Monthly Archives: August 2011

C.S. Lewis in Church: An Episode 54 Followup

31 August 2011

In the anthology of C.S. Lewis’s writings published with the title God in the Dock, we find this interesting tidbit, which may be something of an answer to my speculative question toward the end of the episode. During an open forum at the “Head Office of Electric and Musical Industries Ltd.” (wouldn’t you love to work there?), everyone’s favorite Oxford-don-who-isn’t-Tolkien fielded this question: “Is attendance at a place of worship or membership with a Christian community necessary to a Christian way of life?” His answer:

That’s a question which I cannot answer. My own experience is that when I first became a Christian, about fourteen years ago, I thought that I could do it on my own, by retiring to my rooms and reading theology, and I wouldn’t go to the churches and Gospel Halls; and then later I found that it was the only way of flying your flag; and, of course, I found that meant being a target. It is extraordinary how inconvenient to your family it becomes for you to get up early for Church. It doesn’t matter so much if you get up early for anything else, but if you get up early to go to Church it’s very selfish of you and you upset the house. If there is anything in the teaching of the New Testament which is in the nature of a command, it is that you are obliged to take the Sacrament, and you can’t do it without going to Church. I disliked very much their hymns, which I considered to be fifth-rate poems set to sixth-rate music. But as I went on I saw the great merit of it. I came up against different people of quite different outlooks and different education, and then gradually my conceit just began peeling off. I realized that the hymns (which were just sixth-rate music) were, nevertheless, being sung with devotion and benefit by an old saint in elastic-side boots in the opposite pew, and then you realize that you aren’t fit to clean those boots. It gets you out of your solitary conceit. It is not for me to lay down laws, as I am only a layman, and I don’t know much. (“Answers to Questions on Christianity,” 61-2)

Postliberal and Progressive: A Primer from a Postliberal English Teacher

31 August 2011

Lately a number of conversations around the God-bl0g-o-sphere have caught my attention, and all of them seem to take their impetus from the notion that theologians in the twenty-first century come to be known for “camps” more than by denominational or other official affiliations.  We’ve already linked to James K.A. Smith’s meditation on the topic, over at the Roger Olsen blog,  guest blogger Brandon Morgan wrote a critique of the Wild Goose Festival that called for Emergents to take a page from the post-liberals’ book and carve out a space as distinct from the liberal mainline as it is from the evangelical world.  In response to that, Tony Jones recently called for readers to propose alternatives to “Liberal” or “Progressive” as the identifier for those whose theology is after the same projects that Jones’s seems to be.  (“Incarnational Christians” won the contest.)  More recently, in a series of very good podcasts, Tripp Fuller and Deacon Bo (whose last name I cannot find on their website) discussed the terms liberal, progressive, emergent, and evangelical and the ways that their use as sociological markers blur the content of the philosophy that informs each.

I say all of this to note that my little contribution here is neither the first nor the final word, and although I write as an answer to the question that my good web-friend linda over at i wonder as i wander asked, I figured other folks who have been following all of this chatter might benefit from reading what an English teacher, not a made man in the Hauerwasian mafia but a self-identified post-liberal nonetheless, makes of the distinctions.  So I undertake this mini-taxonomy hoping to draw clarifying comments, not to shut the discussion down.

Progressive Christianity Oversimplified

To say that progressive theology is Hegelian is not to make a genetic claim: of course people were writing about human progress earlier in the Enlightenment (just think of Voltaire and Tom Paine and Immanuel Kant), and many (perhaps most) of those who would call themselves “progressive” in the early twenty-first Century Church have not read Hegel’s Philosophy of History.  Nonetheless, progressive thought tends to follow a narrative similar to Hegel’s: history tends to progress, not uniformly but in intelligible manners, from liberty limited to a few (a very few in places and times like the Egypt of the Pharaohs) towards freedom for more than before.  Although the content of history is quite complex, still there is an intelligible vector to it, namely from liberty-for-fewer-people to liberty-for-more-people.  There are places and times when the spirit of the age contradicts itself, like when post-Reformation Europe became part of the Atlantic slave trade in the sixteenth (and seventeenth and eighteenth) centuries, but Hegel is a sophisticated enough philosopher to note that material conditions are entirely capable of slowing and even reversing spiritual urges towards liberty for a time.  But eventually, and always through the intentional and reasoned organization of human communities (often through events such as the rise of Christianity or the French Revolution), liberty progresses, and the spirit of the age (Hegel’s famous Zeitgeist) comes to impose its form on the world as it’s already been shaped the imaginations of the historically-important leaders.  When such revolutions take place (and I realize I’m mixing some Marx in with the Hegel here), old forms of enslavement cease to threaten liberty, no longer a threat because the intellectual frameworks that kept the many subservient to the few no longer stand as intelligible to the masses.  But in the long transition period, those who help the Zeitgeist take its form must articulate the reasoned arguments for the new way, exposing the contradictions inherent in the old order.  Otherwise, history stagnates or even regresses.

And that’s where Progressive Christians seem to find a sense of calling: whether through grassroots consumer changes or influence within educational institutions or the state power of the Democratic National Committee or (more often than not) a mix of all those and more, Progressive Christians seek to help the world considered more or less broadly to realize the spirit of freedom by means of large-scale shifts in consciousness, public policy, and patterns of consumption.  Some prefer the “Think Globally, Act Locally” approach of example-setting while some tend more towards nation-state partisanship as the best means towards such ends, but by and large there’s a sense that increasing the freedom of all individuals to actualize themselves must be close to the core of the Christian life.  That means a concern for the economic poor certainly, and it often (though not always) also involves advocating for political rights and social recognition of lesbians and gays; promoting the political power of racial minorities; and opposing traditions and laws governing sexual conduct that restrict the individual’s right to enjoy sexual contact on terms that the individual, not any super-individual community, deems appropriate.

Post-Liberal Christianity Oversimplified

The name Post-Liberal, as far as I can tell, comes from the subtitle of George Lindbeck’s seminal work The Nature of Doctrine: Religion and Theology in a Post-Liberal World.  (Do pardon the inconsistent capitalization and hyphenation of that term in this post, but it is a blog, after all.)  In that work Lindbeck, a Yale theology professor, attempts to articulate the difficulties that ecumenical conversations encounter by naming two tendencies in twentieth-century theology that work at cross-purposes.  One, which Lindbeck calls the cognitive/propositional model, holds that Christianity is best described as a core of true indicative sentences (the Father is co-eternal with the Son and Spirit, there will be a general resurrection of the dead, and so on) and the people who agree to their truth are Christians.  There certainly might be a set of practices and narratives of personal experience that follow logically from the content of the doctrine, but the propositions and their correspondence to divine reality is first and foremost.  The other, which Lindbeck calls the experiential/expressive model, holds that the core of Christianity is the religious experience, the sense of dependence on the “other” that leads to a conversion experience.  Within that model the symbols that one uses to name the experience might well be the vocabularies of the Scriptures and the Creeds, but they need not be.  As an alternative to those two, and as a model held forth as more adequate to ecumenical conversation, Lindbeck proposes the cultural/linguistic model, in which the Scriptures and the Creeds do in fact form a canon by which utterances and practices can be judged rightly as Christian or non-Christian but that the parameters are on the level of symbol and narrative rather than on the level of syllogisms and propositions constructed from those symbols and narratives.  In such a system theology, the formulation of syllogistic systems using those vocabularies; and emotive states of being, which flow from the realities to which the vocabularies point; do indeed have a place, but the systems and the experiences stand logically posterior to the complex of symbols, stories, and traditions that shape the parameters of historic Christianity.   Lindbeck’s hope seems to be that, within those loose but intelligible bounds, a genuinely Christian and genuinely ecumenical conversation can happen without as much fogginess as to what is Christian utterance and what doesn’t count as Christian utterance.

The later Post-Liberal (or Yale School) theological tradition takes that same disposition towards Christianity-as-culture and brings it to bear on questions of relationships between the Church and the regime of multinational capitalism; of Christians’ relationships to other human communities; and a range of other questions.  If the role of Christians for Progressives is to alter the world, broadly conceived, the role of Christians for postliberals is to sustain the core of the Christian tradition, embodying a way of life (a culture, to use Lindbeck’s terminology), among the nations but not identical with them, for the sake of pointing the nations (bearing witness, to borrow from Acts) to a way of life beyond the horizons of the systems of unredeemed politics, philosophy, and cultural expectations.  Where those aims coincide with the aims of other such communities, we can rejoice that we share common ground, but our main thought processes in doing ethical discernment have to do not with making the world emerge into new forms by our efforts to grab its levers of power but in living in manners that throw the ideologies and the sins of the world into stark relief, in hopes that the Spirit might convict some of the sinfulness of the status quo (whether that status quo be ahead of the curve or behind it) and bring them to desire a way of life intelligible only in the resurrection of Christ.

The Complications

The tricky thing, of course, is that neither of these philosophies necessarily excludes all elements of the other.  To use myself as an example (and I’ll write simply for myself for the rest of this essay, not as someone speaking for any other post-liberal), I find both Hegel’s model and Marx’s model of history as a non-uniform progress towards individualism helpful for articulating differences between the way I experience the world and the way Dante does.  In other words, I think that Hegelian historicisms are good tools for making sense of the content of history.  But I’m not sure that movements towards individualism are always good, and I’m inclined to say that some historical developments that have advanced the ability for the individual to become one’s own law, separate from intermediate institutions as the Church and the guild and the extended family, have in fact not empowered the human soul but made us more the thralls of the State.  Likewise, although I see good things going in many iterations of Liberation and Feminist theology, I see other iterations as turning the soul over to its own worst impulses, a sort of slavery that I fear often escapes the notice of certain practitioners of materialist (or functionally materialist) philosophies.

Certainly any extended conversation with a self-named Progressive (and once again I point to Tripp and Bo’s recent series of podcast discussions as a fine exemplar of fair treatment of difference) will reveal similar reservations, and one of the singular vices of my own generation of Christian thinkers (and I’ve got three fingers pointing back at myself here) is our tendency to refuse labels for ourselves while insisting that we can brand gigantic swaths of people who disagree with us simply as “liberal” or “fundamentalist” or some other such name and therefore cease to listen to them.  The point in writing little primers like this one is not to say that “you” or “they” are in this category or that and thus unworthy of attention but to give some sort of framework in which particular thinkers make sense relative to one another.  So if in one encounter I seem to think of history in Hegelian terms but in another hold that a resistance to certain central tenets of modernity should be part of Christians’ core mission in the twenty-first century, I’ll admit that I’ve been inconsistent in terms of these categories, but I would maintain that consistency is ultimately less important than intelligibility and (more importantly) faithfulness to Christ in the terms of the “school” of theology we can most honestly call faithful.

In that spirit, once again I invite clarifications, especially from self-identified Progressives or Liberals, where my account of things muddies the water or gets things outright wrong.

 

The Christian Humanist Podcast, Episode #54: Brains in the Body

30 August 2011

General Introduction
- Facebook feedback
- The podcast gains sentience
- The return of CWC
- Homebrewed Christianity

A Practical Topic
- Where do intellectuals fit into a local congregation?
- Our personal experiences

The Lonely Academic
- Anti-intellectual congregations
- Stratification by class, not geography
- Hopwood envy
- Churches in university towns

The Monastery Model
- Alongside the local congregation
- The Christian College Model
- Intellectual overload
- Intelligence vs. intellectual

Unnecessary –Isms?
- Which came first?
- Start at ground level, not with the theory
- Young Christian women and feminism
- The power and value of labels

The Rabid Individualist
- The power and value of labels?
- Emerson: heretic to the heretics
- Make your own way
- Kierkegaard’s attack on the Danish church
- Can Kierkegaardianism exist within the church?
- Milton’s individualistic Biblicism
- The Church of One

General Dissatisfaction
- Criticizing sermons
- The riff sermon
- Literary criticism in the pew
- Michial’s problem with music

The Philosopher-King
- Calvin’s Geneva
- Stumbling into political power
- The problem with church-planting

Proper Models
- Why should this question apply only to academics?
- Trying less to stand out and more to fit in
- C.S. Lewis in church
- You are not the philosopher-king
- Pope Gregory as a model

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Emerson, Ralph Waldo. “The Divinity School Address.” Essays and Lectures. Ed. Joel Porte. New York: Library of America, 1983.

Kierkegaard, Søren. Attack Upon Christendom. Trans. Walter Lowrie. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton UP, 1968.

Milton, John. Paradise Lost. New York: Norton, 2004.

 

 

How Should We Then Live?: A Reflection on the Lectionary Readings for 4 September 2011

29 August 2011

Revised Common Lectionary Page for 4 September 2011 (12th Sunday after Pentecost, Year A)

Exodus 12:1-14 and Psalm 149  • Ezekiel 33:7-11 and Psalm 119:33-40  • Romans 13:8-14  • Matthew 18:15-20

That I knew the phrase from Ezekiel as a book title (one which I wrote about recently) before I knew it as a phrase from Ezekiel makes me sad, but I don’t think that such skewed priorities are uncommon.  After all, just last school year I had the distinct pleasure of doing a close reading of the Biblical book of Job with a group of honors-program freshmen, then sitting with a small group of the same freshmen and noting the profound change of context in a happy-clappy, electric-guitar-heavy praise chorus that used the phrase “My redeemer lives.”  Chatting with them after the service, I could tell that they were stepping into a new way of relating to church music, and just in case  you were worried, I did encourage them to “read” such songs through the lenses of sensus plenior, the doctrine that the death and resurrection of Christ did in fact open up new meanings for Old Testament texts, meanings well beyond the intellectual horizons of the mortal authors.

But Ezekiel 37, as far as I know, isn’t the stuff of any praise chorus, yet the moment in the story of Israel could easily translate there.  After all, this oracle is the sort of meta-revelation that contemporary Christian song thrives on, the sort that doesn’t directly sing of God’s love but tells anyone within earshot that those singing could sing of God’s love forever, given the vocal endurance and days off of work.  This one, though it doesn’t lend itself quite as well to interminable key changes and repetition, nonetheless has the same potential for meta-song, perhaps as a slightly less-catchy course:

God sent me to warn the people

So my words the air will burn

How can we live with our sins, they cry out,

And I say, the LORD says, “Turn!”

Alright, so perhaps I should keep teaching English and leave the catchy praise choruses to those who are good at them.  The point here is that this Ezekiel text has an unappealing side, not unlike the less-happy reality that Job most likely wants a redeemer (a word that has connotations of retributive killing in significance of the Old Testament) because he wants revenge on whatever invisible power is oppressing him or at least someone to proclaim his (Job’s) innocence in public places once God has killed Job off.  In Ezekiel’s case, the unappetizing part of the passage is the long string of conditionals.  The last pair is familiar enough, speaking Biblically, not to warrant too much attention: if the people turn from their wickedness, they will live.  No biggie.  Such comes across in places as diverse as the Sodom and Gomorrah story, Deuteronomy, and even sometimes in the sayings of Jesus.  What’s shocking is the set of conditionals directed directly at the prophet, stuff that decidedly wouldn’t make it into any praise chorus that I could imagine: if you keep silent, you will die.  If you speak, but the people don’t turn, you live, but the people die.  Such is not the way of the praise-chorus deity, but there it is in the Bible.

Such a stark and sad job for the sent messenger is not unique either, of course.  With a bit of familiarity with the text, one can easily enough remember Isaiah’s bittersweet call to proclaim until ears go numb and Jesus’s rationale for using parables that quotes the same passage: sometimes God speaks in mixed crowds, and not all among them will turn.  Such is the harsh reality of the Parable of the Sower, and such is the relationship between proclamation, hearing, faithfulness, and witness that makes intelligible Paul’s great teachings on the Church as the new Israel, the true Temple, and the body of the King constituted wherever we gather.  We are at once the Israel who hears and the prophets who proclaim, and neither of those roles in the story is always a happy one.  Sometimes indeed we come across those who want to know “how should we then live” (an Elizabethan construction that indicates means of survival more than ethical ordering of life), but perhaps even more often we come across those for whom the cross is scandal and foolishness.  Such is the life of the people of God.

May our LORD grant us the fortitude to proclaim and the endurance to proclaim once more.

How Should We Then Link?

26 August 2011

Programming as a Liberal Art: A Review of Program or Be Programmed by Douglas Rushkoff

24 August 2011

Program or Be Programmed: Ten Commands for a Digital Age

by Douglas Rushkoff

154 pp. Soft Skull Press.  $14.95

To explain how I came across this book, I have to make a confession: since my family doesn’t subscribe to cable television, the only time my kids or I watch cable TV (or much TV at all, really) is when we’re on the road, visiting family or otherwise.  My son, predictably gravitates to Disney and the Cartoon Network, but I’m a C-SPAN man.  And when CSPAN-2 has Book TV, I’m watching it.  So guess when and where I saw Douglas Rushkoff interviewed about his new book.  That’s right.  When I can watch anything on cable television, I go to Book TV.

Confession out of the way, what makes this book worthy of the Neil Postman Award that it won (I just learned that such an award exists) is its refusal to let any digital technology become transparent, something that’s a mere window through which we see the world as the world happens to be.  From the first Arpanet connections to email to the ubiquitous vibrating phones (and accompanying “phantom phone buzz syndrome”), Rushkoff keeps his sharp eye on the assumptions that one has to make before the technology makes any sense: that one should adjust one’s personal biological rhythms to the atemporal “always on” existence of computer networks rather than vice versa; that the world should conform its complexity to the reductionism of binary choices; and that human beings are meant to exist as infinitesimal nodes in a vast global network, just to name three.  Spelling out those assumptions, Rushkoff does not so much give ten commands as ask ten penetrating questions, questions that ought to haunt human beings as we jump on board the Internet train.

Why ten commands, then?  Rushkoff, whose approach to technology is the same secular-Jewish approach that Neil Postman made famous with Technopoly and Amusing Ourselves to Death, describes the rise of alphabetic writing as a technological change that made intelligible a genuinely new order of civilized life and the Torah in particular as that body of alphabetic writing which allowed the slave-tribes of Israel to develop into a genuine civilization in the ancient Near East.  Likewise, Rushkoff suggests, folks in the Internet age are experiencing a genuinely new kind of consciousness, one as different from the print age’s as the alphabetic consciousness would have been from the oral cultures which preceded it.  His book is set of suggestions to help people navigate the new age the way that the Ten Commandments helped the Hebrews become Israel.  If he were operating in a religious register, such a claim for his own book would be nothing short of ludicrous, but within his own Cultural Materialist framework, there is a certain degree of sense, on a formal level, to the analogy.  A more adequate analogy for the Christian audience, I reckon, is the work that another book, perhaps written by one of our readers, might tackle.

The upshot of Rushkoff’s ten brief chapters is that, like alphabetic language, computer networks do not regulate themselves.  Just as alphabetic writing has the capacity both for glorious Psalms and the vain name-taking that one of the commandments prohibits (I’ll let my readers supply the numbering, as Lutherans and Presbyterians do that differently), computer networks have the capacity both to slow down our processes of ethical deliberation and other forms of serious thought (as the old dial-up connections used to do, Rushkoff notes) or to enslave us to a pace of connection that journalists call “always-on” and the human body calls slow murder.  Likewise, because information flows so easily on packet-switching networks, the Internet has the capacity to serve as the vehicle for a new culture of collaboration and cooperative creativity or as a place where nobody records music or movies because they’re only going to get stolen.  Each of Rushkoff’s first nine “commands” follows the same sort of pattern, first noting the great potential for human flourishing that digital networks promises and then noting the danger for human destruction that the same characteristic threatens.  Obviously this is the sort of cultural ecology that Marshal McLuhan and Neil Postman made famous, and Rushkoff honors his predecessors by showing the same attention to detail that they did, never simply replicating the analysis that McLuhan did of television or Postman of the early Internet but letting the particular observations that all of us should be making determine the shape of the analysis that Rushkoff offers.

The tenth “command” was the most interesting from my point of view because it included an explicit program for cultural renewal.  As many of us who came through the public schools in the eighties and early nineties can attest, “computer classes” used to mean programming: whether it was LOGO in grade school, BASIC in junior high, or C++ in high school, we learned the tools to make computers do things that other people hadn’t thought of before, and although our products were often puerile and sometimes entirely indecent (I hope they’ve discarded those old servers from the early nineties, I’ll admit), still the fact remained that computers were, for us, what Rushkoff calls “anything machines,” terminals that promised infinite flexibility for those determined enough to use it.  Computer education has, of course, shifted since then: “computer literacy” now seems to mean the ability to operate (at a fairly complex level, to grant the point) programs that large corporations have already written, to do audio-visual presentations on out-of-the-box platforms and perhaps (in the really advanced courses) to edit photographs and video using software sold (at a premium) by the Apple corporation.

The point of this brief history of computer education is that Rushkoff wants to see programming reintroduced to the common curriculum, not only for those who are going to be information-systems professionals but for every citizen who’s going to be an educated contributor to society.  Against the conventional wisdom of the Web 2.0 age, Rushkoff insists that there’s no place in a democratic society in the computer age for one class of programmers and a much larger class of end-users; like literacy and mathematics, to acquire a working knowledge of computer code is simply to know the fabric of the civilization that citizens are supposed to help run.  Like Postman before him, Rushkoff calls for such an education governed not by the “specialists” in the field but by computer-literate, generally educated elder citizens, or to put it in our lingo, by digital humanists.

As someone who is not a computer professional (I’m an English teacher, remember?) but who has a working knowledge of some computer languages, Rushkoff’s suggestions resonate with me.  In fact, they struck me as so true that, upon finishing the book, I immediately went to one of the web resources, Learn Python the Hard Way, and started re-educating myself so that I can be a better teacher.  (As I write this, I’ve completed lesson two.)  I’m also lending this book (before this review goes live) to a computer programming professor at Emmanuel College so that he can read it and tells me what he thinks, and perhaps at some point, down the line, we can get going on a cyber-humanist club or some other kind of extra-curricular pursuit that combines insights from Neil Postman and Al Gore and Douglas Rushkoff with Christian-worldview sorts of resources from Arthur Holmes and Ed Cyzewski and Stan Hauerwas.  (Yes, Al Gore wrote a pretty nice book of cultural-ecological criticism.  I reviewed it here.)  Until then, this is one of those books that hit me so hard that I can’t just review it–I positively recommend it.

 

The Christian Humanist Podcast, Episode #53: Welcome Back

23 August 2011

General Introduction
- Allergic to Kansas
- The Land of the Ice and Snow
- Comments on the blog and elsewhere
- The Conservative Reformed Mafia

The History of the Christian Humanist Podcast
- Who’s more technologically hip?
- Thanks, Tallahassee!
- How Grubbs came on board
- Our first episode and the hijinks thereof

Curator Episodes
- Literary Hell (1.10) and its awesome introduction
- Lopsided episodes and bastard children
- Literary Criticism (2.21)
- Plato (3.25)
- Friendship (3.26) and Gilmour’s inner Tripp Fuller
- Offstage, things were falling apart
- Our pilot episode (1.1)

Our Triptychs
- Movies (2.10.1-12)
- Music (3.32-33, 35)
- Richard Weaver (4.43-45)
- Listen as we divvy up this fall’s triptych!

It’s Fightin’ Time
- Nathan and David go at it over Judas (2.20)
- “That felt more like a fight than it sounded”
- Dialectic is not fighting!
- Nationalism (4.38) and the Death of Conservatism (2.13)
- David Grubbs sings!
- How we stack up against other shows in our format
- Voicing the disagreement

The Christian Humanist Blog
- Much less painful
- The temptation toward the personal
- Skirting controversy
- Going slowly and deliberately

Famous for Fifteen People
- Who are we? And who are you?
- Are we primarily theological or literary?
- Do we have atheist listeners?
- The potential for surprise

What Does the Future Hold?
- The Christian Humanist Journal?
- The Christian Humanist Conference?

How Has the Podcast Changed Our Thought?
- Iron sharpens iron
- What can the internet do?
- What can’t it do?
- Heavy-handed moderation

History, Prophecy, Mystery, Name: A Reflection on the Lectionary Readings for 28 August 2011

22 August 2011

Revised Common Lectionary Page for 28 August 2011 (Eleventh Sunday after Pentecost, Year A)

Exodus 3:1-15 and Psalm 105:1-6, 23-26, 45b  • Jeremiah 15:15-21 and Psalm 26:1-8  • Romans 12:9-21  • Matthew 16:21-28

It’s not for no reason that preachers, theologians, and other readers of the Bible have been fascinated with the “I am” formula in Exodus 3.  Because its form is so distinct yet so open, my own urge as a reader is to do something with it, perhaps even to read the rest of Exodus in light of it, perhaps the rest of the Bible.  The importance of the name of YHWH in the Psalms and in Deuteronomy lends it even more weight, and one of the commandments specifically forbids its use for vain purposes (not that the content of vanity is spelled out any more clearly than is the meaning of the name).  Famously, the Septuagint, the Alexandrian Greek translation that forms the Scriptures for many of the New Testament writers, renders the name ontos, or “Being.”  Systematic theologians have followed that lead, rightly saying that whatever one says about Being and Existence in a Christian system, one must begin with the name and the self-revelation of God as creator and sustainer.  Me, I’m partial to more recent speculations that wonder whether the Masoretic vowel markings have rendered present-tense what the Septuagint turned into a gerund.  By these readings a better reading might be “I will be what I will be,” indicating the radical freedom of YHWH in YHWH’s dealings with the world and not least with Pharaoh.

As I read this week’s Old Testament Lectionary passage, though, what strikes me is that the “I am that I am” passage, important though it must remain, is only one quarter of the name-disclosure that goes on.  YHWH first approaches Moses calling himself the God of Moses’s ancestors, a tribe enslaved in Egypt but even at this early stage in their story with YHWH retaining a strong sense of ethnic memory.  Before the odd recursive non-name ever gets spoken, YHWH has recited the course of recent events, insisting that the Hebrews are still “my people” and that their cries have been heard.  On the initial approach, the long story of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob is the primary field of contact between YHWH and Moses.

When Moses remains doubtful, YHWH shifts to promises rather than history, saying that, when Moses has confronted the great power of Egypt, they will not remain there but will come to Horeb, beyond the wilderness, far out of the reach of Pharaoh and his armies.  In his second self-identification, YHWH has lain claim on the history of the Hebrews and their future, but still Moses is unconvinced.  The “I am that I am” (I keep quoting the King James because it’s still familiar to my memory) passage only comes when Moses demands a name by which he can swear, invoke authority, and perhaps even summon.  And in response, YHWH gives a most confounding formula, one which is neither the “He reigns” of Moloch nor the “Mightly lord” of Ba’al but a non-name, a name that carries no meaning.  By the time Moses hears the voice speak “YHWH,” four letters which meant nothing before YHWH spoke them, the encounter has solidified that this will be no god of the Egyptians, with their correspondences to human realities, nor any god of the Canaanites, with their fairly limited agricultural functions.  Instead, this God calls all of the shots, will not be bound by a name or (as Israel later finds out) by any image, and can be known only in connection to a chosen people.  In short, this is a divine figure the likes of which is going to shake everything up.

After three thousand years, of course (yes, the line from The Big Lebowski is going through my head too), perhaps we’ve become spoiled: after all, the ineffability of God is the bread and butter of modern God-talk, and nobody gets all that surprised at it.  But in that moment, something new was happening in the world (nihil sub sole novum be damned!), and the text of Exodus is not going to let us overlook that.

May our devotion to the God who refuses conventional names bring with it a like commitment to the God who lays claim on all history and promises to sustain the faithful as the world unfolds before us.

Negative Dia-link-tics

19 August 2011

Feminism, Positivism, and Which One Excludes

16 August 2011

 

"Positivism" from Plato's Cave

“Why Be Religious?” at Feministe

Recently Victoria (who’s married to one of the better Christian Humanists) sent me the link above, noting that reading the post and the following comments made her “want to throw things.”  She asked me to help her articulate why such was her reaction, and rather than post my response as a Facebook comment (which is a rotten medium for serious discussion for a number of reasons, all of them having to do with Zuckerberg and none with Victoria), I figured I’d write it up here.  My initial response to her was that I found it difficult to say why she was angry but that I could perhaps offer some reasons why the piece troubles me, and that in turn might cast light on her own reading.  So this little essay is an attempt to articulate those reasons.

My own background in academic theology includes some reading in feminist theology, and like most sorts of theology, I find better texts and worse texts when I read around.  I remember distinctly thinking that Elizabeth Johnson’s She Who Is was one of the stronger explorations of theological language’s metaphorical character that I’d ever read, and although not every feminist-theological text offers answers that I find compelling, I do appreciate the questions that emerge from feminist theology, just as I appreciate the questions that radical orthodoxy and liberation theology and neo-Calvinism and open theism and several other schools of theology bring to light without necessarily embracing all of their answers.

I note my appreciation for feminist theology not in the spirit of the white guy who says he has some good Black friends but because of where I situate feminist theology and academic theology more generally: they’re second-order reflections on Christian worship, which I take to be the primary ordering force in a true imagination of reality.  In other words, I appreciate feminist theology because the best texts help me reflect on the implications of the proclamation of the gospel, of the Eucharist, and of baptism.  I do not find out that I should think hard about baptism from feminist theology: instead, feminist theology helps me ask some interesting questions about that already-crucial conversion moment.  I suppose that’s why Shoshie’s defense of her Jewish practices rattled me a bit:

I feel frustrated when people talk about how I should just embrace spirituality, over religion, because my spirituality comes from my religious practice. It’s a very Christian idea that thoughts and emotions, not actions, are what’s important for spiritual practice. I feel frustrated when people try to separate out my religion from my culture, to say that the culture is acceptable but the religion is not.

This little paragraph let me know right away that what Shoshie calls Christian and what I call Christian differ wildly: the way I’ve been trained to practice Christian theology, I always stand suspicious of the intellectual without the ritual and the emotional without the confessional.  One of the reasons I’ve remained a faithful congregant and deacon within the Christian Churches/Churches of Christ is that our congregations do take baptism-of-adults-by-immersion and weekly Eucharistic gatherings seriously.  In other words, when someone says that one doesn’t “have to go to church” to be a Christian, my response is less anger or congratulation and more puzzlement: if one doesn’t take of the Eucharist, gather for preaching, and share one’s monetary resources with a local community, then why bother calling it Christianity?  (I realize that, especially in America, “Christian” is a word that carries with it more baggage than I’m letting on here, but this is a riff, not a sociological analysis.)  In other words, where Shoshie would call the separation of “thoughts and emotions” from the life of concrete worship practice a Christian tendency, I’d call it an outworking of Enlightenment liberalism.

What Shoshie seems to have done is to take that strange divorce of Eucharist and doctrine, of homily and cogitation, and taken it as the core of rather than a heresy within Christianity.  Thus for Shoshie, one of the primary differences between her own Judaic feminism and a Christian’s or an ex-Christian’s feminism is that the trappings of her Rabbinic tradition and the worldwide community of Jews are integral rather than incidental to her identity as a feminist.  (In a later correction to the post, she does note that her organic unity of faith, community, and feminism does run into some rocky ground when she must give an account for atheist Jews.)

So far, my only real objection is that Shoshie has mistaken certain trends in liberal Christian traditions and assumed that they’re normative for Christians per se.  My own big concerns came not in the post but in the comments, when people ignored the holism that Shoshie holds up as the goodness of Judaism and start to advocate for the Enlightenment-flavored separations that Shoshie rightly suspects.  Those moments of liberalism like comment number four, from Jen, start from a basic assumption that there is a genus called “religion” of which Christianity and Judaism, among others, are species.  In a move that repeats as the atheists start to chime in, Jen insists that the separation between community and doctrine is not only possible but preferable:

The idea that you need religion for community is plain wrong. There are plenty of secular communities out there, and even explicitly atheistic ones. I’ve found my sense of community on campus by joining Secular Student Alliance affiliates, and I love going to the regular meetings of Seattle Atheists and Seattle Skeptics. I’ve made so many friends through the atheist community (yes, it exists) – friendships that have nothing to do with spirituality or supernatural beliefs (which I would argue against for other reasons, but won’t since you requested us not to).

And leaving behind supernatural belief doesn’t mean giving up culture – there are lots of groups devoted to people who are cultural Jews but effectively atheists.

Here the Christianity-in-the-individual’s-heart separation finds its mirror image, namely community-for-no-heavenly-reason.  Jen and others refuse to acknowledge the validity of confessing any god but insist that one can have the community without the gods.  That much is fairly predictable; in the face of the continued desire to spend time with like-minded souls, atheism has the resources of evolutionary biology to declare homo sapiens a social animal (in a blatant rip-off of Aristotle). As more atheists chime in, as does hlynn in comments six, seventeen, and fifty-two, the rhetoric of positivism starts to settle into its standard rhythm:

I think religion works because people want community and ritual. It took me a longer time to figure out how to get these two things outside of religion, but when I realized how to do this, I stopped needing religion. (6)

Even without all that (like I said, I’m not active in any of the national stuff, although I’ve got friends who are trying to get me there), I’ve found scads of other ways to find community wherever I go, without having to use religion as the tie that binds. (17)

So I get the desire for community and belonging. I just don’t get putting such a problematic entity at the center of it. (52)

The positivistic call for community thus runs a little something like this: the human need for community is logically prior to the contingent window-dressings that Islam, Judaism, Shinto, Ancestor-Veneration, or other traditions put on it.  Once one realizes such, one can adjust the decorations as one sees fit, discarding that which is distasteful in favor of spiritualities or non-spiritualities that don’t offend as readily.  Again, the argument is an old one and not particularly interesting.

What strikes me more interesting is how wildly Christians’ accounts of community differ from the positivistic anthropological accounts that the atheists (following Enlightenment writers like Tom Paine and to some extent Voltaire) seem to assume.  Within the constellation of narratives that we call the Christian tradition, certainly there are moments of tradition-flattening positivism; I can distinctly remember an Episcopalian priest coming to my seminary and, after an impassioned call for church-based environmentalism, fielding a question about whether there were anything within the Episcopal tradition in particular that inspired her to such things.  To paraphrase her response as a faux-dialogue, her response was, “No, not really.  I’m not interested in making other people Episcopalian.  You know, it works for me… some days.”

Those (recent) trends aside, a much broader and older stream in the tradition holds that the Church, and Israel before the Church, comes into being not because of some universal human urge but because of particular historical moments, most prominently the Exodus from Egypt and the return from Babylonian exile and the resurrection of Jesus the Messiah.  The communities called Israel and Church do in fact come into being both as grand narratives about God and as bodies of practice (Shoshie got that absolutely right about Judaism and not so much about Christianity), and later on, reflecting on the practices of those communions, theologians (and philosophers in Judaism, since some of the Jews I know get testy about my calling Jewish thought “theology”) come to reflect on analogies between the Eucharist, for example, and the weekly Qur’an-gatherings of the Mosque, and come to see certain analogies between the two “ritual lives.”

Certainly such analogies exist, and they’re worth exploring.  My point here is that, when the second-order analogy comes to displace the first-order experience of living within Church or Mosque, a very different metanarrative comes to situate such practices, and that metanarrative assumes certain axioms that do not make much sense (if any) within the narratives native to Israel and Church.  Such is not to say that the metanarrative of universal (and positivistic) “religion” lacks internal consistency.  Once the common threads between “ritual lives” become primary and the Church secondary, the atheists (and perhaps even the Wiccans, but I’m entirely out of my depth at that point) have every right to say that one can switch out one set of “rituals” for another, so long as the anthropological imperatives get fulfilled.  After all, if one doesn’t feel inclined to give thanks, there’s little sense in having a Eucharist, and if one doesn’t have any need to die to the systems of the world and rise into a new life, one governed by the historically-particular and unique fulfillment of the Exodus and the prophets, then baptism is at best a second-rate “ritual.”

All of this brings me back to the conviction that John Milbank helped me to articulate and which David B. Hart has strengthened, namely that the Christian appeal, though it certainly incorporates rational argument and reasoned discussion, makes most sense in the big picture as an aesthetic appeal.  Thus in order to move from a metanarrative that gives positivistic anthropology priority to a grand story that considers the Cross and Resurrection as prior to the common ground that Church shares with Mosque, something more like a rhetorical persuasion than a logical demonstration must happen.  (The same applies to moves in the other direction.)  What I would call conversion, the motion of the Holy Spirit, is more than a rhetorical encounter, but it’s certainly no less–the soul must move, and hearing the proclaimed gospel must do the moving.  Perhaps all human groups have performed something resembling (in limited ways) baptism and Eucharist, but “ritual” considered generically lacks the narrative grounding that makes baptism salvific and Eucharist unifying in the face of the tribes and factions of (as we Christians call it) the world.

With regards to where feminism fits into those narratives and practices, my answer is the same I give when I consider Neo-Calvinism and Radical Orthodoxy and Liberation Theology: where those second-order reflections stand in harmonious relationship with the proclaimed Scriptures and Creeds of the Church, I can affirm their work and learn to name more truthfully the implications of the Gospel.  But in my own intellectual life, the Eucharist and Baptism always stand primary, and I can only call them good when they articulate realities with their roots in the life of the Church, the Body of the Messiah.  Where they allow some other metanarrative to supplant that Gospel, I’m compelled, because the Cross compels me, to say that they’ve been tried and found wanting.  That priority of the narrative/ritual tradition over positivistic anthropology will make little sense to one convinced by the metanarrative of historic secularization, but I suppose that’s where the lifelong call of the Christian comes in: in order to do the work that the Eucharist should do for the soul, the old, old story must frame it.  And for the old, old story to be anything but a bit of Protestant church history, there must be people whose lives (ordered around the Eucharist) take their shapes from it.  To separate the two is to lose the richness that ought to be called Christianity.

 

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