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Engaging the Word, A Mystical Pagan Hermeneutic
Introduction
This essay theologically analyzes a text from the "New
Church's Teaching Series," Michael Johnston's Engaging
the Word.(1) Its subject matter is hermeneutics, the science of interpreting Scripture.
The "Church's Teaching Series" has been one of the
primary ways in which the Episcopal Church educated its members
in the fundamentals of the Christian faith. It has been in
existence for over fifty years, and the Church has officially
approved past editions. Johnston's text does not belong to the
old series, but to the "New Church's Teaching Series."
Although its title incorporates the old title, it has not
received official sanction. In Johnston's words,
This new series differs from the
previous two in significant ways: it has no official
status, claims no special authority, speaks in a
personal voice, and comes not out of committees but
from scholars and pastors meeting and talking
informally together.(2)
I intend to show that this text, produced by "scholars and
pastors meeting and talking informally together," promotes a
form of mystical paganism masquerading as an enlightened version
of Christian truth. Among other things, I shall contrast this
pagan hermeneutic with aspects of an orthodox understanding of
Scripture, that of Athanasius and the Creed.
The term "mystical," as in Johnston's mystical
paganism, requires some clarification. The Christian religion
contains mysteries, the doctrine of the Trinity, for example, or
the two natures yet one person of Jesus Christ. Even more, not
just doctrine, but God himself is a mystery, and knowing God in
his transcendent holy nature has always entailed a sense of the
mystical. Therefore, as this essay unfolds, I shall show how a
Christian mystical sense of God differs from Johnston's mystical
paganism. As discussed elsewhere, Johnston's mystical paganism
is another example of a perspective widely held throughout the
church in the West. link
From the beginning of the church's life, heretics used Scripture
to subvert the faith. The early church countered this threat in
a number of ways, but its main bulwark was the regula, the
body of creed like statements and public confessions that
provided the key to an orthodox reading of the Scripture. These
rules of faith were eventually formulated into the Creeds, such
as the Nicene or the Apostles' Creed. These Creeds did not give
detailed interpretations of Scripture, but they set the pattern,
the structure, the over arching framework by which Scripture must
be interpreted. As Francis Young puts it:
Neither the Rule of Faith nor the creed
was in fact a summary of the whole biblical narrative,
as demonstrated earlier in The Art of
Performance. They provided, rather, the proper
reading of the beginning and the ending, the focus of
the plot and the relations of the principal characters,
so enabling the "middle" to be heard in bits
as meaningful. They provided the "closure"
which contemporary theory prefers to leave open. They
articulated the essential hermeneutical key without
which texts and community would disintegrate in
incoherence.(3)
For the purposes of this essay, I will focus on the Nicene Creed.
It has been accepted by the Church universal, East and West, and
rehearsed each Sunday throughout Christendom. It lays the
groundwork for understanding two principle doctrines: the one God
as Trinity, and Jesus Christ as fully God and fully man.
Further, it starts with creation, associated with God the Father,
focuses on the Incarnation, associated with God the Son, and ends
with the "life of the world to come," associated with
God the Holy Spirit. This triune pattern, with incarnation at
the center, formed the pattern for interpreting Scripture for the
early church.
Since the Creeds proclaimed that God is one, the early church
read Scripture as a narrative unity, as the revelation of one
God. Scripture is not, as the gnostics sought to show, the
revelation of several gods. This narrative unity begins with
creation in Genesis, continues with sin and a resultant fall and
corruption, followed by law and prophets, centers in the
incarnation of God the Son or Word, followed by the Epistles and
ending with the book of Revelation which speaks of the life of
the world to come. Jesus Christ is the narrative center of
Scripture since he is the definitive revelation of God, "God
from God, Light from Light, true God from true God."
As a result, three principles emerged for interpreting Scripture:
1. The Creed as guiding principle. 2. The unity of Scripture.
3. The centrality of Jesus Christ for biblical
interpretation.
In investigating Johnston's hermeneutic, I shall show that he has
no concept of God as triune, nor of incarnation, nor of the Creed
as a guiding principle, nor of the unity of Scripture, nor of
Jesus Christ as its center. As a result, he does not interpret
Scripture in a creedal, orthodox, trinitarian, and incarnational
fashion. Rather, he operates with a view of God that is totally
alien to Christian faith. His "God" is a pagan deity
who transcends yet includes a pantheon of mediating images and
mythic impressions.
Johnston's Perspective
Johnston's theological perspective can be envisioned as an
equilateral triangle. At its apex is an Ineffable God of
multiple images. The two base angles can be labeled experience
and community. This triangle image depicts Johnston's belief
that the ineffable God is revealed in experience and community as
they mutually condition one another. In the center of the
triangle is the word "stories," referring to Johnston's
conviction that stories mediate God, experience, and community in
mutual and dynamic interactions.
As I shall show, Johnston believes that "God" is
ultimately indescribable, and therefore, to account for the
ineffable and sublime nature of this god, one must include the
full range of images taken from the whole of experience. These
images then form and are formed by the community. For lack of a
better name, I shall call Johnston's deity the "multiple
god," or the "ineffable god."
In regard to experience, Johnston understands the world as
process. As this process unfolds, the community makes sense of
itself, its experience, and the multiple god by means of stories.
These stories are repeated, and as they are repeated, they are
modified in light of new experiences, new manifestations of the
multiple god, and new understandings of the community. This
interactive process continues throughout history life ever
changing, the community ever transformed, the multiple god ever
re imaged, the stories ever evolving. As this happens, the four
aspects of the diagram the ineffable god, experience,
community, and story mutually create, modify, and form each
other. Here are two quotations:
The founding myths shift as the lives of
the people shift. In fact, the experiences that a
community goes through shape its people's stories, just
as the stories they hear and pass on shape them. Or,
to phrase it another way, the sacred community
assembles its texts as much as the sacred texts
assemble the community. This is by no means mere
expediency, however, because the community of faith is
always in dialogue with its sacred story, and
experience is one party to the
conversation.
I prefer to think that God's variety,
ambiguity, nuance, and contradiction come honestly from
people's authentic experience of God in concrete and
diverse situations. In this incarnational stance the
divine and the human are both involved in the ongoing
work of creation, so God makes us up as we go along as
much as we make up God.(4)
In the first quotation, the "founding myths" are
interactively related to the community so that stories and
community mutually create each other. As a result, the
"sacred community assembles its texts as much as the sacred
texts assemble the community." In the second quotation,
Johnston's "God" (the "multiple god") reveals
itself in "concrete and diverse situations," namely, in
diverse experiences. But, since the "divine and the human
are both involved in the ongoing work of creation," it turns
out that "God makes us up as we go along as much as we make
up God." In other words, the community and the multiple god
mutually create each other as they interact in
experience.
This perspective is pagan, since its primary source for the
images and stories of God is general experience rather than the
incarnation of Jesus Christ at the center of Scripture. Further,
as I shall show, it is mystical since it claims that God is
ineffable, and therefore, must contain all images, even ones that
are contrary to each other. These diverse and contrary images
are harmonized into a sublime One, since "God" is
ultimately beyond all finite knowing. In many ways, this
mystical pagan vision is similar to that held by the Presiding
Bishop. link
This picture contrasts with orthodoxy in two fundamental ways.
First, orthodoxy holds that God is not generally revealed in all
of experience, but personally and decisively in Jesus Christ.
Jesus Christ is not everything, but a specific person who said
and did specific concrete things. As a result, not all images
reveal God, rather, God's image is Jesus Christ.
Secondly, although one can know God concretely in Jesus Christ,
this explicit objective knowledge of God also reveals God as
mystery. For example, the resurrection, the appearance of Christ
in glory, revealed that God is beyond comprehension, but only
because the disciples could touch and see the risen Jesus. In
other words, the incomprehensible reality of resurrection
depended upon the disciples seeing, touching, and hearing the
risen Lord. Without that sensible knowledge, given to their
senses and apprehended by their minds, there was no awareness of
God's incomprehensibility. In Johnston, however, the knowledge
of God given to finite knowing, seeing, touching, hearing, is
left behind in order to arrive at a mystical and ineffable One
beyond all finite knowing. In other words, Johnston's mysticism
is not incarnational. This will become more apparent as we
proceed.
Multiple "God," Community, Story
Johnston's first task is to redefine the biblical revelation
according to his mystical pagan vision. He starts this process
in chapter one, entitled "Telling the Story."
When Johnston reads Scripture, he notices that the biblical
people experienced the world, themselves, life, and the divine,
and that they expressed their experiences in stories. These
stories take a religious form, that of myth. A myth is a story
that forms communal and personal identity, gives meaning to the
world, and relates the community to the heavenly realm. One
feature of myths, and this includes biblical stories, is that the
details, the facts, or the particulars of the myth, are not the
real story. Rather, the details or "facts" of the myth
function to disclose the deeper truth that the myth illumines.
For this reason, Johnston understands Scripture, as well as
doctrine and the Creeds, as expressions of deep
"truths" which lie beyond or behind the text. This is
the mystical move which leaves behind the objective text of
Scripture in order to contemplative the mystical One.
Since Johnston understands Scripture as a compendium of mythic
stories, he does not conceive of it as the Word of God speaking
directly to us. Of course, he uses the term, "Word";
the title of his book is Engaging the Word. But the term
"Word" does not mean God speaking, but mythic stories
told by communities to make sense of their experience. Of
course, it may well be possible to experience God speaking, but
as I shall show, this is peripheral to Johnston's perspective.
This will have far reaching implications.
As a result, Johnston begins by making two implicit claims in
regard to Scripture. First, Scripture is primarily an assortment
of stories told by ancient communities to define themselves and
make sense of their experience. Secondly, the meaning of these
texts is not directly given in their verbal content, but lies
behind the text, beneath the surface. Here are a few typical
quotations:
Believing communities are fundamentally
communities assembled around sacred texts. The word
"assembled" connotes more, however, than a
simple gathering to hear the tales told, for these are
the stories that tell us who we are. They give us our
identity. We find in them the myths and deep mysteries
that constitute the truest rendering of where we have
come from, how we ought to be, and where we are
going.
The bible is authoritative because our
experience tells us that its stories best explain who
we are as a believing people and provides a record of
our timeless relationship to God.
These stories have a hold on me because
they are my stories, just as they are your stories, and
they are the stories of the family and the community to
which we belong. They make sense out of our lives, our
relationships, our world, and our God.
But whatever you bring to the Bible or
require of it, the Bible always invites you to read
below its surface as well, because the mystery of God
is not found simply on the page, or within the text,
but behind it.
The Exodus was both a single historical
event and a larger historical movement. As event, it
was an action of God in history recorded first in
Exodus 3 14 and then recapitulated in the songs of
Moses and Miriam in chapter 15. This single action
was, of course, the delivery of the Hebrew people from
their bondage in Egypt. It was their founding
experience, and the memory of that experience has
served throughout the centuries to define Jewish
identity.
Again and again I hear and tell these
same stories, captured by them, held hostage to them,
as thought I were hearing for the first time: "On
the first day of the week, while it was still dark,
came Mary Magdalene early to the tomb" (John
20:1). Just the sound of those words never fails to
strike deep chords within me.(5)
Notice that Johnston refers to the biblical stories as "deep
mysteries," pointers to our "timeless relationship to
God." This is because God is beyond words, so that the
"the Bible always invites you to read below its surface as
well, because the mystery of God is not found simply on the page,
or within the text, but behind it." In this view, the
biblical words are like a mask which must be stripped off to
reveal the indescribable One beyond all language. For this
reason, one does not so much as hear, reflect upon, and obey the
biblical words. Rather, one resonates to their deep mysteries so
that "just the sound of those words never fails to strike
deep chords within me."
As an example of Johnston's perspective in action, let us
consider his analysis of Joshua 24. Here is his description of
this biblical passage:
Joshua begins the ceremony by reciting
the events of Israel's salvation history starting with
the era before Abraham, when "your ancestors
Terah and his sons, Abraham and Nabor lived beyond
the Euphrates and served other gods" (Joshua
24:2). He recounts the journey of Abraham and his
family from Ur of the Chaldeans, around the arc of the
Fertile Crescent, and down into Egypt. He summarizes
the Exodus in roughly three verses, skips quickly
through the wilderness sojourn, brings his hearers
across the Jordan river at Jericho,
...
The Hebrews of Shechem are incorporated
into the ancient story; the ancient story, told again,
assembles a new community. The Mosaic covenant is not
so much being remembered as the Exodus story is being
re membered. Retelling the story to new hearers is
always meant to do precisely that.(6)
Let me ask the reader to read Joshua 24. Notice certain features
of this biblical text. First, the people "presented
themselves before God." That is, God was objectively
present in a particular time and place. Secondly, Joshua begins
by stating, v. 2, "This is the word of the Lord the God of
Israel." He then continues speaking in the first person
singular, with the "I" of the narrative being God
himself. As described by Johnston, however, the narrator is
Joshua, not God. From there, it is a logical step to say that
the "ancient story" "assembles a new
community," rather than God assembling the community. Of
course, Johnston mentions that the narrative depicted "God's
mighty acts," but his real emphasis is the story depicting
the community's experience, rather than God acting or speaking as
portrayed in Joshua 24.
It is difficult to understand, however, how Joshua could be
addressing the assembly in human words, yet be speaking with the
divine "I," as God himself speaking. This theological
problem, how the divine Word could be human words, was the
theological problem of the incarnation. By incarnation, God the
Word became the words and deeds of the Jesus. This mystery led
to the doctrine of the two fold nature of Jesus Christ as
formulated in the Creed of Chalcedon. But it is not a problem
for Johnston. He shows no understanding of incarnation, that God
could actually take form in specific words and deeds. As a
result, he ignores the fact that the text claims God as the one
who addresses the community. Instead, he interprets the text to
say that Joshua is recounting an experience that began with the
Exodus.
One logical corollary to this is that Johnston does not believe
that Scripture is the Word of God:
Likewise, we need to remember that the
Bible does not announce itself as the Word of God; that
is our attribution. So our sacred texts are not the
final word on God's preferred behavior for us. In
fact, our behavior, like our faith, draws from a
Person, not a Book, however sacred that Book has come
to be.(7)
The Christian faith, of course, is derived from a Person. But
this person revealed himself in his words and deeds. His words
and deeds were not a window through which one looked to
mystically glimpse the Ineffable One beyond his words and deeds.
No, the person of Christ is given in his words and deeds as
recorded in the Bible. Johnston, however, falsely sets the Bible
against the Person of Christ. Further, he seems unaware of the
fact that the Bible repeatedly announces itself as the Word of
God, with Joshua 24:2 being one of many instances.
Johnston's view also differs from that of the Creed. The Creed's
primary emphasis is God's acts, his saving words and deeds.
There are three great acts presented in the Creed, each in a
different paragraph creation, the person and work of Christ,
the work of the Spirit culminating in the life of the world to
come. These three acts give the unity of Scripture, beginning
with creation in Genesis, centered in Jesus Christ as God
incarnate, and ending with the book of Revelation which heralds
the final day. From the perspective of the Creed, the primary
content of Scripture would be God acting and speaking.
Therefore, Scripture is called the "Word of God."
There are human words and deeds in Scripture, but these are
integrally related to the divine Word and Deed.
Not only does Johnston fail to see that Joshua 24 is God
assembling and speaking to the people, he fails to relate Joshua
24 to the whole of Scripture from Genesis to Revelation with its
center in Jesus Christ. This is because he isn't thinking in
trinitarian, incarnational terms.
Athanasius, by contrast, does think in trinitarian and
incarnational terms. He conceives of God as one in three.
Within God, God the Word or Son forever comes forth from the
Father like rays from the sun, or like water forever springing up
from a fountain. This Word is God's Word, his Act, his Wisdom,
his active presence. As a result, when God says or does
something, it is always the Word or Son of God that is spoken or
done. Therefore, when God appears to Abraham in his tent, when
he liberates the people from Egypt, when he addresses the people
in Joshua 24, all of these concrete manifestations of God
speaking and acting are God the Son or Word.
As a consequence, Athanasius believed that God the Word or Son
was revealed in the Old Testament, although the full revelation
of God the Son occurred in Jesus Christ. Therefore, the Old
Testament manifestations of God speaking and acting are Jesus
Christ, albeit in a hidden form. As a result, Athanasius was
able to make sense of the New Testament statement that Jesus
Christ is the fulfillment of the law and prophets, for both the
law given to Moses and the words of the prophets were
manifestations of the one Word of God Jesus Christ. In
Athanasius' words,
If Divine adoration was neither due to
Him [Jesus Christ], nor paid Him, until after His
death, how is it that Abraham worshipped Him in His
tent (Gen. xviii)Moses in the bush (Ex. iii), and
Daniel saw thousands upon thousands of angels
ministering unto Him?(8)
Further, when Athanasius analyzes a scriptural text, he places it
in a narrative context, beginning with creation in Genesis,
centering in Jesus Christ, ending with the final eschatological
age. This can be seen throughout his writings, but is especially
apparent in his two treatises Against the Heathen and
On the Incarnation. In these texts he starts with
Genesis, discusses fall, goes forward to Jesus Christ who
reverses the fall, and ends with the blessings of heaven. When
analyzing a text, he understands it in that context.
None of this is possible for Johnston. Trinity and incarnation
contribute nothing to his understanding of Scripture. He does
not read Scripture as a unity, nor does he relate particular
passages to Jesus Christ, nor to the whole of Scripture. As a
result, and this will become quite clear, he interprets each text
as a unit, a discrete text unrelated to other texts. These
diverse unrelated texts produce a pantheon of images, all valid,
all necessary, all unrelated to the whole of Scripture, with the
result that "God" becomes a collection of multiple
images united in an ineffable one which includes them
all.
This is not to say that Johnston does not, from time to time,
make use of traditional phrasing. For example, in one of the
above quotations he noted that the Exodus "was an action of
God in history recorded first in Exodus 3 14 and then
recapitulated in the songs of Moses and Miriam in chapter
15." But this passing statement is placed in a context, in a
section entitled "The Exodus Story," in a chapter
entitled "Telling the Story." The point of the section
is that the Hebrews formulated their experience of the Exodus in
a story, and it is the story, not God's Word or Act, that
Johnston places at the center of his analysis.
Johnston's pagan presuppositions that God does not speak his
Word, that Trinity and incarnation aren't relevant, that general
experience is revelatory are not, however, presented as pagan.
They are simply presented without trinitarian and incarnational
considerations. Whether or not he knows he is pagan, whether or
not he can critique his own thought in terms of orthodox
theology, is not apparent from his text. He simply appeals to
the reader's rather obvious experience that life is experience
and that persons formulate that experience in stories. That is
all he needs and all he presents.
Passing On the Story
Once Johnston has marginalized the concept of God's Act or Word,
and claimed that Scripture is a collection of community stories,
his next step is to show how stories are reformulated and passed
on in communities. This is the theme of his second chapter,
"Passing on the Story." As an example, he uses the
gospel of John.
As Johnston tells it, the community that wrote John's gospel
reformulated its sacred stories (the Old Testament) in light of
its experience of Jesus Christ. The result was the gospel of
John. This gospel made sense of Christ by reassembling Old
Testament texts for a new story. As this happened, community,
story, and experience interactively shaped each other.
Similarly, communities today can reshape their inherited stories
(Scripture), in light of new experiences, just as the community
of John reshaped their story of the Old Testament.
In fact, the experiences that a
community goes through shape its people's stories, just
as the stories they hear and pass on shape them. Or,
to phrase it another way, the sacred community
assembles its texts as much as the sacred texts
assemble the community. This is by no means mere
expediency, however, because the community of faith is
always in dialogue with its sacred story, and
experience is one part to the
conversation.
We are always transforming the text so
that the text will transform us. When that kind of
transformation occurs, reflectively and prayerfully, it
is not a tampering with the text but the movement of
the Holy Spirit... The sacred story has always invited
an interpretive conversation between itself and the
people it shapes, so that a new story can reassemble a
new community for a richer life in God.(9)
From this point of view, Scripture is not so much content as
method. It shows how ancient peoples, the community of John for
example, reassembled their Scripture (the Old Testament) in light
of their new experience (Christ), and therefore, how we can
reassemble our story (Old and New Testament) in light of our new
experiences so that a "new story can reassemble a new
community for a richer life in God."
If, however, the gospel of John is our warrant for creating a new
story, this implies that contemporary experience is to Scripture
as the apostolic experience of Christ was to the Old Testament.
The apostles experienced a new revelation in Jesus Christ which
superseded the Old Testament revelation. When Johnston asserts
that "the sacred community assembles its texts as much as
the sacred texts assemble the community," he is implicitly
claiming that contemporary experience supersedes the biblical
encounter with the incarnate Word since the community today can
reassemble the apostolic witness to Christ (Scripture), just as
the apostolic witness reassembled the Old Testament
revelation.
The Creed, however, presents Jesus Christ as "eternally
begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God
from true God, begotten, not made ... incarnate from the Holy
Spirit and the Virgin Mary(10) and became man, and was crucified
for us under Pontius Pilate ..." God the Son became
incarnate in one place and one place only in a specific human
being, the one "incarnate from the Holy Spirit and the
Virgin Mary," the one who "suffered under Pontius
Pilate." The Creed does not say that God the Son became
incarnate in ongoing experience.
Further, when the Creed says that the Son is "eternally
begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God
from true God," it means that the Son is the definitive
revelation of God. The Creed presents no other major definitive
revelation of God except the Son by incarnation, and the Son will
not be revealed in any qualitatively new way until Christ
"will come again in glory to judge the living and the
dead." That is, there is no contemporary experience of God
that supersedes incarnation until the return of Christ.
The Creed also speaks of the Spirit and the church, but both
depend upon the Incarnation. The Spirit does not introduce a
qualitatively new revelation. The Spirit comes from the Father
and the Son. In other words, the Spirit shapes the church
according to the work of the Son in redeeming the Father's
originally good creation now corrupted by sin.
I know of no major classical theologian who would claim that
contemporary experience supersedes or is even equal to
incarnation. Athanasius, for example, thought that one could
know God as orderly and powerful in creation, but this knowledge
of God did not reveal God as a personal savior. That only
happened in Jesus Christ. Similarly, Hooker felt that experience
could never reveal the supernatural saving truth found in Jesus
Christ; only Scripture did that. He would be appalled to think
that someone would actually dare to place experience above or
even equal to Scripture.
Implicitly, covertly, Johnston has introduced a pagan deity.
Paganism begins with the assumption that the divine is revealed
in the multiplicity of images found in general experience. That
is Johnston's position.
Johnston's Hermeneutic
Once Johnston has redefined Scripture as the stories of an
ancient people, and shown how these stories are continually
reassembled according to fresh experiences, he is now ready to
introduce his method for interpreting Scripture.
Johnston's hermeneutic occurs in three steps. First, one begins
with the literal sense, strict attention to the words of a text,
their syntax and their meaning. This is invaluable and affirmed
by the hermeneutical tradition.
Secondly, and this is the heart of the matter, the student of
Scripture goes behind the text to the history of the text and the
history behind the text. By the former Johnston means how the
text arose, the history of its conversion from event or speech to
oral tradition to written text. The history behind the text is
found by reconstructing the social, economic, religious, and
social conditions of the person and communities that wrote the
text.
Finally, once one understands the text in its original historical
and social context, one then arrives at the prophetic or
spiritual meaning. This is what the text says today, or how it
illumines the "action of God" in our lives.
We may first note that this three step hermeneutic isolates a
given text by removing it from its place in the biblical
narrative. One simply reads the text, goes to the community
behind it, and then discerns the meaning. This allows each
individual text, in and of itself, to become a discrete
revelation of God, without showing its unity and relation to
Scripture as a whole. Further, the text itself no longer becomes
a revelation of God speaking, but a revelation of the community
behind the text. In this way God, as the primary actor in the
biblical drama, is simply eliminated. This justifies Johnston's
belief that contemporary communities can be sources of
revelation, equal to if not superseding Scripture.
Imagine for the moment that Scripture is like a play in which God
is the principle character. Over the course of the play the word
and deeds of God give unity to the play, and by interaction with
others, establishes God and the other characters as credible.
What remains after the words and deeds of God are removed from
the play? The play decomposes into a series of vignettes without
any overall unity in which the various characters appear as
partially developed persons. The real meaning of Scripture is
utterly lost. The vignettes become independent units, each a
window into the ineffable. In short, the pagan form, reality as
the revelation of a multiplicity of gods emerges.
The Hermeneutic in Action
In his next chapter, "Breaking Open the Word," Johnston
applies his hermeneutic to two biblical texts. I will consider
his first example, his interpretation of Mark 5:1 20, the story
of the Gadarene demoniac.
On the basis of scholarly reconstruction, Johnston claims that
the community that wrote Mark's gospel was a Gentile Christian
community struggling to maintain its radical values in a
Roman/Greek cultural milieu. In contrast to the hierarchical and
exclusive social life of the Romans, the Marcan community
practiced a radically egalitarian and inclusive ethic.
In regard to Mark 5:1 20, Johnston reaches this conclusion on the
basis of a number of clues. For example, he notes that the
demons name themselves "legion," a Roman military term
denoting a band of soldiers. Casting out the "legion"
would then symbolize the eradication of the oppressive social and
economic structure maintained by Roman military power. From
there, Johnson views the exorcism of the Gadarene demoniac as the
proclamation of a social program. In other words, the text has a
hidden meaning, a social program found by reconstructing the
social world behind Mark's gospel and seeing the text in that
context:
Mark's gospel is rather like a richly
nuanced cryptogram, encoding in its story world the
details of Mark's social world. And Mark's Jesus, in
turn, wipes the Palestinian landscape clean of its
dominant politics and its prevailing piety in order to
establish an alternate social reality what he will
call, as the gospel moves forward from these stories,
the "kingdom of God."
Building the kingdom of God involves
"wiping the landscape clean" of economic
exploitation and class oppression, political domination
and colonial occupation.(11)
From there, it is but a short step to the spiritual or prophetic
meaning of the text, the call to social justice:
Where is the demoniac of economic
exploitation in the neighborhoods or our urban poor?
Where do we collude with the demons of oppression in
our political process? Where is the shackling of the
mind in our schools and of the spirit in our churches?
And where are our "swineherds" who anxiously
oppose the unmasking of the powers of darkness? Mark's
gospel draws sharp attention to our dependence on,
indeed, our addiction to, habits of economic
entitlement and personal power. These are our stalwart
twentieth century Western demons, but we dare not name
the truth of them for fear of wreaking havoc on all hat
is comfortably familiar in our social world.
(12)
This is called "breaking open the Word," an apt
metaphor because one cracks open the text like breaking open a
nut. One then discards the shell but eats the meat
within.
Several comments are in order. First, Johnston's second
hermeneutical step, the passage to the community behind the text
through the use of scholarly reconstruction, erases the
possibility that Mark 5:1 20 might be telling us something of the
supernatural power of God. Johnston is not alone in this. The
general aim of modern scholarly analysis of biblical texts is not
to affirm God's act, but to reconstruct social worlds behind the
text. Once that world is reconstructed, the interpretation of
the text becomes a social political program since this is all
that is left.
Mark 5:1 20 cannot be reduced to a social program. The passage
may well have social implications, but first and foremost it
describes God acting and speaking in the words and deeds of Jesus
to save, help, and deliver a possessed person. Athanasius knew
this; so did the church fathers. They believed God could act,
and they read Scripture as a whole. Since they read the whole of
Scripture, they knew God's work in Christ could not be reduced to
the status of a social program similar to that of the Old
Testament. Something new happened in Jesus Christ, something
that went beyond the Exodus, the entrance into the Canaan, and
the formation of a new social, economic, and religious order.
Let us attend to what they have to say about the Gadarene
demoniac:
It was for the greater good of attesting
God's power and eliciting faith that the swine were
slain by the agency of demons. (Jerome, Chrysostom)
The glory of humanity made in the image of God had
freely fallen to the depths under the power of unclean
spirits. (Prudentius) These fallen spiritual creatures
were first to recognize the Son as holy, sovereign,
God. (Athanasius, Peter Chrysologus, Prudentius) It is
one who is truly man and truly God that the demons
instantly recognize with dread. (Gregory Nazianzen)
Even if a whole army of demons takes up residence in a
single body, the redeemer can transform human misery
into soundness. (Lactantius, Ephrem the Syrian) Limited
powers are temporarily permitted to the demonic to test
faith. (Tertullian) The church continues to petition
God to deliver the faithful from demonic powers.
(Apostolic Constitutions, Ephrem the Syrian) The
demonic powers are not originally and directly willed
by God but are only permitted by God under the
conditions of sin, and as a consequence of taking
freedom seriously, they play a role in drawing forth
the greater good. They are already being bound up by
the anointed one. (John of Damascus) The faithful
today attest the same cleansing grace. (Gregory the
Great)(13)
What is the immediate, overwhelming, interpretation of Mark
5:1 20 given by the church fathers? that God acted in the
words of Jesus to liberate a possessed man from the power of the
demons. Their interpretation of the text is as obvious as the
text itself. There is no cryptogram here. It is a witness to
the act of a sovereign God. Further, the fathers claimed that
God the redeemer continued to do the same in their day as well.
Gregory the Great (540 604), for example, reflected on the
passage by saying that a "legion of demons has been, as I
believe, cast out of me."(14) It is well known that the
early church exorcised its catechumens for months prior to their
baptism. It was believed that this power to heal led to a
qualitatively new form of life superior to any other.
Similarly, Athanasius frequently claimed that God the Son sets
human beings free from the power of the devils as well as
creating love of God, purity of heart, and joy in believing. He
believed in the utterly obvious meaning of Mark 5:1 20 because he
saw that Christ in his day did exactly what Mark 5:1 20 claimed
that Jesus did then.
For it is plain that if Christ be dead,
he could not be expelling demons and spoiling idols;
for a dead man the spirits would not have obeyed. But
if they be manifestly expelled by the naming of his
name, it must be evident that he is not dead;
especially as spirits, seeing even what is unseen by
men, could tell if Christ were dead and refuse him no
obedience at all. But as it is, what irreligious men
believe not, the spirits see that he is God and
hence they fly and fall at his feet, saying just what
they uttered when he was in the body: "We know
thee who thou art, the Holy One of God," and
"Ah, what have we to do with thee, thou Son of
God. I pray thee, torment me not."
(15)
Or how, if he [Jesus Christ] is no
longer active (for this is proper to one dead), does he
stay from their activity those who are active and
alive, so that the adulterer no longer commits
adultery, and the murderer murders no more, nor is the
inflicter of wrong any longer grasping, and the profane
is henceforth religious. Or how, if he be not risen but
is dead, does he drive away, and pursue, and cast down
those false gods said by the unbelievers to be alive,
and the demons they worship? For where Christ is
named, and his faith, there all idolatry is deposed and
all imposture of evil spirits is exposed, and any
spirit is unable to endure even the name, nay, even on
barely hearing it, flies and disappears. But this work
is not that of one dead, but of one that lives
especially of God.(16)
Furthermore, the patristic interpreters of Mark 5:1 20 placed
this text in a wider biblical and theological context. They did
not go behind the text to a reconstructed "Marcan
community," but read it in the context of the entire
biblical witness. The statements that the "glory of
humanity made in the image of God has fallen to the depths,"
or that "limited powers are temporarily permitted to the
demonic," or that "the demonic powers are not
originally and directly willed by God but only permitted by God
under the conditions of sin," or "these fallen
spiritual creatures," are all statements indicating an
awareness that God created the world good, that there was a fall,
and that the Redeemer reversed the conditions of the fall. The
sweep of biblical history, from Genesis to Revelation, lies
behind these statements and gives them their true narrative and
theological context.
Thus, if the church fathers are right, the meaning of Mark 5:1 20
is that Jesus cast out demons, and further, they can be cast out
in his name today. That, above all, must be professed with all
possible force. This is not surprising. Jesus Christ is Lord.
He does these sorts of things, as much now as then.
Unfortunately, it is a miserable fact that virtually the whole of
contemporary exegesis of Scripture ignores what God has done in
the past, does now, and will always do. But any biblical
scholar, academic, or Christian who takes Mark 5:1 20 seriously
as God's act, and shares the insight of the church fathers, needs
to seriously consider that this passage, in conjunction with many
others in the New Testament, tell us that God has given to the
church the authority to set people free in the name of Jesus.(17) That is the immediate, obvious interpretation of this
biblical text. link
I will omit Johnston's next section, on ethics, as I am
addressing it in another essay on Hooker and Timothy Sedgwick.
As the reader may well imagine, however, Johnston does not
believe that God speaks his Word of ethical command. Therefore,
he does not believe that God tells us how to live ethically.
Rather than a code of ethics, Scripture presumably reveals a set
of ethical abstractions such as love, equality, mutuality,
justice, inclusiveness, faithfulness, and so forth. If, however,
God does not speak concretely, if he does not give specific
ethical injunctions, why would he command specific abstractions?
In the end, these abstractions will have little ethical
substance. Their empty forms will be filled by an amalgam of
impulses, feelings and social trends taken from experience.
Johnston's "God"
Once Johnston has eliminated the concept of God's act, placed
experience ahead of Scripture, defined biblical interpretation in
terms of community story, and turned ethics into a progressive
realization of abstract norms, he is ready to discuss the nature
of God as found in Scripture. That chapter is entitled "Who
is the God of the Bible?"
The Christian response to that question is that the God of the
Bible is the Father of Jesus Christ. That is the most important
affirmation in the whole of Scripture. Without that, there is
nothing. But Johnston doesn't make that claim. He is wondering
about the God of the Old Testament, and he doesn't really connect
that God to Jesus Christ.
To begin with, Johnston notices that the Old Testament is filled
with multiple images of God. There is a reason for this.
Israel, like her pagan neighbors, found a wide variety of images
in creation. Among these images, only certain ones were applied
to God. But unlike her neighbors, these images were welded
together in a narrative stream of God's acts which placed them in
a new interpretative context. It was this specific narrative
stream of God's acts that distinguished the Hebrew God from the
pagan deities.(18)
Johnston, however, reverses the process. He picks texts out of
the biblical stream, isolates their images, and proclaims that
these multiple images reveal "God." In this way the
narrative meaning centering in Jesus Christ is lost.
"God" then becomes a mystic one beyond all images, yet
including and harmonizing all of them. Since the source of these
images was originally creation, they reproduce the pagan
form.
Further, since Scripture is really the product of communities
telling "their" stories, and since the divine is given
in the stories, it follows logically that "God ... makes us
up as we go along as much as we make up God."(19)
Athanasius, of course, would consider this blasphemy. Here is
Johnston:
There is no single metaphor, nor complex
of metaphors, that serves fully to define the ineffable
character of God. No single revelation can exhaust all
that is to be revealed. In fact, the more adept you
become at the kind of critical Bible reading I have
tried to suggest in these pages, the more you begin to
see that the God of the biblical tradition is not a
single reality at all, but a multiplicity of realities,
a diversity, more a plurality than a unity and often
uncomfortably so.
I prefer to think that God's variety,
ambiguity, nuance, and contradiction come honestly from
people's authentic experience of God in concrete and
diverse situations. In this incarnational stance the
divine and the human are both involved in the ongoing
work of creation, so God makes us up as we go along as
much as we make up God.
God may be a single, comprehensive
reality in heaven, but the God we find in most of the
biblical texts who actually seems to have some
"shadow" sides as well is busy and
restless, an innovative Creator who is working some
very strange sides of the streets of the world.(20)
Johnston calls his stance "incarnational." By this he
does not mean the Incarnation of the Word in Jesus Christ.
Rather, everything is "incarnational," meaning that
creation's diverse images all contribute to the sense of the
ineffable god. Implicit, though not stated, is the idea that
those who hold to Jesus Christ as the definitive image of God
have a limited and restricted view of incarnation. Similarly,
when he gets to Jesus and the incarnation, he will expand the
valid images for Christ so as to include present experience and
avoid what he calls a "boxed in Jesus."
In the third quotation, Johnston denies that the biblical God is
a "single, comprehensive reality" outside of heaven,
and implies that he may not be so in heaven either. In other
words, he denies the Christian tradition that God is One. The
oneness of God was the traditional defense against paganism. To
say that God was three did not mean that God was three distinct
Gods. God was one in essence ("substance"), three in
persons, with each person sharing in the one divine essence.
Johnston ignores all this. He wants a god who is an ineffable
one internally, but externally manifested in a variety of images,
metaphors, stories, and myths.
Further, since these multiple images are taken from creation,
they must include images of evil. Pagan religions were well
aware that the powers of nature both bless and curse. The sun
brings light and life, but also drought and death. Rain produces
crops, but also flooding and destruction. The pagan gods were
both good and evil. By contrast, however, Scripture does not
locate evil in God. Consistent with his pagan approach, however,
Johnston wants to include the full range of images, the light and
the "shadow" in God. Therefore he claims that God has
his "shadow sides" (note the plural) as well.(21)
As an example of these ideas in action, we may consider
Johnston's treatment of Isaiah 6:1 4 and Hosea 11:1 4. In Isaiah
6, God is utterly transcendent, "awesome, numinous, and
presidential, who occupies a reality vastly different from our
own." Hosea's God, however, is close at hand, one who
"takes your infant hands in his and steadies your halting
first steps, raises you up when you fall, and cuddles you cheek
to cheek." From this, Johnston concludes that each of these
conceptions is a "very different deity"(22) from the
other. That is, they are two different gods.
They may be different gods, but Johnston "does not think for
a moment that these two images are contradictory; in fact, one
complements the other."(23) This is logical. These two
images may contradict verbally, but each points to the
"ineffable," the transcendent divine one beyond verbal
contradiction. Yet each image is required since all images are
required, and therefore, they complement each other.
The passages, however, do not refer to two "very
different" deities. They refer to one deity, the Father of
Jesus Christ. In both passages God speaks, and that spoken Word
is Jesus Christ. In Isaiah, God addresses the prophet with the
words, "Whom shall I send?" In Hosea, speaking in the
first person, God describes his calling Israel out of Egypt.
Above all, Jesus was the one sent by God, and the New Testament
understands his life, death, and resurrection as a new Exodus
from the Egypt of sin. He is the one fulfillment of all the
prophetic words. As Hebrews 1:1 puts it, "God, who gave to
our forefathers many different glimpses of the truth in the words
of the prophets, has now, at the end of the present age, given us
the truth in his Son." Since Johnston does not read
Scripture with Christ at the center, he concludes that Isaiah and
Hosea refer to two "very different" deities.
Johnston ends his chapter on the God of the Bible with a passage
that rather neatly sums up his pagan vision:
In the end, Isaiah probably got it
right: Yahweh is other! other! other! Which is just
another way of make the point of this chapter: God has
a rich and diverse interiority that no single reading
can exhaust. But I think it is also a joy and comfort
really Good News that the God of the Bible has
some scandalous dimensions as well. Alongside wisdom
and justice and love and compassion and peace, we
discover ambiguity, contradiction, and incongruity
as well as some rather bad behavior. We know these
things to be true about ourselves, but we did not know
them about God. Once having made that discovery,
however, we are set free to read the stories of our own
lives without having to omit specific verses that look
as if they should not belong in our personal texts. It
turns out what we may be more in the image of our
Creator than we had ever thought.(24)
Here we have a slight change. In previous passages Johnston had
located the sense of complexity in the "variety, ambiguity,
nuance, and contradiction come honestly from people's authentic
experience of God in concrete and diverse situations." In
other words, the "divine" multiplicity lay outside God.
Here, however, he moves the complexity into God, with the single
term "God" referring to an abstract catchall that
contains the full panoply of diverse and scarcely related images.
This divine One is wholly "other! other! other!",
meaning that it transcends yet requires each and every metaphor.
Since creation's images contradict each other, some good and some
evil, this "other! other! other!" will manifest itself
in contrary qualities existing side by side. Love exists right
along with some "rather bad behavior," which makes for
"ambiguity, contradiction, and incongruity." We knew
this about ourselves, now we know it about God.
This is a mystical pagan vision, a sense of ultimate mystery
coupled with a pantheon of divine images including the
personification of human virtues and vices. This is the logical
conclusion of a hermeneutic in which "God makes us up as we
go along as much as we make up God."
Finally, we may note that this "Good News" sets us free
to "read the stories of our own lives without having to omit
specific verses that look as if they should not belong in our
personal texts." When decoded, this means we are free to be
as much of a scoundrel as God is.
Johnston's Jesus
Once Johnston has eliminated God's act, turned Scripture into a
series of community stories, subordinated Scripture to
experience, ignored God's ethical command, and defined
"God" through a pantheon of images united in a mystical
one, he is ready to introduce the subject of Jesus Christ. This
occurs in his chapter, "Who is the Jesus of the
Bible?"
Johnston is quite consistent. First, he does not connect Jesus
Christ to the whole of Scripture so that Jesus Christ is the
central revelation of the God of the Bible. Further, he does not
think there is one Jesus Christ in Scripture, the one
"incarnate from the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary"
and "crucified for us under Pontius Pilate." Rather,
just as the God of the Bible was multiple, so is Jesus. Each
biblical Jesus was the product of an original Jesus history,
transformed and augmented by different communities on the basis
of different experiences. Finally, just as the biblical people
created four gospel versions of Jesus, communities today can
create their own version of Jesus on the basis of their own
unique experience.
Johnston's begins by reading the gospels as a three layered
composite. First, there is the Jesus of history. This is what
you would get if you followed Jesus around with a video camera.
But the early church didn't have video cameras. They had stories
about Jesus that circulated orally. This original layer of oral
stories is called the "Jesus of history." As these
stories were circulated they were embellished and transformed,
with material added or subtracted according to the varied
circumstances and interests of different communities. This is
the second layer. Finally, various communities reflected
theologically on the stories. They added their theological
reflections to the stories. This produced the third layer. The
latter two layers are called the "Christ of faith."
This process of transformation took place in different
communities, each arriving at different stories of Jesus.
Finally, various communities wrote down some of the transformed
stories. Four accounts were later preserved as authoritative, the
four different gospel accounts of Jesus.
The Jesus of history belongs to the
first layer, the Christ of faith belongs to the second
and third. This is not to say that the first is the
only authentic layer while the other two are somehow
invalid. Quite the contrary. Just as we discovered
with the God of the Hebrew Bible, redaction of the
Jesus material functioned to assist revelation. In
short, the gospels are not journalistic recitations of
the life of Jesus; he left behind followers who were
thinkers, not merely scribes, and who believed the
Christ of faith was still with them in the Holy Spirit,
teaching and leading them into new truths.(25)
This process can be illustrated by applying it to Mark 5:1 20,
the story of the Gadarene demoniac. Originally, there may not
have been any miracle at all. A strange and unkempt man may have
recognized something startling about Jesus, and in his
excitement, frightened some pigs and they ran into a lake. As
the story circulated, however, it became exaggerated. The man
was described as possessed. He was fierce, he broke his chains.
These details entered the story at level two. Even more, as the
early Christian community felt the holy in this story of Jesus,
they came to sense he was the Son of God. Therefore, the story
picked up that title, placing it in the lips of the possessed man
through whom the demons recognized Jesus. The title, "Son
of God," thus belongs to level three, the level of
theological reflection.
Crucial to this analysis is that God did not act to deliver the
possessed man, just as he did not calm the storm, feed the five
thousand, and raise Jesus from the dead. Or, if Jesus really did
deliver the man, it was the effect of his compelling personality
rather than God's act. In other words, phrases about Jesus
referring to God's divine acts, or Jesus sharing in God's
divinity as God's Son, belong to the second and third layers.
They are the "Christ of faith," creations of the early
church. This is a logical conclusion to a hermeneutic that has
eliminated God's act.
Let us suppose for a moment that Jesus, more or less, did as
Scripture claims. Let us also assume, like Gregory the Great
from whom a "legion of demons has been, as I believe, cast
out of me," that demons are cast out today in the name of
Jesus. Let us assume further that we were in the crowd that saw
Jesus cast the legion of demons out of the man. What would we
then think? We could maintain skepticism Jesus' miracles were
occasional freaks of nature, or the result of his impressive
personality, or Jesus was possessed by the supernatural power of
the devil or else believe that he did the works of God. Those
who witnessed Jesus' mighty acts and wrote the gospels knew where
they stood, as did the fathers, as do those whom Jesus has
liberated today. For them, he did the works of God. That
conclusion would have been obvious and immediate. The claim that
he was the Son of God would have been rooted in the reality that
Jesus did what only God could do.
Whether the demons actually called Jesus "Son of the Most
High God" is beyond my verification. It is known that evil
spirits sometimes confess Christ at the moment of defeat.(26)
In that case, the demons' confession could have belonged to level
one. What is important, however, is that Jesus acted to save,
then and now. What must be denied is that the title was simply a
mystical impression an experience of holy being in the man
Jesus (Macquarrie), the Infinite in the finite (Tillich), Jesus'
potent God consciousness (Schleiermacher) rather than a title
for a man who did what only God can do.
Even if the original stories were partially transformed as a
result of subsequent reflection, I would affirm that this
reflection, the "Christ of faith," was rooted in the
reality of Christ as the second person of the Trinity incarnate
as the Son of Man.
If this be true, if the "Christ of faith" is integrally
related to the "Jesus of history," then there is no
artificial division between the two. Rather, there was a Jesus
who lived and a God who acted, and the God who acted did so in
the words and deeds of the Jesus who lived. From their view, the
gospels proclaim the man Jesus and the divine presence
inextricably bound together. This eventually found its
authoritative statement at Chalcedon, the doctrine that Jesus
Christ was one person of two natures, human and divine.
By contrast, "Christ of faith" scholarship has little
or nothing to say about Jesus being God, except to report the
history of the concept in early Christian writings. Instead of
the divine and human natures in the person of Jesus Christ, such
scholarship presents the non divine Jesus of history and an
interpretation of the early church called the Christ of faith.
These two human elements are then merged into four separate
stories called gospels, devoid of God's saving acts.
Athanasius, however, saw the matter in an utterly different
light. In his view, it would be madness to view the deity of
Christ as a theological add on to a human Jesus who did nothing
divine. Over and over again in his battle with Arius he insisted
that Jesus was God because he did what only God could do.
Further, he had to do what only God could do or he could not
save. Only God could reverse the sin, corruption, and death, that
afflicts the world. Only God could raise Lazarus from the dead.
Jesus did this, and therefore, he was God.
This is not to say that Athanasius didn't engage in theological
reflection. He did, and some of his reflections took him beyond
the language of Scripture. For example, he affirmed the
homoousia, a term not found in Scripture. But his
reflections did not allow him to create attributes which did not
have their foundation in Scripture. In fact, his Against
Arius is an intensive analysis of Scripture as the one Word
of God, Jesus Christ. Here are two typical quotations out of
many. In the first, Athanasius counters the assertion that Jesus
was a phantom and not a man. In the second, he counters those
who would claim Jesus was not God, that the divine attributes did
not have their origin in reality:
And thus when there was need to restore
to health Peter's wife's mother who was sick of a
fever, our Lord's hand touched her, but His Godhead
cured her (S. Matt. viii. 14). It was not the
spittle and the clay, but Christ's Almighty Power that
gave sight to the man that had been born blind from his
birth (S. John ix. 11). The voice of man called
Lazarus out of the grave, but it was the Word of God
which raised him from the dead (S John xi. 43). And
our Lord, by acting in this manner, gave evidence of
His manhood, and prevented any suspicion if His being
only an apparition or phantom.(27)
For his charging evil spirits, and their
being driven forth, this deed is not of man, but of
God. Or who that saw him healing the diseases to which
the human race is subject, can still think him man and
not God. For he cleansed lepers, made lame men to
walk, opened the hearing of deaf men, made blind men to
see again, and in a word drove away from men all
diseases and infirmities: from which acts it was
possible even for the most ordinary observer to see his
Godhead.(28)
Once Johnston has separated the life of Jesus into four gospel
portraits, and once each gospel has been separated into layers,
he then compares the first layer of each against the first layer
of the other three. Essentially, he comes up with nothing.
There is nothing there because a primary actor in the story, God
acting, has been eliminated, allowing the residue to fall into a
heap of sand. This heap can be variously interpreted, and from
my reading, contemporary scholarship appears to drift from one
hypothesis to another. Johnston describes the state of current
scholarship with these words:
Depending on what you read, the Jesus of
current scholarship is an eschatological prophet, an
itinerant Cynic sage, a social revolutionary, a teacher
of unconventional wisdom, a founder of a religious
movement, or a shaman that is, a mystical holy man.(29)
What do we have here? We have six versions of how Jesus could
have been a human being. Not one of them makes the claim that
Jesus was fully human, yet fully divine, and that a primary
significance of the human nature was that it revealed God's
mighty acts.
What however, is the relationship between the Jesus of history
and the Christ of faith? Or, why is it that the gospel
narratives differ on certain features of Jesus' life such
things as the day of the crucifixion, the order of the
temptations, the wording of the Beatitudes, or even the voice in
which Jesus speaks? The church fathers, Origin for one, were
aware of these differences. This matter can be addressed from
the point of view of the Creed.
According to the Creed, each person of the Trinity is directly
associated with a specific divine act. The Father is associated
with creation, the Son with incarnation, the Spirit with the
"one, holy, and apostolic church" and "life of the
world to come." Although a specific person of the Trinity is
at the fore of any act of God, the other two persons are also
present and active as well. As a result, the whole Trinity is
involved in every divine act. For example, God the Son is the
one who became incarnate. Nevertheless the Son was sent by the
Father and "incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin
Mary." Therefore, both Father and Spirit were involved in
the Incarnation.
Consequently, the Spirit was involved in the witness to the
Incarnation, that is, in the work of gospel formation. Johnston
is right to say that Jesus "left behind followers who were
thinkers, not merely scribes," and that the Spirit led these
followers. The apostles reflected theologically on Christ, and
their reflections are woven into the original gospel stories.
He is amiss, however, to claim that the Spirit can guide the
community into "new truths." If the community can
create "new truths" on the basis of new experience,
this implies that the Son (the Truth) comes from the Father
(general experience) and the Spirit (community). This is not the
creedal faith. For the Creed, the Son does not come from the
Father and the Spirit. The Spirit comes from the Father and the
Son, which means that the Spirit in forming the gospels
truthfully witnessed to the Incarnation as the redemption of the
Father's original good creation now corrupted by sin and death.
Therefore, while the Spirit and the Christian community played a
part in preserving the witness to Jesus Christ, the Spirit's work
was not one of invention, but of faithful reflection and
exposition of God's saving acts in Jesus Christ. The Spirit did
not create "new truths" as Johnston claims, but more
fully revealed the truth of Christ.
If the Spirit was faithful to the truth of the Incarnation, and
if the apostles were led by the Spirit, then the apostolic
witness to Christ developed and strengthened the revelation in
Christ without exceeding its limits. That is the creedal
statement that the Church is "apostolic." Being
apostolic does not mean having the authority to assemble a new
Jesus under the impact of a spirit. Rather, it means that the
biblical apostolic witness is reliable and that the church must
be faithful to it. This has been the claim of the church from
the beginning.(30)
This is a faith statement, affirmed by those who hold the
theology of the Creeds. It cannot be proved nor disproved. If
someone wants to claim that the Spirit created a "Christ of
faith," and that this "Christ of faith" was
composed out of "new truths," it is hard to see how
their claim can be falsified since we have virtually no other
source for the person of Jesus except the biblical records
themselves.
Finally, when Johnston reads the four gospel accounts, he reads
each against the other. This maximizes the differences between
them and leads to four different versions of Jesus. Johnston
knows this isn't the tradition: "By and large, Christian
tradition has not encouraged horizontal reading, comparing one
gospel account to another. Instead, the faithful have been
taught, if they have been taught at all, to read vertically and
look for agreement and unity. The result gives us a boxed in
Jesus."(31)
There may be four different gospels of Jesus Christ in Scripture,
but the church has always known there was only one Jesus. He was
not four persons, nor does Jesus take on new forms today in light
of new experiences. Nor does the fact that there are some
variations in the gospels imply that Jesus was multiple rather
than one. There are scholars today who take account of the
different gospel witnesses, yet recognize that Jesus was one,
with the result that there is a single substantial person
revealed in all four gospels. There are even those who
understand that Christ did miracles, and that he acted as God.
N.T. Wright's "Jesus and the Victory of God" is
a good example.
Why does Johnston impugn the tradition with the term
"boxed in Jesus?" He wants to get out of the box. He
wants to create new versions of Jesus on the basis of new
experience. But that is the one thing the Spirit will not do.
Only when Christ comes again will there be a qualitatively new
revelation, and even then, it will not deny but complete and
fulfill the revelation already given in Jesus Christ.
In the end, where does Johnston leave us in regard to Jesus? He
leaves us with the Jesus of "experience and promise."
That is all that matters the Jesus we experience today, the
one assembled "out of the lives and hopes of believing
communities and faithful individuals." This has nothing to
do with the apostolic faith.
Thus, we are left at the end of this
chapter with the question I posed at the beginning
still unanswered: "Who is the Jesus portrayed in
the Bible?" But perhaps that is not the most
urgent question; it is really only another way to ask,
"Who do people say that I am?" That question
seems peripheral, especially if we focus only on the
literal and historical Jesus. But when we attend to
the prophetic Jesus as well, what is primary and
crucial is not the Jesus of record but the Jesus of
experience and promise. He is ultimately assembled out
of the lives and hopes of believing communities and
faithful individuals. Who do you say that he is?(32)
This claim, the claim that the Spirit can redefine the truth is
nothing new. One of its first proponents was the heretic
Montanus, followed by the spiritual Franciscans, the radical
Anti Baptists, the enthusiasts of Hooker's time, and those today
who feel they can rewrite Scripture as they please. As Hooker
states:
When they of the family of love have it
once in their heads that Christ does not signify any
one person but a quality whereof many are partakers;
that to be raised is nothing else but to be regenerated
or endowed with the said quality; and that when
separation of them which have it from them which have
it not is here made, this is judgment; how plainly do
they imagine that the Scripture everywhere speaketh in
the favour of that sect.(33)
Johnston does not believe that Christ was "one person,"
but "many," created by those who have the "said
quality," that is, the "Jesus of experience and
promise," by virtue of the fact that resurrection means that
they are "regenerated or endowed with the said quality;
..." And this text, "Engaging the Word,"
is an attempt to show that "Scripture everywhere speaketh in
the favour of that sect."
What will happen if Johnston's hermeneutic is adopted by the
Church? First and foremost, the Father of Jesus Christ will be
replaced by a pagan deity wearing the mask of Christian truth.
As a result, the living God of the Bible, the one who acts to
save, as much now as always, will be replaced by a pantheon of
programs, fads, insights, and revelations, all more or less
contemporary, all more or less brilliant, all more or less
relevant, and all, inevitably, surely, and without delay, leaving
us bereft of the One whose "power within us is able to do
infinitely more than we ever dare to ask or imagine." In
short, the loss of the gospel and the ruin of the Church.
Endnotes
1. Michael Johnston, Engaging the Word. The New Church's
Teaching Series, Volume 3. Cambridge: Cowley Publications, 1998.
All quotations of Johnston are from this text.
2. Johnston, pp. ix-x.
3. Frances M. Young, Biblical Exegesis and the Formation of
Christian Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1997, p. 21.
4. Johnston, pp. 25, 97.
5. Johnston, pp. 12, 12-13, 23, 4, 19, 23.
6. Johnston, pp. 20, 22.
7. Johnston, pp. 94-95.
8. Athanasius, Against Arius. I, 38.
9. Johnston, pp. 25, 37.
10. In regards to the phrase "from the Holy Spirit and the
Virgin Mary and became man," the 1979 Episcopal Book of
Common Prayer inserts a word not found in the original Creed.
That word is "power." It reads "by the power of
the Holy Spirit" rather than "from the Holy
Spirit." This weakens the original conception. Men and
women in the Old Testament did things by the power of the Holy
Spirit, but the Creed is saying something much stronger the
divine Son became "incarnate from the Holy Spirit and the
virgin Mary." This was a unique event without Old Testament
parallels.
11. Johnston, pp. 60 61, 61.
12. Johnston, p. 62.
13. Oden, Thomas C. and Hall, Christopher A., eds. Ancient
Christian Commentary On Scripture, New Testament II:
Mark." Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1998, pp. 66 67.
This text is one of a series on the patristic interpretation of
Scripture. The series is in process, and it is invaluable.
14. Oden and Hall, p. 71.
15. Athanasius. On the Incarnation of the Word. The
Library of Christian Classics, Volume III: Christology of the
Later Fathers. Hardy, Edward Rochie, and Richardson, Cyril C.,
eds. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1954, p. 86.
16. Athanasius. On the Incarnation of the Word, pp.
84-85.
17. While I cannot go into detail here, I have been involved in
a ministry of deliverance for more than thirty years, and have
seen first hand the astonishing things that happen in the name of
Jesus Christ. Over and over again I have known people to be
delivered in ways that absolutely amaze me, as much now as when I
first began so many years ago.
18. A good analysis of how this happened can be found in Frank
Moore Cross, Canaanite Myth and Hebrew Epic. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1973
It wasn't the fact that Yahweh
revealed himself in history that made him unique. Pagan deities
could act in history. Rather, Yahweh revealed himself in a
specific history, with a specific people. This is what
distinguished Yahweh from other gods. Ultimately, God is unique
because he has revealed himself in a specific person, Jesus
Christ, and not just persons in general.
19. Johnston, p. 97.
20. Johnston, pp, 99-100, 97, 97.
21. The term "shadow" is taken from the analytical
psychology of Carl Jung. For Jung, wholeness occurs when good
and evil, light and dark, female and male, spirit and matter,
unite to form the "coincidence of opposites," the
divine one behind all finite phenomena.
22. Johnston, p. 99.
23. Johnston, p. 99.
24. Johnston, pp. 114-15.
25. Johnston, pp. 119-20.
26. It is rarely recognized that one of the decisive turning
points in the development of Karl Barth's theology was his
encounter with the Blumhardts. The Blumhardts, father and son,
carried out a ministry of healing and exorcism, and Barth visited
them quite early in his ministry. There he saw God act
miraculously. This experience, together with WWI and what he
called the "Strange New World of the Bible," led him to
see that Scripture was concerned with God's deeds, and not simply
the history of religious experience.
It was only after his reading of Anselm in the late 1920s,
however, that Barth was able to formulate in trinitarian and
christological terms the meaning of God's act or Word. This
analysis forms the prolegomena of his Church
Dogmatics.
But he did not forget the Blumhardts, nor did he forget that a
decisive moment in their ministry occurred when a demon was cast
out of a young women. As it left, it uttered "Jesus is
Victor." Among other places, Barth speaks of the Blumhardts
in a section of the Church Dogmatics entitled "Jesus
is Victor":
That Jesus conquers was not stated nor
known, and certainly not "settled" in this
way among the contemporaries of Blumhardt, whether
extra or intra muros ecclesiae, whether in the
world of Goethe or Hegel, whether in official circles,
pietistic groups or theology, whether by the
Rationalists, Supranaturalists and Pietists of the 18th
century or the Romantics, Speculatives, Biblicists or
theologians of the Awakening of the 19th century. To
be sure, many important things were then seen and said
concerning Jesus the God man of the early dogma, Jesus
the supreme vehicle of eternal reason, Jesus the friend
of humanity and Teacher of ethics, Jesus the Saviour of
souls, Jesus the centre of Christian piety, and, after
the fabulous discovery of D. F. Strauss, Jesus the
mystical personage. If we turn to any secular or
Christian book of the period, and among the Christian
books it makes little difference whether it is a work
of scholarship or edification, the two words said about
Jesus in this declaration, namely, that He "is
Victor," could be put on the outer margin of any
of them, but they could not have the decisive and
comprehensive significance, the emphasis, which they
have for Blumhardt. ... The only question which is
finally relevant in relation to the incident is the
spiritual one whether or not we will hear this saying.
(Barth, Church Dogmatics, IV, Part Three, first
half, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1961, p.
171.)
27. Athanasius, Against Arius, III, 32.
28. Athanasius, On the Incarnation of the Word, p.
72.
29. Johnston, p. 127.
30. Let me suggest chapter 1, pp. 1ff., of J. N. D. Kelly,
Early Christian Creeds, Third Edition. New York: David
McKay Company, Inc., 1972. Also, T. E. Torrance, The
Trinitarian Faith, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1988, pp. 285f.
31. Johnston, p. 178.
32. Johnston, p. 141.
33. Hooker, Lawes, Preface, III, 9.
The Rev. Robert J. Sanders, Ph.D.
May, 2002.
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