
Occasional Articles
As with the Introductory Articles, we
will add other articles as time permits or as our readers request. If you
have a suggestion for anything, please let us know.
Michael Hardin
Is the Apocalypse Inevitable?: Native American Prophecy and the Mimetic Theory presented to the Colloquium on Violence and Religion 2008
Michael's Essay for a Celebration Volume honoring Rene Girard
Michael's Response to Willard Swartley's Covenent of Peace at the November Colloquium and Violence Meeting
Does
Peace Make A Difference? - Michael's essay in response to Rick
Warren's P.E.A.C.E. plan (which somehow never mentions peace).
An Analysis of Rick Warren - Michael's response to "The Purpose Driven Life."
"The
God of Pat Robertson" - a response to Pat Robertson's words
to the people of Dover, PA.
"A
response to Charles Stanley's "A Nation at War"
"Must
God be violent? A Diagnosis and Prescription for Modern Christianity"
The
Scapegoat: Christologies in Conflict - A Study in Dietrich Bonhoeffer
Biblical
Testaments as a Marriage of Convenience: Rene Girard and Biblical Interpretation
Finding
Our Way Home: A Brief Note On The Authority and Interpretation of Scripture
"Does
The Passion of the Christ Preach the Gospel?"
A
sermon for the holiday devoted to Dr. Martin Luther King. (requires
Adobe Acrobat Reader.)
GRASPING
GOD: Philippians 2: 1-11 in the Light of Mimetic Theory
Essay on Brethren Life & Thought
Essay on Mimesis and Dominion
"EcoSpirituality"
Or What Happens When You Sit Down With A French Literary Critic
Jeff Krantz
Mighty
One or Crucified Messiah? Competing Christologies and the Chiastic
Structure of Mark's Gospel
There's
No Such Thing as the Rapture - A sermon preached at the Church
of the Advent, Westbury (requires Acrobat Reader)
Holy
Scripture and the Consecration of Gene Robinson - a response
to the request of the Windsor Report for a Scriptural rationale. (requires
Adobe's Acrobat Reader)
Worship - The Redemption of Desire by Jeff Krantz
Myth
and Film - a piece written for the City of Angels Film Festival
The Stations of the Cross - Rewritten by Jeff Krantz
A Dramatic Presentation of the Stations of the Cross for Youth by Barb Fabijan-Waddell
Escaping
the Power of "My" - A NonViolent Approach to Stewardship
Preaching
Peace in Hollywood: The Theologies of Terminator, Lord of the Rings, and the
Matrix
V
for Vendetta - The Name Says It All A review of the movie.
Essays, Sermons and Liturgical Pieces by Friends of Preaching Peace
Mark Heim's "No More of This" - A hymn on Nonviolent Atonement
Kate Layzer's "No More of This" - A hymn on Nonviolent Atonement (and inspiration for Mark Heim's hymn!)
Alan Cork, "Transformation" in L'Arche: A Mimetic Account presented to the Colloquium on Violence and Religion 2008
"The Wisdom of God's Peace" a sermon by Jim Amstutz, co-pastor of Michael's church.
Girard's Christology - Per Bjornar Grande
Violence, Anarchy and Scripture: Jacques Ellul and Rene Girard - Matthew Patillo
Comparing
Plato's Understanding of Mimesis to Girard's - Per Bjorner Grande
C. Frank Terhune, an Easter Sermon: "God's Big But" (no kidding!)
Gerald Biesecker-Mast's paper from Theologia Pacis on Pacifist Gospel Epstimology.
An essay by the Rev. John Hill on Mimetic Theory and Catechesis
This same hermeneutic can be found in Matthew
5 where Jesus contrasts his speech with that of Moses in the Torah. No matter
how you slice it, Matthew 5:17-20 is not about abolition of Torah but about
its fulfillment, a fulfillment seen in the ‘I say unto you’ portions.
It is the rejection of religion and the affirmation of the spirituality (and
sociology) of forgiveness and non-retribution. It is the rejection of a militant
spirituality, just as Jesus’ use of Psalm 110 is a rejection of anti (=
militant) Christology.
This can be further seen in Jesus’
use of Isaiah. We have greatly benefited from Bruce Chilton’s research
on Jesus’ use of the Isaiah Targum. Unquestionably, Isaiah was Jesus’
favorite book, the lens through which he perceived his people’s history.
In Luke 4 and in Luke 7 (as we see in Year C Epiphany), Jesus cites the Isaiah
text and four out of four times (at a minimum) Jesus omits the continuing
Isaianic theme of vengeance on the Gentiles. This is again of a piece with
Jesus’ hermeneutic on demythologizing the ‘violent’ God.
In each case where Jesus cites Isaiah,
it is always in the context of one way or another challenging his hearers
to consider what God without retribution would look like. This similar principle
can also be found In Jesus’ parables. In the parables, familiar eschatological
imagery is given a turn on its head. For example, the kingdom is God is never
conceived of as a reign of coercion, rather, God is like the father who cares
not for his honor and RUNS to his estranged child. God’s reign is a
place where sparrows are fed and lilies are clothed. Jesus’ parables
are subversive by their very insistence that God is not like that which had
been conceived.
Finally I must mention the oft-cited
use of Psalm 22 in the passion narrative. Evangelicals tend to see a one to
one correspondence between the events of Psalm 22 and the passion of Jesus.
Psalm 22 is cited as fulfilled prophecy and becomes a witness, not to the
passion of Jesus, but to a view of inspiration. And sadly, there it remains.
Whether or not the use of Psalm 22 can be traced to the historical Jesus is
an open question. Part of the reason for this openness is that scholars have
a difficult time understanding how Jesus could have uttered such words, after
all didn’t he have this great thing with God going on in the text previously.
The Evangelical response is to say that Jesus quoted Psalm 22 because God
had indeed abandoned him and was pouring out wrath upon him for our sins.
That is mythologizing. Jesus’ use of Psalm 22 in the passion narrative
is intended to call to mind the victimage process, the persecution of the
innocent. It is the end of myth. Psalm 22 ends on a note of vindication just
as Jesus knows his story will. He does not need to cite the whole text to
make this point; the opening verse should bring the entire text to mind. But,
if it is mythologized, then we ourselves are proof that had we been there
we would have done the same things as Jesus’ persecutors. And the proof
of that lies in those we scapegoat on a day to day basis.
Over and over again there is a consistent
pattern in Jesus’ use of Scripture in the gospel tradition. It does
not all have to go back to the historical Jesus and some of it undoubtedly
comes from the good theologizing of the early church. But this early church
did their theology in the presence of this Living Lord, so it is little wonder
that there might be such congruency between his approach to Scripture and
their approach. I think Jesus was far more of a ‘thinker’ than
many give him credit for, I believe he was quite brilliant to be able to nurture
such a vision of God.
What does this mean for us today in the
churches that must still see the intimate connections between the two Testaments?
Several things come to mind.
First, there must be a better understanding
of Judaism in the churches. Far too much of what is taught and believed about
Judaism in the churches is at best patently false and at worst, downright
evil. When considering Scripture, e.g., Christians have a tendency to think
Jews (and Jesus) viewed their Bible as a monolithic authority. Such was not
the case, even for the Pharisees. It is essential to view Jesus in the midst
of the many hermeneutic options available to him. The days of considering
ancient Judaism as a unified religion are over. The time has come to recognize
the diversity of thought that can be found in the literature and history of
ancient Judaism, which includes various views of the biblical canon as well
as a variety of ways of interpreting that canon.
Second, the church would do well to take
its hermeneutic cue from Jesus and the apostles rather than inherited sacrificial
theologies. I cannot emphasize this point enough. We will not recognize our
sacrificial theology, hermeneutic and ethic if we do not take the time to
ask if our reading of Scripture is consistent with that of Jesus and the prophetic
and apostolic witness. We can only do this when we see that the essential
component is the question: what does God without violence look like? The answer
of course is that God looks a lot like Jesus. But this means we must reconsider
the sacrificial mythmaking of our theologies and correct them.
Therefore, third, we as Christians must
own up to our sacrificial theologies and our tendency to mythologize and we
must repent. If indeed we confess that humans are ‘in sin’ then
we better accept the fact that our hermeneutics will tend also ‘to sin.’
As my professor Bernard Ramm used to say, “God forgives our theology…just
like he forgives our sin.” How do we recognize if we have a sacrificial
theology? We look to see if the marks of victimage are present. Do we have
a scapegoat? Do we justify ourselves? Do we lie? Do we create rivalries? Is
our theology essentially dualistic? Do we sacralize the victim (and thus our
violence)?
Fourth, the Protestant ‘sola scriptura’
principle without the controlling element of a theology of the cross will
forever be a misplaced ideal. It will stand alone, defying interpreters to
make sense out of its differentiation. It will be no more than a jigsaw puzzle
without a box cover to give a clue as to what the end result looks like. Theology
that does not begin and end as anthropology, with the humanity, death and
resurrection of Jesus, will never be Christian theology. It will be more or
less mythologized gospel. If we allow a theory of inspiration to control our
hermeneutic, we will not be able to perceive the essential element that is
the cornerstone of responsible Christian theology: the rejection of God in
Christ on the cross by all humanity and the revelation of God's forgiving
spirit.
Fifth, with Girard and others we may
recognize the travail of revelation in the Hebrew Scriptures, just as we can
recognize it, e.g., in certain early Greek playwrights. What is being birthed
is the revelation of the forgiving God. This birth culminates in the death
and resurrection of Jesus and the witnesses to his life that we call ‘gospel.’
As long as we insist on flattening out the biblical revelation with a theory
of inspiration we will not be able to see the real character of God revealed
in Jesus.
So you see, from my perspective, it is
centrally important to readdress this issue of modern Christian hermeneutics
from the perspective of mimetic theory. In so doing we also expose the underlying
mythological (sacrificial) elements in our various doctrines, not the least
of which is the doctrine of the authority, inspiration and interpretation
of Scripture. I fear that the churches will not want to hear this. It will
be far easier and more comfortable for them to remain in the la-la land of
their first naivete. But I fear more for the world, for it is not hearing
the good news of the gospel by those who claim to know Christ. I fear not
that God will judge them, but that we will have missed so many opportunities
to share the joyous message of liberation and peace that we have been given.
Until and unless we re-examine this issue, we will remain in the vacuous sterility
of our ignorance.
I hope I have answered your question
about Jesus and his hermeneutic. I have chosen to keep my remarks brief and
to refrain from all kinds of footnoting and debating of positions. At any
point in this letter-essay I might have referenced one or more authors but
I don’t think being pedantic will help here. Better clarity than obfuscation.
If I have been unclear, it is because I too, am learning to repent, and know
that my theology must also be forgiven.
Peace be with you.
Michael
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This business of witness is key when approaching
Scripture. If we do not play the ‘blame’ game and sacralize the
text, we are left standing before witnesses, those who saw, heard, touched,
felt and experienced Jesus the man. Jesus, one might say, the true man, the
new Adam, the corporate figure of the Son of Man, the hope for a transfigured
humanity. This is how the apostolic witnesses looked upon Jesus. They did not
sit around creatively playing with christological titles and crafting nifty
theologies. Their entire life, their entire day to day existence was about bearing
witness to the Risen Lord and the good news of the message of God’s grace.
They were suffused with Jesus. If we do not approach their literary legacy with
this in mind, we will never find our way out of the hermeneutic impasses and
dead ends we see replicated all over Christianity.
How then should we approach the Scriptures?
Who will be our guide? I have suggested that instead of a multitude of hermeneutic
options available to the church (e.g., adjectival theologies or theologies
in the genitive), there are really only two: that of myth, a sacrificial interpretation,
and that of gospel, the desacralizing of violent mimesis and the affirmation
of loving mimesis. We are either following the prince of darkness on the road
to hell, a hell of our own making, or we are following the Prince of Peace
on the path of the Kingdom. Jesus is our guide.
We are freed and invited to follow the
path of the apostolic witness. We do this by beginning where all Christian
theology must begin, with the death of Jesus on a Roman cross and his subsequent
resurrection from the dead. We begin with a theology of the cross. This is
the theological way of speaking. Anthropologically speaking, we begin with
the generative mimetic scapegoat mechanism. We have seen how Girard is able
to demonstrate the effects of the gospel revelation on human reading of myth
as well as the social and political effects of such. You know from Girard’s
work, the role the passion of Jesus plays in the deconstruction of culture.
In both cases or from either direction, we are bearing witness to the fact
that Jesus died forgiving his enemies.
This forgiveness is given ‘salvation-historical’
rootedness by the apostle Paul. Unfortunately, we Western Christians assume
Paul was referring to individually dispensed forgiveness for each one of us,
for each one of our sins. No, for Paul, the forgiveness of God in the dying
of Jesus was a real cosmic forgiveness. As a species, we are forgiven, in
whole and in part. The message is: there will be no more scapegoats. The forgiveness
of Jesus from the cross is the singular message that breaks the devil’s
back. From that day forth, the generative scapegoating mechanism has a Conqueror
in its midst. It is no longer able to take complete advantage over humanity.
There is now light in the darkness. It is this cosmic thrust of forgiveness
that is behind Paul’s proclamation of the gospel, most clearly evidenced
in his mission to those beyond the Covenant of the Hebrew Bible.
The same is true for the four Gospels.
You know the quip (I think it is K.L. Schmidt) that ‘the gospels are
just passion narratives with extended introductions?’ This is not an
unreal observation. Nor should it surprise us that the Passion narrative was
more than likely the earliest developed narrative (as Theissen shows). Nor
should we be further surprised to find that the ‘extended introduction’
of the gospels is all focused on the cross and that we are invited to follow
Jesus and to carry a cross as he does. The specific hermeneutic of a theology
of the cross is the implicit and explicit interpretive means we are given
by the gospels themselves.
With this in mind, I want to turn my
attention now to the use of Scripture by Jesus in the gospels. Can we discern
any kind of a pattern in Jesus’ use of Scripture? Ask any Christian
and they will tell you that Jesus quoted the Bible. By quoting it he validated
its authority. By validating its authority, Jesus as ‘God’ validates
the God of the Bible who in many ways is remarkably different from him. Go
figure.
First I want to look at two texts that
are used by some to assert that Jesus affirmed in whole the authority of the
Hebrew Bible. Mark 12:35-40 where Jesus quotes Psalm 110 I have already dealt
with in both Year B as well as “The Biblical Testaments as a Marriage
of Convenience.” When Jesus quotes Psalm 110, he adds an aside ‘David
himself, speaking by the Holy Spirit declared..” Some see here a warrant
for saying that the Hebrew Scriptures are ‘God-breathed’ (a la
2 Tim 3:16). But Jesus’ selective use of Psalm 110 as a hermeneutic
alternative to militant notions of Messiah vitiates that interpretation. More
than likely, this phrase is meant ironically as in “Your Bible says
this and since you believe your Bible is inspired you must answer the question.”
It has been shown that Jesus’ could be just as ironic as Socrates.
We have the same thing going on in John
10:34-39. Here Jesus, in describing his relationship to the Father, is about
to be lynched. In this mob scene, Jesus is going to be publicly executed for
violating ‘law’ that is, committing blasphemy. Jesus says, “Is
it not written in your Law, ‘I have said you are gods?’ (Psalm
82:6) If he called them ‘gods’ to whom the word of God came –
and the Scripture cannot be broken – what about the one whom the Father
set apart and sent into the world?” Once again the phrase “and
Scripture cannot be broken” is used ironically. Not only can this be
demonstrated within the larger Johannine use of irony but also in the fact
that the law referred to has a possessive pronoun, it is “your Law.”
In neither case do we need to see in the texts some kind of theory of inspiration;
on the contrary, both texts give us a theory of non-inspiration. What do I
mean by this?
When we looked at Mark 12 and Jesus’
use of Psalm 110, we saw that Jesus’ explicitly chose to refute the
Hasmonean interpretation by not quoting Psalm 110: 2-3, 5-7. Jesus refused
to perceive his mission in terms of a militant deliverer. Jesus explicitly
rejected this '‘christology' and it is something he does throughout
the entire gospel tradition. Remember, even the disciples didn’t get
it while he was alive, how much less the crowds or the authorities. But this
use of Psalm 110 is indicative of a hermeneutic.
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Protestants are in some senses justly proud
of the achievements of the Reformers. But it is not enough to parrot their utterances.
We must be bold to discern the gospel in our time. Let’s face it, Martin
Luther opened a can of worms with his ‘sola scriptura’ principle.
The ‘sola scriptura’ principal has part of its roots in the humanism
of Erasmus and others. Because this is so, alongside the developing role of
science in the 17th and 18th centuries as an authority on ‘reality’,
the Protestant church also solidified its authority by appeal to the authority
of Scripture. The heirs of the magisterial Reformers developed a view of the
inspiration of Scripture that said, in its whole and in its parts, Scripture
is truthful in what it asserts. Of course this was bound to clash with the growing
authority of science particularly when scientific method began to be applied
to the Bible.
By the 19th century, the tide began to
turn. Theological science, or theology done in the name of science, had laid
the framework to demonstrate that the two most important books to the church,
Genesis and the Fourth Gospel, were neither accurate nor true. The Jesus of
the Fourth Gospel is almost immediately dismissed in critical research of
the late 18th and early 19th centuries. From Remairus and Lessing to Strauss
and Baur, the Fourth Gospel was sundered from Jesus’ life. The developments
in biology and physics challenged the creation narrative of Genesis for rights
of truth. The Protestant view of ‘biblical infallibility’ now
had a two-fold front on the battlefield, with science, and of course with
Rome’s assertion of papal infallibility.
Some Protestants at this time reconciled
themselves to the reality that science was here to stay and surrendered the
inaccuracies of Scripture to science. That is, they asserted that while the
biblical text may not be accurate scientifically, it is true on a theological
level. It was the time when ‘salvation history’ or ‘the
history of the acts of God’ originated. Others were not content to surrender
so quickly and asserted that not only was the theology of the Bible inspired
but also every word that was written was inspired. This is the presupposition
for the doctrine of inerrancy. Science had really won this battle by turning
the conservatives and the liberals against one another. But both sides frequently
ended up with a sacrificial reading of the gospel.
I will give you one example from either
side. Evangelicalism is a good example of a mimetically conceived sacrificial
theology from a conservative perspective. Liberation theology that of a liberal
perspective. Both generally share in the mythologizing of the victim. Both
are quite different in their outcomes, that is, different scapegoats are used,
but both engage the justification of victimage, which is tantamount to mythologizing.
All the doctrine of biblical infallibility
or inerrancy protects is the right to retribution. This is why it is necessary
to the Christian myth and why some Christians will foam at the mouth when
their beloved Bible comes under attack. This same way of thinking can also
be found in other religious traditions, as you know. It is not unique to Christianity.
And in every case it functions as part of the mythological covering of religious
literature.
In the realm of sacrificial theology
there are a thousand variations. They may be conservative or liberal, Protestant,
Catholic or Orthodox, Reformed or Lutheran, Baptist, Pentecostal or Presbyterian,
Anglican, feminist, post-structuralist or just about anything in between but
they all have one thing in common: they all have a theory about the text that
when applied to the text justifies their retributive stance against one another.
Fortunately, there are exceptions to
the rule. Lots of exceptions. The alternative to the multitudinous (because
mimetically duplicated) sacrificial ways of reading Scripture can be found
in the singular way the gospel has been appropriated by those within and without
the Christian tradition who like Jesus, renounced violence. How many examples
do you need? It seems as though every age, place and generation has those
who understand this. Yet, their voices are often not connected. This appreciation
for the ‘theology and ethic of non-violence’ that Jesus propounds
has often struggled with the ‘just God’ of the Christian Church.
Others have been quick to renounce Jesus’ non-retributive ethic as a
tool of the bourgeois designed to keep folks low on the ladder even lower.
Either way it is thrown out as a piece of revelation and it is precisely the
cornerstone they have cast out!
It is the non-retributive God that is
being announced in Jesus’ life and message. It is what theology without
violence looks like. In other words it is not the religious speculation of
the generative scapegoating mechanism with its guilty victims and angry gods
with bruised honors. This singular alternative, this perspective from below,
this hermeneutic of peace, no matter what you call it, is a unique event in
anthropological history. It is completely good news because the God of the
gospel of Jesus is a good God demonstrated in his loving kindness, faithfulness
and forgiveness to humanity.
We reach an impasse at this juncture
if we insist on holding to a theory of biblical infallibility or inerrancy.
It is the same conundrum that faced Marcion, viz., what do the ‘violent’
Creator god of the Hebrew Bible and the merciful God of the gospel have in
common? There is no possible way to assert biblical infallibility and come
to clear orthodox trinitarian thinking on this. One inevitably crashes on
the shoals of the myth of the guilty victim. Either sinners are guilty, or
Jesus is guilty, or the enemy is guilty or Satan is guilty or God is guilty,
someone has to be blamed. Little wonder that Christians have often been perceived
as polytheistic, they have been!
In their troubled appropriation of the
Hebrew Scriptures, the Christian churches have for the most part obliterated
the revelatory character of the person of Jesus. Jesus has undergone assimilation
into the heavenly Pantheon of deities over and over again. Fortunately he
escapes those bounds and dwells in those whose lives are examples of his life.
We can no more capture Jesus with our theologies than we can capture an elephant
with a butterfly net. But we can bear witness to him.
Theology without violence does not need
a ‘theory of Scripture’ to justify its assertions regarding the
divine. It suffices that Scripture is testimony, in the same fundamental relationship
to Jesus as was John the Baptist. Any authority it may possess is only possessed
by virtue of him to whom witness is borne. This is the application of a theology
of the cross to a view of the role of Holy Scripture. It does not ‘divinize’
or sacralize Scripture; it does not need to. When Scripture is testimony,
it is received in its full anthropological sense; it is human witness that
is being borne whether it is the testimony of humans or whether it is testimony
about a human. The question, ‘If God were fully human, what would God
look like?” is answered not only in the life of Jesus but also in his
death which, as I mentioned earlier, must, like his life, be framed in terms
of forgiveness and non-retaliation. We, like the apostles before us, are but
witnesses to this.
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Before I turn to your question about Jesus’ hermeneutic, I must do so
by way of reviewing the hermeneutic problem that exists in the modern American
churches as well as modern theology. I can only state a very general thesis
because I want to paint a big picture, whose details I can fill in if you have
questions. Then I will really turn my attention to Jesus and Scripture. In so
doing, I hope I will have expressed the answer to your question.
Throughout our conversations these past
years, you and I have turned many questions on their head, looked at them
from what we might call a ‘hermeneutic from below.’ Our general
theme has examined the question, ‘what would the church look like if
it looked like Jesus?’ This is a sociological concern we have had because
we sense that a group of Christians, ‘a Christian society’, should,
after all, look like Christ. And the problem is that it does, it looks like
a Christology, but it doesn’t look like Jesus.
If we acknowledge that Jesus’ ministry
was all about forgiveness and the extent of God’s mercy and love, then
what happens when at the critical point, the point of the cross, we import
the notion of God’s non-forgiveness or wrath. We completely ignore the
explicit text “Father, forgive them, they do not know what they are
doing.” The consequence of this is that the seeds of mythology are sown
in the gospel. And the text, which is ignored, that is, extruded or victimized,
becomes transformed or sacralized. The theological expression for this is
what is popularly known as the doctrine of the inspiration and authority of
Scripture. This doctrine is a foil, to hide the truth, because it origins
always stem from a lie. Whether the lie of romantic ‘individualism’
or the lie that the victim got what they deserved, one can inevitably trace
back all arguments for this doctrine to the need to justify violence, the
need for divine sanction when violent. We need a violent precedent on a cosmic
scale to justify our sacrificial tendencies.
In the essay “The Biblical Testaments
as a Marriage of Convenience” I laid out an essential framework for
the problem as I conceive it. The issue was about what occurred when Christian
theology and life began to become dualistic. What I observed is that there
is a direct correlation between the use of Scripture and the theological scapegoating
that began with Judaism and ended with paganism. This sacrificial hermeneutic
is found only on the fringes of the apostolic canon. The apostolic canon reveals
a non-sacrificial hermeneutic for the most part. The early church I am sure
did its best when dealing with those she felt had crossed over the border.
But once Marcion and Justin Martyr get the sacrificial ball rolling, it rolls
all the way to Augustine who has heaved it down through history to our time.
The consequence of this is what I have
called the Christian myth, the myth of the violence of God in Christ. No matter
what form it takes, it is a sacrificial, and thus mythological, reading of
the scriptures. The marks of myth will be evident in such a reading: justification
for the killing of the victim and justice for God. This is one of the greater
burdens of modern Christianity, the so-called penal theory of the atonement,
which Anthony Bartlett has so well analyzed from the perspective of mimetic
theory (Cross Purposes).
The alternative to this way of rendering
Scripture I have termed gospel. It recognizes the impact Jesus’ life
has when framing mimesis, particularly when it comes to discussing positive
mimesis. The most direct consequence of this is that it develops a non-sacrificial
reading of the text with extraordinary implications for theology as it is
popularly constructed. This has been demonstrated time and again not only
by Rene Girard but also by those who have applied mimetic theory to the gospels.
Raymund Schwager has pioneered the way, along with Bob Hamerton-Kelly, Gil
Bailie, Walter Wink and a host of others.
There is thus a manifest congruence between
Jesus’ life as expressed in the Gospels and the application of that
Life by the Spirit in the church. The early Christians died in the same manner,
as had their Master, forgiving and non-retaliatory. They produced the letters
and gospels of the Biblical canon. Can we ignore their choice for non-retribution
or that of their Master, the Lord Jesus? Can we further ignore that their
life with Jesus as Spirit and their recollections of Jesus as human were one
and the same? Of course when we read the Gospels they will tell us as much
about the early Christians as they do about Jesus. This is because the early
Christians were all about Jesus! We don’t need to be rocket scientists
to figure this one out.
All of our fretting and worrying over
the ‘ipsissima vox/verba’ of Jesus’ teaching is just a reflection
of our desire to get beyond the mythological ‘Christs of history.’
We shall come back to this in another place. We need to address the modern
origins of the far more troublesome doctrine of Biblical infallibility.
The failure of the Reformers was that
neither Luther nor Calvin was willing to rethink Augustine. Augustine was
accepted as their ‘early Church’ authority because Augustine loomed
large in Roman Catholic theology and still does. Augustine was the first thinker
to bring together two words that heretofore had only been eschatologically
united: civilization and Christian. Augustine’s attempt to conceive
a Christian culture would mean the merging of Christianity and culture. But
as all culture is mimetic and violent in nature, this resulted in the predominance
of violent, mimetic Christianity. Thus the groundwork was laid for Augustinian
thought in the assimilation of two kingdoms, the church and the state, the
two Testaments, law and gospel, Christ and all the other gods. Augustine’s
flattening of Holy Scripture undergirds the view of inspiration taught in
both Catholic as well as Protestant churches. ‘The Bible is God’s
holy Word.’ Christian Platonism with its ‘analogia entis’
(analogy of being) had thoroughly shifted the trajectory of the Christian
gospel. It was now on a heading for Myth. And the Reformers did little to
stop this (although I think Luther did a better job than Calvin did and only
certain Anabaptist movements really succeeded).
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FINDING OUR WAY HOME:
A BRIEF NOTE ON THE AUTHORITY
AND INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE
www.preachingpeace.org
December 2003
Dear Jeff,
You recently asked me
to write something on Jesus’ hermeneutic. That one can even speak
of Jesus’ hermeneutic is a blessing today. Between the churches removal
of Jesus behind the veil of dualism and the academy’s burial of Jesus
in historical science, it truly is a wonder that we are able to speak the
words Jesus and hermeneutic in the same breath.
Some thirty years ago
when I began studying Scripture, I found that I had a lot of questions.
Every subject I tackled led to ten more subjects, all of which I felt driven
to understand just to comprehend whatever book I was reading at the time.
Over the years, I have accumulated hundreds of thousands of questions, the
questions of the authors whose books I have read.
Their questions led me
on some amazing journeys with breath-taking vistas around every corner.
Writers from all places and times, backgrounds and faiths each seemed to
have a piece to contribute to the overall picture. More so, many of these
writers captivated me and I read everything they wrote that I could get
my hands on. I could sense that somewhere deep within the questions was
a solution. I knew that Jesus was that solution.
I believe that Jesus has
something to teach us and tell us about the Creator that we have consistently
missed throughout our history, Christians included. It is the secret of
the kingdom of heaven: God is forgiving, God is not conflicted, and God
is not violent. Jesus’ Jewish spirituality recognizes this through
and through. It is the one singular thing his contemporaries did not want
to hear. It is the one singular thing we do not want to hear. Jesus’
God is not an angry God. It is demonstrated in the way he lives and forgives
others in the name of this God. It (this life of forgiveness) is, in a sense,
ontologized within history as the eschatological horizon of the resurrection;
the resurrection of the forgiving innocent victim. It is the one message
that is differentiated from every other form of religious discourse. Jesus
teaches us this.
However, it is necessary
for us to understand the roots and trajectories of our sacrificial thinking
as Christians. We need to deconstruct before we can re-construct. Sort of
like what the folks on the PBS show This Old House do. They take an old
house whose structure is solid, take it down to the basics, which are sound,
and re-build on that structure. Christian theology, for me, is like This
Old House. It is tired, old, worn, beaten and generally in great need of
repair. Through the eyes of the folks who rebuild houses and see within
a decrepit building a beautiful home that with time, effort and attention
can be an enjoyable habitation, so also I think we can do the same with
Christian theology. Theology is a beautiful science because theology is
about Jesus.
Let’s look at some
of the stuff on our theological house that is no longer useful. Let’s
examine whether or not we need to restructure some of the interior of our
house. Then let’s rebuild.
Using Paul Ricoeur’s
language we might say that if the church is mired in a first naivete, the
academy is no less stuck in critical distance. Neither one is able to speak
of Jesus credibly with any sense of unity. It is the third stage of the
understanding process, which Ricoeur calls a ‘second naivete’
from which I write. Since I am neither in the academy nor in the parish,
I do not feel constrained by either when I consider the question of Jesus’
hermeneutic. The ‘historical Jesus’ is slick and slippery, and
just when you think you have a grasp, he slips away. The ‘Christ of
faith’ is a gigantic monolith, high and exalted, encrusted with traditions.
If the ‘Christ of faith’ represents the ‘first naivete’
and the ‘historical Jesus’ represents the ‘critical distance’
then how shall we describe ‘second naivete?’ In order to do
so, it is crucial to shift our perspective on the either/or of the question
to this: what is the relationship of the Jesus of faith to the Christ of
history? Must we not begin with the presupposition that as bearers of God’s
Spirit we already know the Lord Jesus? What we need to discern are the ways
both the church and the academy have embellished the living Jesus with their
Christologies.
Christological duality,
which is and always has been, the big issue in both the church and the academy,
need not be necessary if one moves the question to a position of ‘second
naivete.’ But how can we justify such on both anthropological and
theological grounds? You already know how I will answer this: by turning
to Rene Girard and Karl Barth. These are the two significant twentieth century
thinkers who moved beyond Platonic dualism to construct a Christology that
is true to Jesus. One did it from an anthropological perspective, the other
from a theological one. But both succeeded because they both began with
the cross of Jesus.
The early Christians understood
that this whole resurrection/life thing existed only because there was a
crucifixion/death thing. The resurrection was a vindication of this death
that was forgiving, and this life and ministry that was all about forgiveness.
In the resurrection God does not retaliate, God forgives. This is the message
of the early church. It encompasses the entire Jesus reality: Jesus as Spirit
and Jesus’ story were woven of the same stuff.
We also must not forget
that the perspective of the New Testament is ‘from below’, that
is, it is written from the perspective of the persecuted. This is of strategic
importance. All of the complaints that have been made against the Christian
churches are derived from the fact that the very church which is grounded
in the forgiveness of the Cross of Jesus, and whose texts are written from
the perspective of the persecuted, does itself persecute and justifies persecution
by an appeal to these texts. There is very little that is apostolic about
the modern church.
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