arndt@lymph.DEC (05/18/85)
---------: Thanks for your interesting mail. You are responding to what I consider to be one of the KEY points that Christainity has to make. See my quote of myself below. I believe the whole concept of the Trinity gives a logical starting point to the task of thinking about the meaning of life. Note carefully that I say it is a 'hypothesis'. I believe that there is no absolute place from which to start thinking, given our finiteness. By the way, where do YOU start your thinking? I would ask you just where you get your ideas about Christainity? And the history of the development of Christian theology? I believe that you misrepresent both the doctrine of the Trinity as implied in the old and the new testament and the process by which it has come to be expressed in the Christian world. See below. Now by 'misrepresent' I don't mean to imply any meanness or stupidity on your part. I mean that I disagree with your position which I allow you honestly hold. I add that last because I have been known to flame and I am not flaming at you. [I said] >The Trinity is a HYPOTHESIS used as a starting point!!!! > >A second HYPOTHESIS is that this triune God has revealed himself in the >bible. > [you replied] Funny that if this "triune" God revealed (him?)self so clearly in the ** why the "him?" surely you're not going to raise that old 'sexist' chestnut. Or is it that you have a problem accepting that God, whatever 'he' really is, reveals himself to us in terms we understand. As Calvin says, 'God lisps' to speak to us. It seems entirely reasonable that a 'God' (remember the Christian definition of 'God') should, using our thought forms reveal himself to us. The claim of such language only being man anthropomorphizing God does not speak to the necessity that such a 'God' would HAVE to use language we understand. Not because he is limited but precisely because WE are. God 'acts', 'feels', 'regrets', etc. How else to express it? It is a major point of Christian theology that these are mere conventions, forms, that fail to completely express what is really being talked about. I could give any number of Paul's statements and others here, 'we see through a glass darkly', etc. By the way, I would have no trouble if 'he' revealed 'himself' as 'she'!! My only objection to the attempt of radical femminists to retranslate these words is one of custom and the form by which God HAS revealed himself. Nothing theological changes by changing a pronoun. If the 'sons of light' and the Jews after them had developed a matriarchical rather than a patriarchial society perhaps this would have been the case. Of course one has to deal with the idea that God created Man first, etc. whatever that may mean. Of a certainty is the point the New Testament makes about the equality of all mankind before God whatever the form their culture and custom take. I personally believe that many Christian women are mistaken when they look to their male partners to take the lead in their relationship as Christians before God. But we're getting into another subject aren't we. [you continue] Bible it took three centuries of theologic and philosophic wrangling mixed in with a liberal dose of Hellenistic philosophy to hammer out the exact formulation (the Trinity). Why couldn't the old boy just have spelled it out nice and clear for all the folks? I mean, wasn't one of him here in person? ** Let me reply to this by quoting from the article 'Christianity' by John Hick (a well known English theologian) in the Ency of Phil. Vol.2, Paul Edwards, ed.,p.105ff. Please note that I quote Hick not because I think you will be impressed but because he so nearly expresses my opinion on the topic and to show that my opinion is not a unique one on the topic. The article lists other references that speak of the same and other viewpoints. But on to Hick: "The relationship between experience (the record, the Bible) and discursive Christianity (theology) can be brought out by distinguishing two orders of Christian belief. There is a primary level, consisting of direct reports of experience, secular and religious, and a secondary level, consisting of theological theories constructed on the basis of these reports." [I'm speaking] I disagree with the idea that later theological theories were or can be rightfully made up from other elements than the 'primary' level' Hicks lays out above. I agree that's not EXACTLY what you said. But you seem to imply it. "Three centuries of theologic and philosophic wrangling" Let me quote Hicks further in an attempt to make my meaning clear. Speaking about the great early Christological debates (Docetism of some of the Gnostics in the 1st and 2nd C. and Arianism in the 4th) he says: "In the Gospels these two beliefs, identifying Jesus both as a son of man and as the son of God, occur together without any attempt to theorize about the relationship between them. Thus, this primary stratum of Christian literature contains, as data for theological reflection, reports of (a) the publically observable fact that Jesus was a man, and (b) the fact of faith that he was divine, in that "in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell" (Col. 1:19)" [A note: I would argue that the 'fact of faith' is really no different from the 'fact of evidence observed in the so-called material world', since we are not able to take an unbiased, neutral viewpoint on EITHER but must form hypotheses from which to reason, testing them as we go. No knowledge is 'hard', it seems, in the 19th C usage of the term as applied to scientific knowledge.] "During its first four centuries of life these data provided the church with its chief intellectual task. The eventual outcome of the Christological debates (and the Trinitarian discussions which accompanied them), formalized by the Council of Chalcedon (451), was not to propound any definitive theory concerning the relationship between Jesus' humanity and his divinity but simply to REAFFIRM, IN THE THEOLOGICAL LANGUAGE OF THAT DAY, THE ORIGINAL FACTS OF FAITH." (italics mine, p106.) [me again] I offer what Hicks says above in contrast to your statement that it took "three or four centuries of theologic and philosophic wrangling along with a liberal dose of Hellenistic philosophy to hammer out the exact formulation of the trinity." I reject any notion of 'making it up as we go along' but rather a careful drawing out of the implications of the given data. Can you see the distinction, an important one I think? If we make it up as we go along then we are not really dealing with something stable but merely with 'custom' like litergy is. If there IS content, statements that are true in the scripture then they can't be changed by custom or decree. Only 'explained in the language of the (later) time'. As for, "Why didn't the old boy make it plain, etc.", it seems to me that what you are really asking here is why didn't God, in the 1st C, speak in 20th C language for you! One might just as well ask why the Council in 451 didn't do the same. And 200 years from now those who find what we are now writing perhaps should ask why we didn't express our thoughts in their forms. Remember, the "formulation" of the doctrine of the trinity arose out of a need to respond to heresy about God which changed the record of the 1st C to mean something other than that Jesus was God but not 'totally' God. God the 'Father' and God the 'Son'. What does Father/Son mean? I place them in the same catagory as 'he/she'. Handles for speaking about God! The Holy Spirit is also spoken of in terms of being God, so up jumped the trinity! [you continue] Instead all we find is a few cryptic references to "The Father & I are one" mixed in with such as "Father make them (the disciples) one, even as we are" (how bizarre!). The Trinity looks to me like a valiant attempt to save Platonic absolutism for scholastics who converted to Christianity and couldn't give up their old beliefs, sleight of hand to say the least! But obviously a lot of people must find it appealing, even if I find it somewhat appalling (sorry about that!). ** I would disagree with you that there are a 'few cryptic references' tempered by the points I made above about Hick's distinction between the two levels of Christian thought. Space precludes my listing them - this is long enough already. Look it up in any number of references books. Your comment "How bizarre!" regarding the quote you give of Christ's prayer to the father to make the disciples one as he and God the Father are one is very funny. I'm not sure that you realize it. Your comment seems to draw a picture, at least in my mind, of all the disciples becoming one person (body). Rather than 'bizarre' I would agree with the idea that we don't and can't understand all that that statement implies. But leaving aside the truely bizarre notion that they become literally 'one' I think given the context of the whole teaching of scripture it is plain that what is meant is that they have the 'Spirit' of God in them and so a 'oneness' in outlook, life and action. There is also the point to be made that the Christian belief is that once 'born again' one has the life of God, the Holy Spirit living 'inside' of one as part of the 'new creation' the words 'born again' mean. See John chapter three. By the way, your mention of the 'scholastics' misses the formulation of the doctrine of the Trinity by quite a few centuries. That is to say, the doctrine of the trinity was well formulated and understood way before the scholastics appeared on the scene. "a valient attempt . . . by scholastics who converted to Christianity" is a gaffle. Perhaps another posting will allow us to deal with the differences between 'Platonic absolutism' and the Christian view - but again this is getting too long. THE BOTTEM LINE: I think you find the doctrine of the Trinity 'appalling' because you haven't properly grasped it or the process by which it came to be formulated. I hope you find my ideas interesting. I certainly enjoyed your comments and attempting to reply to them. I will answer the second half of your posting in another mailing. Best regards, Ken Arndt