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A review article published in Doctrine and Life,
March 2004
Church-of-Ireland Canon Hilary Wakeman - recently retired from
parish ministry in Co Cork - is chiefly concerned in this work to
stem the decline of what she calls 'moderate Christianity' -
especially here in Ireland. By 'moderate' she means
non-fundamentalist - and she ascribes this decline largely to "the
unwillingness of all the churches, in all countries but perhaps
especially now in Ireland, to look honestly and openly into what we
say we believe".
Opening with the familiar tale of the Emperor's New Clothes, she
soon makes it clear that she shares the embarrassment of Episcopal
bishop J.S. Spong at having to utter the Nicene creed as part of a
religious service, as though it was in all respects literally true.
"Sunday by Sunday, countless Christians, reciting the Creeds in
church, have the experience of metaphorically crossing their fingers
behind their backs when they say some particular set of words. This
brings a sense of dishonesty, of integrity apparently having to be
set aside for the greater good."
Canon Wakeman soon makes clear which creedal doctrines she sees as
causing this finger-crossing: the virgin birth and the bodily
resurrection of Jesus. She points out that surveys of belief
increasingly find that many Church of England clergymen don't
actually believe these doctrines - less than half in the case of the
virgin birth. (Unfortunately she provides no supporting data on the
finger-crossing, so 'countless' it remains.)
At this point Canon Wakeman reaches for the now-familiar theory that
the left and right halves of the human brain have different
functions: the left is 'analytical', the right 'intuitive', and so
on. She offers the possibility that religion belongs properly to the
intuitive side, while doctrine tends to be a left-brain analytical
and organisational matter. In the Creeds, she fears, "Christians are
being asked to state that poetic-paradox statements about God are
literally true".
At this point, I must confess, alarm bells were insistently ringing
for me. Are the categories 'poetic' and 'literal' (or 'factual')
necessarily mutually exclusive? What would happen to the poetry of
the Creeds, or of the Gospels for that matter, if we were to insist
that they were merely poetic (i.e. fictive), and not, or not
necessarily, substantially true in a historical sense. And if
Christianity belongs wholly in the realm of the intuitive and
fictive, who will then find it compelling as a source of meaning?
Certainly the Gospels and the creeds have poetic resonance, but
their endurance to this late date has surely had to do essentially
with their claim to a substantive historical and factual foundation
- an actual intervention by a transcendant reality into human
history.
Would Canon Wakeman attempt to discern the actual as distinct from
the poetic truth about such an intervention? Disappointingly for me,
she ends this chapter on doctrine by proposing that Richard
Dawkins's objections to the Catholic doctrine of the Assumption are
valid on the grounds that this elevation of a material body into a
heaven is comprehensible only within the 'flat-earth' vertically
ordered universe of the early first millennium.
This, for me, is an unfortunate descent into Spongian rhetoric. It
is also strangely dated scientifically, stuck somewhere before 1900
C.E. - as though 'hard' matter had not been discovered in the last
century to be mostly empty space, to consist otherwise largely of
vast quantities of energy, and to be gravitationally compressible to
the point of its own disappearance. Given also the theoretical
possibility of multiple invisible further dimensions within what we
perceive as empty four-dimensional space, just how much
'commonsense' certitude can there be these days on the actual nature
of 'space' and 'bodies'?
The fact is, surely, that the most advanced physics today has
destroyed the 'commonsense' Newtonian universe that underpins
atheistic certitude, and is as inscrutable on the precise nature of
physical reality as theology ever was on the subject of heaven. I
strongly wish the progressive school would progress to the point of
acknowledging this. If we are to update the Creeds (an exercise not
attempted in this book), we must do it properly and not leave
ourselves with something that would have been spanking new and
acceptable to, say, Charles Darwin.
Furthermore, for theologians, heaven has almost always had more to
do with a relationship of unity with God than with questions of
'where?' or 'how?' Is there for Canon Wakeman, I wondered at this
point, truly a God to relate to?
Again unfortunately, her chapter on 'How we experience God' is
centred once more on the assertion that we experience God with the
'right' brain, whereas doctrine is a 'left' brain activity. This is
ultimately inadequate, as it seems again to fudge the issue of
truth. Can we really deal with people who ask "Is there truly a
God?" by saying something like:
"Well, the right side of my brain - the poetic side - says 'yes',
while the left side, the analytical side, is far less sure of it."?
If we do we should be well prepared for the next obvious question:
"But isn't the right side of your brain the bit that makes things
up?" Where, I wonder, would the Canon go from there?
On the grounds of their poetic resonance she is willing to accept
doctrines such as the divinity of Christ, the Fall and the
Resurrection as 'basically life affirming' but, she insists, the
concept of atonement "(that Jesus died to placate an angry God)
seems to have no salvageable aspect".
If that particular theory of atonement is the only acceptable one
within the Anglican communion I shudder at such authoritarian
rigidity. Especially because the earliest understanding of atonement
centred upon the idea of release (or redemption) not from a debt
owed to God, but from the power of evil, personified as Satan. Canon
Wakeman is here identifying a travesty of Anselm's feudal
satisfaction theory of atonement with the Creeds - a clear
anachronism.
The point is important, because Canon Wakeman has begun by arguing
that a twenty-first mind cannot truly accept a first- or even
fourth-century worldview. Given Rene Girard's anthropological
analysis of the Gospel text as an exposure of the process of
scapegoating violence in the ancient world - a process still ongoing
in phenomena as diverse as the war on terrorism and schoolyard
bullying - the first century understanding of atonement may well in
fact be bang up-to-date.
Catholic demythologisers might note at this point that this must
score as a plus for the Catholic catechism, which is non-definitive
on theories of atonement. It does not insist that God demanded
satisfaction (or substitution for that matter) - merely that
Christ's suffering and death has forever reconciled us with God.
Atonement is simply at-one-ment - final reconciliation. The doctrine
in itself is not definitive on how Jesus reconciles. For me -
poetically and factually - God moves towards us - and reveals
himself through -Jesus - in the way that the father of the prodigal
son ran to meet him on his return. (And of course I can say so while
acknowledging that to speak of God as merely male is inadequate.)
In a chapter on 'Some Basic Christian Doctrines - and New Ways to
Express Them' Canon Wakeman comes closest to defining her positions
on revelation, the nature of God, and the sonship, resurrection and
divinity of Jesus. She dwells sensibly upon the ineffability of God,
but her account of the concept of revelation seems woefully
inadequate, leaving out as it does the centrality of Jesus to the
concept - the belief that it is through the revelatory Jesus above
all that we come to know the ineffable God.
This is important, because the statement 'Jesus is God' needs to be
understood as a statement that speaks as much about God as about
Jesus - an assertion that we come to understand the goodness,
intentions and wisdom of God uniquely and indispensably through him.
And this in turn means that the statement 'Jesus is the Son of God'
could never have been fully understood in a simplistic biological
sense - as though anyone ever thought he already knew who and what
God is and how exactly he could become a biological parent. The
doctrines of the sonship and divinity of Jesus are best understood
as expressing a belief in the unique filiation of Jesus - the belief
that his filial relationship to, understanding of, and fidelity to
the being he himself called 'Abba', was of an order way beyond the
sonship of, for example, David - so far beyond it that Jesus became
for Christians the definitive, sufficient and indispensable
authority on who God is and what he expects of us. Literal
biological sons (e.g. Absalom) were not uniformly faithful to their
parents, so that to say of Jesus that he was the 'literal' son of
God would not pay him a unique compliment. 'Light from Light, True
God from True God' on the other hand suggests true fidelity to and
identity with the spiritual essence and benevolent purpose of God.
This is a far higher claim that does not insist upon a 'literal'
interpretation of 'sonship' (whatever 'literal' might mean in this
context).
Canon Wakeman would probably object that the doctrine of the virgin
birth is surely insisting upon some kind of biological sonship. As
biology was an unknown science in the fourth century it could be
argued equally that it is no more than an attempt to explain and
justify the exaltation of Jesus to the pinnacle of the revelatory
process - to explain how he could have become what he was, so
entirely unaffected by, yet opposed to, the evil he confronted.
Canon Wakeman rejects even the use of the word 'unique' in reference
to Jesus, and prefers this formula: 'In Jesus there was so much of
God that those who came in contact with him could not see where
Jesus stopped and God began.'
I must confess that I find this embarrassingly twee - a sentimental
reduction that is not only condescending but completely incapable of
explaining the commitment-unto-death of so many of those who
followed Jesus - precisely because they believed in his revelatory
uniqueness.
It's clear soon enough what consequences flow from such negativity.
To begin with, although Jesus's crucifixion was the result of an
'archetypal' confrontation between good and evil, the concept of
Jesus 'dying for our sins' can only be understood through the
unacceptable Anselmian lens, and must go. With it goes, of course,
any notion of an historical centrality for the Gospel story.
Was 'Abba' a right-brain mytho-poetic (i.e. fictive) construct of
Jesus? If so, did Jesus confront bogus religion and endure
crucifixion essentially because he had a dangerous habit of talking
to himself? Canon Wakeman does not address such questions - but they
go to the heart of the larger question of whether Christianity is
worth saving
And inevitably, Jesus's bodily resurrection must go the way of
'literal' sonship. The intense sense of loss that was felt by the
closest followers of Jesus, and their recollections of his life and
teachings, led to a conviction that he was in some sense still
present, and must therefore have survived death. It was the
surviving Christian community that created the right-brain myth of
the bodily resurrection. The possibility, strongly argued by the NT
texts themselves, that it was on the contrary the unexpected
eventuality of some kind of actual tangible resurrection that
restored the already dispirited and fragmenting Christian community,
is not one that Canon Wakeman can entertain.
A few historian's questions surfaced in my mind at this point. If
this was all there ever was to Jesus, why did his followers soon go
to the suicidal lengths of making of this rejected one the
cornerstone of more than one separated and excoriated community
within, and then outside, Judaism? Was Stephen's self-sacrificing
testament merely another (right-) brainstorm? And why did Paul take
the equally dangerous and inexplicable course of substituting belief
in a liberating Jesus for rigid adherence to the minutiae of the
Jewish law as expounded by the religious elites of his time - the
belief system for which he had earlier been willing to kill
Christians on the grounds of the threat they posed to it? Why were
they such a threat?
These questions are important, I believe, because they relate to the
origins of the historical phenomenon of global Christianity that
lasted the two millennia needed to justify any discussion today on
the meaning of the life of Jesus of Nazareth. If you reduce Jesus to
the status of another prophet - even a supreme prophet (and Canon
Wakeman shies away even the use of the word 'unique' to describe
him) - you are faced with the problem of explaining the emergence of
Christianity from Judaism as a quite separate belief system that was
willing to endure the most frightful persecution that followed. No
amount of right-brain poetry can fully explain the often
horrendously risky dynamism of the early church.
What other consequences flow from progressive reductionism, in Canon
Wakeman's view? Can we still celebrate Christmas and Easter, for
example? Yes, we are assured - the celebration of light piercing the
darkness and the victory of life over death is beneficial - and the
soul does indeed need the periodic renewal that Lent can provide.
The Bible can be read for its nourishment of the right brain - but
the idea of divine inspiration is liable to nourish fundamentalism
and so should be discarded. Lectio divina, however, is encouraged.
As for the future, Canon Wakeman sees little hope for 'moderate'
orthodoxy, which is slowly 'dying out'. The future lies either with
reaction (going backward and tightening up) - the road taken by
fundamentalism - or progressivism (going forward and loosening up)
in the style of her book. The preservation of an 'exclusive' core of
doctrine is a futile exercise. The future of ministered sacraments
is tied to the problematic future of ministry itself, and we should
encourage one another to see the beauty of the natural world as
'sacramental'.
Was Jesus even archetypally sacramental? As Canon Wakeman quotes
Schillebeeckz and admits that Jesus was at least an archetype of
some kind, one might expect that she would explore this possibility
at least. Unfortunately she doesn't - leaving me with essentially
the same disappointment that I had with J.S. Spong's 'Why
Christianity Must Change or Die'. If Christianity is worth saving
shouldn't its reductionist saviours at least attempt to be
inspirationally reconstructive of the primacy of the person at its
centre - if only to mitigate the pain of those exposed to so much
reduction? A Chapter on 'Jesus for Our Time' or 'What Jesus teaches
us about God' suggests itself - but perhaps that might be the theme
of a sequel to this book.
I certainly hope so. I have learned much about progressivism from
this book. Unlike Spong's, the canon's style is never insufferably
self-congratulatory. The very last thing a minister of the Gospel
should be is hypocritical or dishonest - and Canon Wakeman has
certainly acquitted herself on that score. She has read widely and
produced a highly stimulating and provocative text that can be
easily absorbed. How would her views of Jesus and God be affected by
reading Girard, I wonder, supportive as his work is of orthodoxy,
and of the Bible as a supremely revelatory text - and from an
unexpected rationalist direction? (So far, I believe, Girard remains
undiscovered territory for progressives - suggesting that it is
essentially an Anglican phenomenon).
Although Canon Wakeman's argument rests largely upon the conviction
that the decline of moderate orthodoxy has to do centrally with the
prevalence of finger-crossing during the creed, she provides no data
that would confirm this. A survey or even a poll would surely be
possible. I can only say that I see the creeds not as an insistence
upon an ancient physical cosmology but as an affirmation that, in
all eras, there is, factually, a transcendant moral cosmos to which
we also belong, and from which we can draw inspiration and strength
- especially through the one whose belief in it was both absolute
and fatal to himself. I neither cross my fingers nor switch off my
left brain when I say them.
Central to the phenomenon of progressivism so far, it seems to me,
is an unnecessary intellectual embarrassment - an overwhelming
desire to dissociate oneself from the fundamentalists and
'creationists' who have rejected so much of modern science. It
originates, I suspect, at academic dinners when, reaching for the
salt, the Christian theologian is assailed with a smirking "Not
another Saviour, I hope?" from the eminent evolutionary biologist in
the next seat. The need to make one's own faith unembarrassing in
such company is necessarily acute - and an unremitting reductionism
is obviously one way to go.
But what of the intellectual hubris such a sally implies - that our
own era has not only answered every important question but saved
everyone in need of saving - as the archetypal anti-Christian
programme, the Enlightenment of the 1700s, expressly promised? It
often implies also that what is positive in modern secularism owes
nothing to orthodox Christianity - as though values such as liberty,
equality and fraternity originated fully formed in the mind of the
late 1700s, had no earlier provenance, and have by now anywhere been
fully achieved. There is so much ignorance and insouciance in such a
worldview that it surely requires challenge rather than
encouragement.
Era-chauvinism is as close as I can get to a name for the phenomenon
- the Panglossian view that of all past and possible eras this one
is by far the wisest - and especially because we are so
knowledgeable, and first century folk were so superstitious.
Of course it is essential to detach Christianity from bigotry and
obscurantism, but the surgery required to do this must not pierce
the heart that keeps Christianity alive: the belief that,
independent of both sides of our brain, there truly exists a
spiritual entity that intends our good, knows and understands us
intimately, and wishes to release us from cyclical self-harm.
This book has not convinced me that 'progressive Christian' surgery
has left Christianity with a heart that can still beat. One simply
cannot save Christianity by implying (without quite saying) that
Jesus's faith in Abba was no more than a right-brain poetic fancy.
The death of what this kind of progressivism proposes to save would
surely be too high a price to pay for the approval of an
intellectual elite that is often every bit as arrogant and
insouciant as the one Paul found in the Athens of his day. And,
let's face it, nothing less than the final death of the Christian
tradition will fully satisfy that self-satisfied coterie anyway.
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