is simple enough. The ultimate
renovation of the earth is the end to which the Christian subjects all
else. This is Christianity's unifying concept. The means of achieving
this renovation is revolution. And, because it is central to Christian
thinking, the revolutionary means of attaining the goal of renovation
must receive urgent attention. This kind of religious Marxism moved
rapidly from Protestant circles into Roman Catholic thinking which had
been well prepared for its reception by Vatican II. Johannes Metz has
become the chief spokesman for the Catholic "political theology" in
Germany.
What is happening in Germany is by no means of merely parochial concern
or peripheral significance. South America, for example, is now ripe for
political revolution. The poverty, oppression and thwarted hopes of
which revolutions are made abound on that continent. It is not
surprising, then, that many South American priests are adopting the
stance, if not the practices, of Marxist revolutionaries. What makes
this development so significant is that the destruction of the existing
order is being given messianic significance. The crumbling of buildings,
the overthrow of institutions and even the murder of fellow countrymen
may be considered signs of God's impending renovation of society.
Revolutions can generate tremendous impetus of their own accord, but
allied to religious conviction, they receive a soul, a determination,
even an ideology, which they would other-wise lack. This
is why the new secular theology cannot be dismissed as merely the
brainchild of theologians closeted away in their ivory towers. It may
make itself felt one day not only in the lecture room but on the streets
of cities smashed by revolutionaries. Vatican II did not openly
sanction revolution, except in one paragraph, but its endorsement of the
new eschatology, its giving of sacred meaning to the secular, has
opened up the possibility of Church involvement in revolutions. There is
no question, though, how radicals in South America will understand that
one paragraph which gives tacit approval to revolution:
"By its very nature, private property has a social quality deriving from
the law of communal purpose of earthly goods. If this social quality is
overlooked, property often becomes an occasion of greed and of serious
disturbance. In many underdeveloped areas there are large and even
gigantic rural estates which are only moderately cultivated or lie
completely idle for the sake of profit. At the same time the majority of
the people are either without land or have only very small holdings,
and there is evident and urgent need to increase land productivity. . . insufficiently cultivated estates should be distributed to those who can make these lands fruitful" [my italics] .
This,
of course, is precisely what happened in the Bolshevik revolution where
an economic elite were forcibly ejected from the large uncultivated
estates which they had owned. At that time the Church was identified
with the status quo. It supported the imperial order. Now it appears to
be identifying with the downtrodden peasant. At least this is how South
American theologians like Mendez Arceo and Ivan Illich are interpreting
their Catholic commitment. And, in a slightly different context, this is
also how the Berrigan brothers are interpreting theirs. What is
alarming about the new direction in which elements of avant-garde
Catholic thought are moving is not their concern for ethical, social and
political matters but the base on which the concern is built. Radical
priests and some laymen are seeing themselves as the instruments in
God's re-making of society and revolution as the way in which this will
be achieved. Behind this idea lies the new relationship of the natural and the supernatural.
God and the world, as biblically conceived, are no longer at odds with
one another, but the supernatural is now merged into the natural.
...
CHRISTIANITY: BROAD OR NARROW DEFINTION?
Traditional Catholicism maintained that the connecting link between man
and Christ is the Church, whereas the Reformers, for example, argued
that it is faith. ...This position was contested by Roman theologians of
the day who established an identification between Christ and the
Catholic Church. With few exceptions, they said, man can only know
Christ through this Church. Since there is an exclusiveness in Christ's
teaching about himself, so there must be an exclusiveness in the
Church's teaching about herself. If Christ is the only source of truth,
then joining the Catholic Church is the only way of finding that truth.
The one Christ and the one Body of Christ belong indissolubly together.
He who rejects the one true Church is all too easily brought, as by an
inexorable logic, to go astray also about Christ. As a matter of fact
the history of revolt from the Church is at the same time a history of
the progressive decomposition of the primitive faith in Christ. This
position was deftly summarized in the third century by the north African
bishop Cyprian and officially endorsed by the Fourth Lateran Council
(A.D. 1215) in the dictum that "Outside the Church there is no salvation
(Extra ecclesiarn nulla salus)."
Today, however, in an intriguing new development, Roman Catholic
theologians themselves are trying to pierce the armor of this argument.
It is vulnerable, they say, in its claim that there is an airtight
relationship between Christ and the Catholic Church.
The
old argument was formulated by men who thought they could know God's
truth infallibly. Their confidence, it is said, was the child of
classical logic in which truth was always truth, error was always error
and the distinction between them was never blurred. The classical mind
was composed of black and white only, never of gray.
Consequently, there was for traditional Catholics an unbridgeable chasm
between Christ and the devil, light and darkness, Catholic and
non-Catholic religion. But is this not, it is asked, a rather facile
oversimplification of the real situation?
On the level of cognition—what man can know—the
old Catholic was confident and affirmative. The new Catholic, by
contrast, tends to be agnostic in some respects and uncertain in others.
He is the child of the existential, not the classical, world. For him,
the object of religious knowledge, in this case Christ, is often
obscure. The sharp lines of distinction in matters of truth are now
untenable, perhaps even undesirable. The concern has shifted from
objective definition to subjective experience. It is not what you
believe which is important but that you believe, not what you believe in
but the quality of your commitment as you believe.
Consequently, some people have begun to wonder—rather loudly as it turns out—whether
there is a distinction to be made between truth as it exists in itself
and truth as it is understood in the Church. Do we ever understand truth
as it really is? Does not our fallible humanity always interpose itself
like an obfuscating filter between the truth and what we understand
about that truth? If this distinction can be maintained, then truth
could mean different things for God and for man. Reality for God is
utterly perspicuous; for man it is always blurred. To God, truth is
always an integrated whole; for man, it usually appears as fragmented
insights which, at some later point, might have to be revised. Truth is absolute to God; it is relative to man.
A good illustration of the new view of truth, although it is only one of many which could be used, is the book entitled God Jesus Spirit.
This book, says its editor Daniel Callahan, was made necessary by the
new spirit which Vatican II encouraged. It has forced Roman Catholics to
rethink their faith in non-traditional terms. Callahan, therefore,
commissioned a number of authors to re-examine the doctrine of God, the
meaning of Jesus and the place of the Spirit in Christian life. The
three subjects which were chosen would suggest that what was really in
view was the doctrine of the Trinity, but Callahan denies this. Modern
theologians, he says, no longer think of truth as a whole, nor do they
think of Christianity as a system in which doctrines are inter-related.
Rather, truth is fragmentary, and Christian theology is made up of a
series of partial and unrelated insights. Themes are taken up seriatim; their interconnections are not examined.
If
this position can be sustained, there is little doubt that the airtight
relationship between Christ and the Church has been broken. The
truth of Christ may be absolute, but the Church can never see it
clearly enough to comprehend it absolutely. Her doctrinal formulations
can never be more than approximations to the truth. Some are good
approximations, others are bad, but all are subject to revision. Since
the Church can no longer declare with that old ring of authority what
the truth is, she must accordingly abandon her old claim to be in exclusive possession of it.
This
line of reasoning has an unusual history. For about twenty years before
Vatican II, Catholic thinkers—especially those in France—had been
probing this distinction, to the acute discomfort of traditionalists. In
his opening speech to the Council, Pope John apparently alluded
favorably to these ideas. However, we should note that it is one thing for theologians to speculate about truth like this, but quite another for the Pope to do so.
Indeed, in the brief interim between the reading of his speech and its
appearance in official translation, one traditionalist at least went on
record as saying that the Pope could not possibly have endorsed these
ideas.' To the conservatives' chagrin,
however, it turned out that he had, for he said that "the substance of
the ancient doctrine of the deposit of faith is one thing, and the way
in which it is presented is another."
To
a Protestant casually browsing over the speech, this sentence may
appear so bland as to seem almost meaningless. It may seem as if John
was merely saying that each generation must re-express the unchanging
core of Christian truth in its own language and jargon. But this
idea is so obvious the Pope need not have said it, and it is certainly
not capable of precipitating the furor which followed his statement. We
must look elsewhere for its real significance. In the audience of
trained theologians, John could use a kind of theological shorthand
which would be interpreted in the way he wished. His single sentence was
a pithy, if deceptively simple, summary of the new ideas: There
is a distinction to be drawn between truth in itself ("the deposit of
faith is one thing") and truth as it is comprehended by the Church and
taught to the world ("the way in which it is presented is another").
This
distinction is primarily responsible for freeing contemporary Roman
Catholicism from its traditional attitudes towards culture and religion.
Because the close relationship between Christ and the Church has been
broken, no doctrinal formulation from the past can bind Catholic
attitudes in the present. Each formulation is to some extent deficient.
Each generation must try afresh to penetrate the deposit of faith more
deeply and correspondingly reformulate its own faith. No generation will
again be able to claim eternal and unchanging status for its
formulations.
Hans Kung was the first major theologian to pursue these ideas in print.
For example, he tried to give Council decisions a merely local or
momentary significance.' They were infallible in the moment in which
they were enunciated, but at a later date they could be changed. But
then in 1970, he moved to a more logically satisfying position in his
book Infallible?: An Inquiry in which he denied that infallibility can ever be found in any form or in any place (including the Vatican).
The
New Catholicism, then, does not find itself limited by past statements
on man's religion. The traditionalists were formulating faith for their
time; progressives are now doing it for ours. Both parties are said to
be working with the same "deposit of faith," but as they work with it,
they see different things.
According
to progressives, the crucial statement in the Council documents
occurred early in the Constitution on the Church. There it is stated
that "at all times and among every people, God has given welcome to
whosoever fears Him and does what is right." This sentence appears
before any of the discussion on the traditional means of salvation, such
as the sacraments. This order is important, as Butler explains:
The
constitution on the Church . . . in its chapter on the People of God,
opens its discussion of salvation by a primary affirmation that
'whosoever fears God and does what is right is acceptable to God.' Only
after laying down this principle does it proceed to teach that the
objective means of salvation are given by God in the People of God, that
is the Church. This inversion of the traditional order of thought may
be taken as a shift in emphasis from objective to subjective. ...
Salvation is, for the individual, radically dependent on subjective good
intention [rather] than on external ecclesiastical allegiance ... [B.C Butler, The Theology of Vatican II, 167]
One
of the French theologians who did so much to influence the Church
towards many of the new positions is Henri de Lubac. On this particular
point see his Catholicism: Christ and the Common Destiny of Man, (London: Bums and Oates, 1950), pp. 107-26)."
Theology is at the centre of the Vatican Council II confusion and SSPX canonical problem.
ReplyDeleteArchbishop Pozzo : continuing a monologue with the SSPX
http://eucharistandmission.blogspot.it/2016/07/archbishop-pozzo-continuing-monologue.html