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What's Wrong with Theology: A Short Case Study

Augustine


Earlier today, browsing the Amazon page for Augustine's Essential Sermons, I came across this passage from the "Product Description":

The eleven volumes of Augustine's popular sermons (Sermones ad populum) . . . showcase Augustine the brilliant speaker and engaging preacher of the Word and have proven an indispensable resource for contemporary scholarship. . . . [Edmund] Hill's translation and extensive notes have received many accolades by scholars, but professors have clamored for a one-volume anthology in paperback form that would be affordable to students and that could be used as required texts in teaching undergraduates, graduate students and seminarians. . . . Students and preachers alike will discover Augustine's masterful interpretation of the Word of God and creative skills in engaging the people of God.

What's wrong with this description? More importantly, who is missing? These sermons are "an indispensable resource for contemporary scholarship," and the translations have received "many accolades by scholars," and this one-volume anthology will be useful for "undergraduates, graduate students and seminarians." But where is the layperson?There's a reason they ain't titled Sermones ad professorum. They were preached in a church to laypeople, and now they are tragically of interest primarily to scholars and students training to become scholars. The devoted layperson has been left out of the picture altogether. Language like this is a symptom of a disease — the co-opting of theology by the academy from its place in service to the church.

Augustine himself would have been unhappy with our bifurcation of theology and spirituality, or their institutional parallels, academy and church. Consider:

Factum audivimus: mysterium requiramus.
(We have heard the fact, let us seek the mystery.)

One of the maddening things about my "Christian spirituality" classes in grad school was the constant separation students fretted over between "head" and "heart." This may have been a legitimate problem, but the way they articulated it made it sound like the problem was somehow too much theology. Wrong! A bifurcation of "head" and "heart" is the result of faulty theology, not too much. Something we could learn by reading more Augustine.

(A bracing post-Enlightenment tonic for this ailment is Andrew Louth's marvelous book Discerning the Mystery: An Essay on the Nature of Theology, which Eighth Day Books has put back in print.)


Posted by Jeff Reimer in Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink

Cormac McCarthy, the Nature of Literature, the Natural Law, Morality, and a Host of Other Sundries


Mccarthycovers


I was excited recently to find this article by Christopher Badeaux on Cormac McCarthy at a promising (new?) website called The City, which is run by some folks at Houston Baptist University and looks like a sort of evangelical riff on First Things. I’ve read a few other pieces and liked them alright, but I was pretty disappointed with the Cormac McCarthy article. I got as far as the extended quotation below (which is near the beginning) before I realized what I was in for. (I would have commented on the article’s site itself, but that function appears to be unavailable right now.) The quotation:

It is not a profound insight to say that disorder lies at the core of every modern novel: Things falling apart drive action. The truth of most literature since well before the Romantic era, however, is that disorder is made right at the end of almost every book. The villain is defeated, the damsel is rescued, the world is saved, and, in literature from the 1960s on, socially appropriate noises are made and coffee is had. Even with that, novels are a window into a safer world, one in which everything more or less turns out right in the end—where the awful consequences of life are put on hold in favor of the pleasant ones.

Put differently, only the Russians want to be depressed at the end of a good book.

This is actually slightly maddening, because a novel is a self-contained utopia in which disorder has no extrinsic effects, carries no ripples of destruction and disintegration, and in fact, suggests to the reader that an original sin is always entirely containable and repairable. One never feels the connection between the people who inhabit the bubble of the novel. They live lives as strutting, separate parts of some beautiful machine that runs precisely and predictably outside of the suspension of disbelief.

Where to begin with this comedy of errors? First, we have a thesis: “disorder lies at the core of every modern novel.” (Fair enough.) Then Badeaux takes us back to “most literature since well before the Romantic era,” where “disorder is made right at the end of almost every book.” (I think the Greeks might have had something to say about this. Possibly also Shakespeare.) But in the very next sentence, we’ve somehow been magically transported back to “literature from the 1960s on,” where at the end of every novel “socially appropriate noises are made and coffee is had.” (What this means or is referring to I have no idea.)

I mean, seriously. What world is this describing? Not the one I live in. If by “most literature since well before the Romantic era” he means “the complete works of Jan Karon,” I suppose it begins to make sense, but I may be making a bit of an interpretive leap there. There were also those “Russians,” the inevitable exception that proves the rule, who just “want to be depressed at the end of a good book,” which seems just a tad glib. (Incidentally, “the Russians”—by which I’m guessing he means, primarily, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky—would more characteristically be described as modern than anything else, which should support his thesis rather than provide an exception.)

Directly following the extended passage quoted above, Badeaux launches into the following: “In the real world, sin is a pebble in a pond: It touches so much more than the sinner and, when there is one, the victim. It disorders lives and relationships in ways foreseeable and incredible.” Change “victim” to “victims” and “foreseeable” into “unforeseeable” and you practically have a thematic summary of Macbeth. But according to Badeaux’s account of the history of literature, Macbeth—produced before the Romantic era—is one of those works where “The villain is defeated, the damsel is rescued,” and “the world is saved.” I must’ve missed that Act.

In opposition to the happy, cheery world of Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Sophocles’ Oedipus Rex, Badeaux posits as their antithesis Cormac McCarthy’s two books No Country for Old Men and The Road. I just can’t make things add up.

But why my disproportionate reaction? Well, I share two things in common with Badeaux: I am a fan of Cormac McCarthy, and I am a committed, relatively conservative Christian. So I feel like I have a vested interest in the outcome of Badeuax’s exploration.

The general thrust of the article is to read Cormac McCarthy (or at least No Country and The Road) as a particularly compelling illustration of natural law, especially original sin, which is fine enough. The article should be evaluated on whether or not it succeeds in its aims. But Badeaux’s understanding of the history of literature is so phenomenally and weirdly wrong (either that or I’m misreading it somehow, and I would be happy to be told so if that were the case), that it gives me serious pause about anything else that he will say after it.

And it turns out I was right to give pause. Badeaux’s interest seems not to be in literature per se but in either co-opting or rejecting it based on its adherence to or deviation from a Christian understanding of natural law. Consequently, he seems somewhat dismissive—or even ignorant—of Cormac McCarthy’s work that doesn’t fit his thesis of McCarthy as quasi-Christian auteur of original sin. (At one point he says, “for contrast [to No Country and The Road], I worked my way through Blood Meridian,” but there are no references to any of McCarthy’s seven other novels.) As an example, Badeaux reads the psychotic killer Anton Chigurh in No Country as the manifestation of Llewelyn Moss’s moral failings, which is interesting, but Moss seems less a catalyst of evil than an inadvertantly complicit protagonist on whom is wrought the furies of the novel’s bizzarely fatalistic antagonist, Chigurh, who more or less represents a concentrated manifestation of the universe’s ontology of violence. To understand Moss’s actions as catalyzing moral retribution seems not to read McCarthy as displaying the natural law but to read an explicitly Christian morality into McCarthy’s own aims for the book. These are two very different things, and the latter is a stretch at best and inconceivable at worst. And since there’s no retribution for evil in Blood Meridian, despite its being much more philosophically complex than No Country, Badeaux dismisses it as “simple.”

Two things have happened here. Art has become, first, evaluated based on its adherence to a particular morality and, second, merely a vehicle for a worldview. I don’t think art doesn’t contain those things, but to reduce art to a worldview or a morality—either in its creation or in its evaluation—destroys it.



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Posted by Jeff Reimer in Literature, Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink | Comments (4)

A Brief Titular and Structural Explication of Christianity and Classical Culture by Jaroslav Pelikan

Pelikan

The title and the structure of this book alone warrant a significant amount of sorting out to figure out what's going on. The full title is Christianity and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian Encounter with Hellenism. The book is structured in two parts: "Natural Theology as Apologetics" and "Natural Theology as Presupposition." Each part has ten chapters, and each chapter parallels a chapter in the other part. So, for example, chapter six is titled "The Universe as Cosmos," and chapter sixteen is titled "Cosmos as Contingent Creation."

But back to the title. Pelikan sees the highest synthesis of Christianity and classical culture occurring, at least in the Christian East, in the thought of the Cappadocians. The book is an exploration of how Greek thought functioned in their theology. In other words, what was the nature of the relationship between philosophy ("natural theology" or simply "reason,") and theology? As the subtitle indicates, Pelikan intuits a metamorphosis in the way "natural theology" functioned in the Cappadocians' theology. The nature of that metamorphosis is hinted at in the structure of the book.

For Pelikan, the metamorphosis of natural theology took place in that it first functioned as an apologetic against the larger Greek-speaking—Pagan—cultural establishment, hence "Natural Theology as Apologetic." But in the transition, under Constantine, from Christianity as an oppressed and persecuted religious group to the cultural and ideological milieu, natural theology metamorphosed into a presupposition for dogmatic or systematic theology. In other words, the faithful witness of Scripture confirms, completes, and transcends natural reason. Hence "Natural Theology as Presupposition." The premises of natural theology are confirmed and enhanced by the conclusions encapsulated in the language of faith. Another way of thinking about it would be that the "Natural Theology as Apologetic" model is outward-looking in its emphasis, geared toward the establishment of a Christian theological patrimony in the wider culture, and uses reason (in other words, natural theology) toward that end, while "Natural Theology as Presupposition" is inward-looking, geared toward the life and thought of the church, and uses reason in the service of the higher truths of Christian doctrine.

So the structure seems quite ingenious, demonstrating, first, the two functions of Hellenistic thought among the Cappadocians and, second, Pelikan's thesis that those two functions reflect a transition from one to the next. A simple example is that, by reason, one might be able to prove—against, say, an atheist—that there is a God (natural theology as apologetic), but reason alone cannot prove the Trinity, which must be divinely revealed and received in faith (natural theology as presupposition).

There's plenty more to think about, but I haven't actually finished the book yet.



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Posted by Jeff Reimer in Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink | Comments (4)

The Meaning of "Original" in St. John Damascene

Damascene_2

The subtitle of Andrew Louth's book on St. John Damascene is Tradition and Originality in Byzantine Theology. I expected Louth to dwell on this theme more than he did, but there were nevertheless some very interesting bits. The book's epigraph is attributed to Zissimos Lorenzatos and says: "Originality means to remain faithful to the originals." In the preface he gives the Lorenzatos quote in its context:

Originality means to remain faithful to the originals, to the eternal prototypes, to extinguish "a wisdom of [your] own" before the "common Word," as Heraclitus says—in other words, to lose your soul if you wish to find it, and not to parade your originality or to do what pleases you.

So originality becomes (or already always was) more a conduit of tradition than its opposite. Tradition is, in fact, the continuous reification of its origins.

Posted by Jeff Reimer in Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink | Comments (0)

Cormac McCarthy's Cosmos & the Weight of Negative Presence

Fludd_2

The other night a friend who had recently watched No Country for Old Men asked me where Cormac McCarthy is "coming from." I stumbled around a little bit and made a few stabs at the idea that "fiction lives in the mind" and it's impossible to distill the essence of a novel from the text itself (this almost directly from Terry Crabtree in Wonder Boys), and although I think this is partly true, I eventually came around to a better, less evasive answer. My friend actually just wanted to know if he's a Christian (he's not). But Cormac McCarthy doesn't simply not believe in God. McCarthy's universe, rather than simply being empty, has been vacated. There is a palpable absence of the divine in Cormac McCarthy's world, a negative presence weighing on the characters. I want to develop this idea a little bit.

Some of the church fathers, particularly the Cappadocian fathers, appropriated the Greek philosophical term cosmos to refer to the universe. They refer to the world not as a cosmos "of its own initiative or by some ananke, [Greek for necessity or determination] but contingently, because of the free and sovereign will of God."* In other words the cosmos, for the Fathers, is a world charged with divine presence. The reality of the divine, of God, animates physical reality while remaining ontologically separate from it.

I think Cormac McCarthy's universe is a cosmos. But it is a vacated cosmos, one still given shape by at least the idea of the divine, or maybe the idea of divine absence. This creates a kind of negative copy of the Christian cosmos. The transcendent order -- which for the Cappadocian Fathers is characterized by the Aristotelian ideals of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful -- for Cormac McCarthy is animated by murder, violence, and destruction.**

I'm not trying to make McCarthy a Christian lecturing us on human depravity or the evils that befall a godless humanity. For McCarthy, humanity has not left God, God has left humanity. God is the one who has done the leaving. God is dead. Whatever. For example, one of the last images in his novel The Road is that of the boy praying to his father, but it's not enough for McCarthy to have this boy praying to his father. He emphasizes that the boy specifically does not pray to God; he prays to his father because he cannot pray to God. The same is true of the almost messianic status accorded Billy Parham's dead brother in The Crossing.

So why does a good Christian boy like me love McCarthy? It's not that I couldn't love his novels simply because they are beautifully and vividly written or because they compellingly portray nonbelief in believable characters. But there are plenty of writers who do that (though few living writers who do it as well as McCarthy). The reason that I keep reading him is that I can't see the moments of beauty and meaning, the resplendent moments of each character's humanity, as simply fatalistic (aside from No Country, regularly considered McCarthy's worst novel). In fact, these moments shine all the brighter for the darkness that otherwise pervades his work. Consider this passage from The Road:

The boy sat tottering. The man watched him that he not topple into the flames. He kicked holes in the sand for the boy’s hips and shoulders where he would sleep and he sat holding him while he tousled his hair before the fire to dry it. All of this like some ancient anointing. So be it. Evoke the forms. Where you’ve nothing else construct ceremonies out of the air and breathe upon them.

This is religious language. It's fatalistic but, but . . . It's like McCarthy almost (and it's always almost) can't quite write these moments off as random or arbitrary or absurd. They somehow exist as intruding or remaining elements of the Cappadocians' cosmos despite the cosmos of violence he describes (or descries). This is what I call negative presence. Moments of Real Presence that intrude upon McCarthy's vacated cosmos. In an essay on Herman Melville (one of McCarthy's literary progenitors) the critic James Wood notes that Melville's prose is "messy with metaphysics." The same phrase could aptly be applied to McCarthy. The vestiges of the Christian cosmos lay shattered and strewn across the pages of his novels, and it's almost as if his characters stumble across them providentially. Almost.

*Jaroslav Pelikan, Christianity and Classical Culture: The Metamorphosis of Natural Theology in the Christian Encounter with Hellenism (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1993), 105.

**See James Wood's comments to this end in his essay on McCarthy, "Red Planet," in The New Yorker, here.

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Posted by Jeff Reimer in Literature, Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink | Comments (0)

Form and Content in Early Christian Art

Picturinggem

In an essay from latest issue of The New York Review of Books, Peter Brown reviews an art exhibition called "Picturing the Bible: The Earliest Christian Art." The entire essay is worth a close read (alas, it's not available online without a subscription), but one of the most intriguing observations Brown makes along the way is that though early Christian art was rife with images lifted straight from the biblical narrative, what they were doing was not simply drawing pictures of their favorite Bible stories. Rather, he sees subtle development and burgeoning cohesion:

Art did not simply illustrate. It played a part in making an entire body of novel beliefs seem true--truly true, because seen to be true, in a visual language that could be shared by Jews, Christians, and Pagans. What this exhibition shows us is not simply a succession of "first sightings" of themes that were mentioned in the Bible and that would continue in all future ages of Christian art, belief, and practice. It follows for three centuries the slow reschooling of the visual imagination of a large section of the Roman world.

We must remember that the social and cultural consistency of the Christian communities changed greatly  in the course of those centuries. It is these changes that may well have had a major part in bringing about the final, triumphant synthesis of medium and message with which we end, in the later fifth and sixth centuries, in the last rooms of the exhibition.

Another passage makes a similar point:

We should bear this in mind [that Christians yearned for supernatural protection] when we look at the recurrent images of deliverance from danger that make up the overwhelming majority of the artificats in the early rooms of this exhibition: Daniel in the Lion's Den, Jonah delivered from the depths of the sea, Susanna saved from false testimony. Those who possessed these images (and Jews who did the same) did not see them, as we might see them, as merely "picturing" the Bible. Rather, these images "applied" the Bible. They brought the electric presence of a timeless and almighty God (the shared high God of Jews and Christians) into the present.

Brown further observes, counterintuitively, that while this early art--humble, usually displayed in the homes of wealthier Christians--depicted images of a powerful God delivering his followers from danger, it wasn't until the age of the Christian empire that images of a humble Christ appeared with regularity. While on the one hand, of course "Constantine and his successors enjoyed the full support of Christians in seeking out a visual language for Christ that at last did just to His imagined stupendous power," on the other hand, there were different, more intentional strains of thought:

In late-Roman conditions, the humility of Christ did not come naturally. . . . It was a humility that had to be worked for, so as to make it stand out, even in an art of majesty. Thus, paradoxically, we find the most touching statements of Christ's humanity not in the art of the pre-Constantinian church but later, toward the end of the fourth century, when the theological issues raised by the electrifying tension between Christ's humanity and his divinity had begun to rock the churches.

The culmination--the convergence of medium and message--as Brown sees it, is that of the "gigantic tomes," illuminated manuscripts of the Bible, which "figure scripture itself as a physical presence" in "supremely intelligible and well-orchestrated visual splendor" and provide "the last great visual mythology of the ancient world." 

"Reschooling of the visual imagination," "seeking out a visual language," "visual mythology": the essay is full of tasty metaphors like these. It's refreshing to hear a voice from the increasingly-specialized realm of academia, and especially in Brown's corner of the realm there is frustratingly little cross-disciplinary conversation, write with such penetrating--and surprisingly contemporary--acuity about the nature and purpose of  art.

Posted by Jeff Reimer in Art, Religion, Written by Jeff Reimer | Permalink | Comments (0)

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