A new book by two
Yale theologians reminds me why I fell in love with theology as a new Christian
in the 1970’s. The book is entitled For
the Life of the World: Theology That Makes a Difference by Miroslav Volf
and Matthew Croasmun (Brazos Press, 2019). They had me with the opening paragraph:
“Though written in a style of an invitation, this book is a
manifesto. Before we begin, we should to tell you, each in our own voice, why
and how theology has come to matter to us, and then, together, we should sketch
the main thesis of the book: academic theology ought to be, but today largely
isn’t, about what matters the most—the true life in the presence of God. The
failure of theology to attend to its purpose is a loss for the church and for
the world, for theology is uniquely qualified to explore what matters the most.
And this is a loss for theology itself—for theology will either refocus itself
on what matters the most or gradually cease to matter at all.”
Volf then gives his personal testimony. “I grew up in a
place and at a time when we, a small group of teenagers who knew no better,
thought that no intellectual endeavor could possibly matter more than doing
theology. The time was the early 1970s.” He continues, “As we spent our days and
nights (yes, lots of long nights) reading and arguing about all matters
theological, we had no idea that out in the wide world of Western academies,
where we all wanted to study, theology was in a serious crisis.”
That crisis is what inspired them to write this book. Volf
says, “I wrote this book to give myself a reason to keep faith with the dream
of the teenager-theologian I once was.” According to Volf and Croasmun Christian
theology is in serious trouble.
The authors lament that no one reads theology anymore.
Neither Christian laypeople nor ministers, who have historically been the
biggest market for theological tomes. According to the authors, today’s clergy
consider theology “largely irrelevant for their profession.” The book puts
forth external and internal reasons for this decline in theology’s popularity.
Externally less churches are requiring their clergy to be
academically trained. This has resulted in the closing of seminaries and the
decline in religion departments in universities. Churches do not feel the need
for their members – or their pastors - to be theologically literate. Theology
is considered impractical. The authors explain: “There is no gain in
communicating eloquently and accessibly what has already been deemed arcane and
vacuous.” Internally the academic discipline of theology is having an identity
crisis. Christian theologians have forgotten their purpose.
I agree that most Christians are not very interested in
theology these days, except as ammunition in the culture war. Today’s theology
seems to be of two basic types. In its conservative form theology is used as an
apologetic weapon to defend the purity of Christian doctrine against heretics.
Theology is used to define who is “in” and who is “out,” who is a “true”
Christian and who is not. On the other hand, progressive theologians see it as
their mission to combat the groupthink of evangelical Christianity and expand
our theological parameters in the name of spiritual liberty and academic
freedom.
This book attempts to remedy the situation by reestablishing
the purpose of theology as they see it, which is “to discern, articulate, and
commend visions of and paths to flourishing life in light of the
self-revelation of God in the life, death, resurrection, exaltation, and coming
in glory of Jesus Christ…” They say, “Flourishing life should be the
encompassing purpose that all theologians’ endeavors serve.” They spend the
rest of the book unpacking their vision of this “flourishing life.”
They do an admirable job in trying to give new life to the
floundering discipline of Christian theology. But in the end this book also
caused me to remember why I became disillusioned with theology. For me theology
– even theology done well, as in this book - does not live up to its purpose.
In the end it is incapable of leading us to “what matters the most — the true
life in the presence of God.” In the end it is just words about God and about
our life with God.
After decades of pastoral theologizing, I have come to the
conclusion that theology does not bring people closer to God or to a
flourishing life in God. In fact theology can serve as a substitute for a
genuine spirituality. Theology by its very nature as an intellectual discipline
keeps us at a distance from God, while giving us the illusion of knowing and
saying something meaningful about God.
Therefore I have chosen another way. Rather than seeing
theology as knowledge about the divine, even Croasmun and Volf’s “knowledge as
their way of participating in God’s grand project of transforming the world
into God’s home,” I now see it as a springboard from which to dive headlong
into the unfathomable Mystery we call God. Theology is not truth, but it can be
a stepping stone – or a diving board – into Truth.
In my way of thinking, theologians’ purpose is to work themselves
out of a job. Theology is meant to point us to the God who is beyond
theological formulations. Theology can only take us so far. It can start us off
in the right direction, and it can be useful at certain critical junctions
along the path. But theology is ultimately incapable of bringing us into the
presence of God.
To their credit the authors anticipate my reaction, but
dismiss it as an extreme approach “intended to delegitimize positive visions of
the good life.” They see my approach, known as mystical, apophatic or negative
theology, as one end of a theological spectrum. They prefer
a more balanced approach. They explain, “Kataphatic and apophatic approaches
are both indispensable elements in a carefully and systematically curated
dialectical strategy whose purpose is both to articulate the nature of God and
to acknowledge through language God’s infinite transcendence of all
articulations.”
To many people that sentence may sound like so much
theological gobbledygook, and they may be tempted to stop reading my blog right
here. They have no idea what the terms kataphatic, apophatic, and even
dialectical mean, and they do not care. They do not see it as relevant to their
spiritual lives. And they would be right.
That is my point. Theology too easily gets twisted up in
words and concepts. I do not need any more words and concepts – even good concepts
like these two authors offer. I desire only God. I want what they promised in
the second sentence of the book: “what matters the most — the true life in the
presence of God.” That is why I originally fell in love with theology. But that
is exactly what theology cannot deliver.
So maybe it is good that theology is dying out in the
churches. Maybe theology does not need to be renewed by academic theologians.
Maybe it needs to die, so that resurrection can happen within Christianity. Perhaps
the waning of the theological enterprise is a sign of the maturation of
American Christianity, rather than its spiritual demise. Theology is fulfilling
its end, which is to die to itself that God may live in us.
As Jesus said, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain
of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it
bears much fruit.” In this case the death of theology is not to be lamented,
but celebrated. It has accomplished its end. Praise be to God! Theology is
dead! God lives!
Interesting viewpoint! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI agree with some of what you wrote, but I think the death of Theology is a road block to knowing God... It's like a writing teacher once told me when my sentence structuring was bad. She said there are several famous writers that break Grammer laws as a rule for their writing, but they can do this and get away with it because they know all the rules... She told me that I was not them... Not knowing theology is like me writing badly... Pure laziness and not on a path of mastery... Theology is not truth but it's the standing on the backs of thousands of generations of searchers to know God... Why muddy around in waters left behind hundreds of years ago and traveling the same path over and over to one day just make it to the place theology ends only to have no more time to add what I've learned.
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