Saturday, 26 April 2008
Easter 6 A
There is an implied contrast between the Christian vision and the classics that has run throughout western history. My favourite story is the story of St Jerome's struggle. He loved the classical literature of Greece and Rome, and felt annoyed every time he turned to read the gospels at the rudeness of their style. But as one who would one day be canonised as a saint, he felt guilty about this. He vowed to lead an ascetic life, but did not want to give up his rich library. So he settled on a routine of fasting alternating with reading Cicero. One day, the story goes, he fell ill and in his delirium he had a dream that he was on trial. He protested that he was a Christian. But the judge said, No, you are a Ciceronian. Realising he was a man of divided loyalties, when he recovered Jerome abandoned the classics and devoted himself to demonstrating the integrity and sophistication of biblical literature in his own right.
I like this story, but I am quoting it from memory so it may not be all that accurate. Another thing I like about Jerome is his confession to wasting so much time daydreaming, wishing things weren't as they were. But that has nothing to do with Acts 17, which I am preaching on. The gospel lesson, continuing from last Sunday's reading in John 14, has that core proclamation in John that God abides in us as we in our discipleship abide in him. In the sermon I pick this up in connection with Paul saying, in Acts 17, that in God we live and move and have our being.
The Areopagus, where the street preacher Paul is taken to speak more formally, by the way, was the criminal court north west of the city centre. The story here doesn;t make much of this, but I find it interesting.
Underneath this story I find a fundamental tension between classical culture and the emerging Christian culture. The popular religion of multiple gods was a religion of anxiety in which people saw themselves pulled by irrational forces in all sorts of directions. Religious practice was a means of propitiating the gods so that their influence would be benign rather than distructive. The centre of personality was exterior to the individual in this sense. (Bruno Snell tells this story in The Discovery of the Mind). Another story in this direction is the one about Augustine coming across Ambrose reading silently. The custom was always to read out loud, but Ambrose confessed that he always read silently. Augustine was amazed, as if to discover that the world of ideas was not just something that happened outside the person (out loud), but inside.
In a sense both the Stoics and the Epicurians represented efforts to overcome the way the gods pull us in so many directions by resisting extremes of passion all together, with the Epicurians resisting the popular fear of the gods and fear of retribution in life after death by embracing simple this-world pleasures (not hedonism), and the Stoics cultivated a dispassionate life that formed the philosophical background to British stiff-upper-lip-ism. Both schools therefore represent a flight from the wholeness of experience. Luke's Paul introduces a way of life that is wholly integrated in what is, using the Greek philosophical language of that in which we live and move and have our being as the ground of consciousness of an individual capable of both self-consciousness and a capacity to transform life into relationship with what is fundamental to a creation of which we are a part, and not separated from, a relationship that is manifested in action--acts of healing and compassion. This is self-consciousness that is also conscious of life with God that looks to me like a pretty good cure for anxiety.
Wednesday, 16 April 2008
Easter 5 A
When Jesus, in John 14, says “I am the way,” I think we are invited to see what he says in parallel with other explorations of “the Way” like Dharma (धर्म), Tao (道) or Torah (תּוֹרָה).
In all these examples of “the Way” we find the understanding that there is an underlying structure to the fecundity and flourishing of things that is also the structure of the self. Such an underlying structure also gives shape to society. In Christianity such a structure takes shape around the metaphor of “the kingdom of God”. In Torah, the Way becomes an Exodus-like path to Law as a characteristic of a free society. The Way is a dynamic journey to liberation from unjust structures, from worlds like the worlds of Pharaoh and Robert Mugabe. In this lesson, however, the focus is on the actualisation of the self. The one who believes in Jesus (verse 12) will do what he does. The implication of this text is that if we follow the Way we become like Jesus. We, too, make the Father visible. The Father dwells in us, too. We, too, are able to say “I am.” Christ ‘Я’ Us. This kind of thinking is central to the Gospel of John from the beginning (John 1.12) to the end (John 21.15-17). The Word becomes our flesh and dwells among us in our discipleship, in what we do.
I find it interesting that Carl Jung says “Christ is our nearest analogy of the self and its meaning” (“Christ, a Symbol of the Self”). And I find it immensely helpful in today’s world to look at “the Way”, shrouded in metaphor as it is in the Gospel of John, in terms of the process of individuation as described in Jung’s work. For Jung, individuation comes through a process of integrating consciousness and the unconscious that discovers the self as an undivided whole. Consciousness alone is exclusive, selective and discriminating, and thus only part of the meaning of the whole person. The true self, whole and complete, will include the unconscious as well. While consciousness and the unconscious are often in conflict, and the ego-consciousness in its effort to remain loyal to what we call “reality” will swallow or suppress the unconscious, or, to the contrary, the unconscious psyche will disrupt and impair consciousness like an unwelcome intruder bent on creating chaos, the process of individuation is “a course of development arising out of the conflict between these two psychic facts” (“Consciousness, Unconsciousness and Individuation”). The healthy individual is one who can acknowledge the truth of the whole self, even the bits one would like to bury and forget.
The prayer goes on to say
Here in the Church’s liturgy we have the concern for integration and wholeness that is envisioned in the process of individuation, but also in the gospel call to confession, which is also an acknowledgement of the whole person, not a denial or suppression of what Jung calls our “shadow” but an awareness and acknowledgement of it. We speak in the presence of grace of what we can otherwise barely acknowledge in ourselves. Notice, moreover, that the prayers I have cited are for ourselves the worshippers at the funeral service. While at a funeral service we are unavoidably collectively aware of the one who has died as a whole person (warts and all”, or, as Jung would say, “animus/anima, shadow, and so on, and all), and our awareness is, in the best instances, buoyed by grace, worshippers are encouraged to have this same gracious awareness about themselves as whole persons. That is what the act of confession and the assurance or pardon are all about, after all, and such self-reflection helps us face our own dying as whole persons (persons whose lives include death).
Similar psychological pressure to deny the dark side of the self occurs in politics and international relations. Richard Hofstadter, in his classic essay, “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” describes a mode of social behaviour motivated by “social conflicts that involve ultimate schemes of values and that bring fundamental fears and hatreds, rather than negotiable interests, into political action.” The fear of the other is a projection of unresolved fears lurking within the fragmented self.
But the image of Christ in scripture is the image of the one who is “not put off by the affliction of the afflicted” (Psalm 22.24), who was “numbered among the transgressors” (Isaiah 53.12), who was made by God “to be sin” (2 Cor 5.21), who “emptied himself, taking the form of a slave” (Philippians 2.7). The very doctrine of incarnation that is described as the descent of God into our humanity is, in ordinary human experience, the acknowledgement of the wholeness of one’s own humanity as it is described in these references, an acknowledgement that, in the process of individuation, is not at all easy to make but is the very heart of the journey described here as “the Way”. This is the incarnational journey Paul calls us to make when, in Philippians 2, he challenges us to have the mind of Christ and do what he did in embracing the life of the condemned as his own. I would say the mystery of the incarnation is something very like the mystery of individuation, the challenge to become a whole person.
Doesn’t it add immense significance to this teaching about discipleship, by the way, that it is presented in the context of anticipating the death of Jesus as their leader? The significance is twofold. In the first place, in this journey toward integration we call “the Way” death and life cease to be opposites but become integrated in the person who learns how to live by “emptying” himself in this way (Philippians 2.7 again). The Gospel of John plays with this paradox of death as life in the ambiguity of the phrase “lifted up: “And I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all people to myself" (John 12.32). “Lifted up” refers equally to crucifixion and exaltation.
In addition, as the gospels tell the story of a journey toward integration that takes place within religious and political conflict that closely resembles conflict experienced in the process of individuation discussed above, the end of the story intensifies the fundamental paradoxes that have operated throughout the story. Jesus is crucified between two thieves. For Jung, this can mean, on the one hand, the collapse of the ego caused by the uncontrolled irruption of the dark side of the self, or the ego's submission to a higher and more spacious part of the self that is given the final word. In either option the ego seems to be "defeated", but the one option is the story of failure and the other the story of victory. Karl Barth described the crucifixion of Jesus between two thieves as a community that defines the first church—the kind of community Jesus intended, the company he wished to keep. In the eyes of the world it looks like failure. As the trajectory of “the Way” it is victory, it creates a new world that is unlike Caesar's world, and we are invited to do what Jesus did, finding our integrity in similar community.
Wednesday, 9 April 2008
Easter 4 A
In her chapter on “Gospels in Conflict: John and Thomas” in her book Beyond Belief (Macmillan 2003), Elaine Pagels remembers being an enthusiastic 14-year-old member of an evangelical church that offered what she then craved—the assurance of belonging to the right group, the true “flock” that alone belonged to God. As Brown described the “price tag” of such unity, so Pagels experienced leaders who charged her not to associate with outsiders, except to convert them (p. 31). They said her Jewish friend, killed in a car accident when she was 16, was eternally damned because she had never been “born again”. John’s gospel, written, Pagels says, “in the heat of controversy, to defend certain views of Jesus and to oppose others” (p. 36), was the focus gospel for this evangelical community.
