On Knowing the End: Some Questions for David Ford
Lewis Ayres Candler School of Theology, Emory University
It seems to me that a rather reductive reading of David Ford's very
interesting paper might say that it consists of the evolution of one central
strategy for arguing that the text of Ephesians can be read in a
"counter-conventional" way (to use David Dawson's terminology) against
Christian supercessionism. That central strategy consists in arguing for the
ambiguity (in a general and not, I think, specifically Peircean sense) of
Ephesians' account of the end of all things.
If, David's strategy goes, this "end" is ambiguous in the sense of
non-predictable and incomprehensible to us then the fate of continuing Judaism
cannot easily be subject to accounts which place it as superceded by the
Church. Non-predictable here is the key word: it is key to David's
argument that the hope that Christians have for and in the eschaton
should combine, on the one hand, hope that there will be an end in which the
Good God will be ultimately salvific and, on the other hand, that the sheer
indescribability of this event should render virtually impossible any attempt
to describe through the detailed categories of Christian theology or in terms
of the various scriptural accounts of its sequence. Well, that is not quite
specific enough. For David's argument to work Christian theologies may shape
Christian hope in the sense that they encourage one to hope and believe that
there will be a good outcome: but those theologies should not be allowed to
characterize our hope too densely. This may be a rather blunt way of putting
it, but it seems to me that David's argument attempts to open a space for
rejecting supercessionism largely by resisting any attempt to characterize the
eschaton through close attention to the details of the scriptural text!
Of course David deploys a number of other tactics in support of his central
strategy, some of which are more effective than others. But I shall not comment
on these, and focus only on this main strategy that I perceive at the heart of
his paper.
The problem with the strategy that David's paper pursues is two-fold: on the
one hand I do not see why it should have the effect that he hopes; on the other
hand, I think it involves making a move (seen also in some other contemporary
authors) that actually relies on playing down some key aspects of the
scriptural text. My first problem may be stated fairly easily. Arguing for an
extra degree of ambiguity about the eschaton actually has very little
force in refuting supercessionist reading of the emergence of the Church as the
"new" Israel. Readings of Romans 9-11, for example, which have a
supercessionist tone will not be refuted by re-description of the
eschaton. Nor, to give another example, will similar readings of
Ephesians 2:12-15 be refuted by the same strategy. Supercessionist readings of
such texts are compatible with a variety of different eschatologies: and, vice
versa, David's ambiguous eschatology is compatible with a variety
of understandings of the relationship between Church and Israel. For example,
one might find someone saying the Church replaces Israel, and
continuing Judaism is simply an anachronism, but damn, God's mercy is
all-powerful and in the end we can hope even for the union of Jews and
Gentiles. Against such an account David's argument has little persuasive
force. Thus, in the first case, I don't think that David's main strategy is
actually relevant to the question at hand.
My second criticism is a little more complex. In common with a number of
other theologians - for recent examples I think especially of George Lindbeck
and Kendall Soulen - one effect of David's overarching strategy is to play down
any precise Christological reading of the eschaton. The broad reading that
David adopts prefers a reading of the eschaton in terms of "kingdom" rather
than as union in and through Christ. It is supposedly the case that such a
reading emphasises the fundamentally Jewish story with which Christians must
grapple and plays down the christological language that seems to be the main
alternative to "kingdom" language. While this is a subtle and interesting
point, it seems to me that it contravenes the exegesis of some fairly
significant New Testament texts, renders them extremely problematic and can
only be fully accomplished in ways with which members of a Society for
Scriptural Reasoning should be unhappy.
Let me take the example of Patristic exegesis. Patristic readings of the
eschaton are deeply Christological and they are rooted in a conception
of the Kingdom, but they are so because of their ultimately Trinitarian focus
(Were we considering Kendall Soulen's work I would want to take issue with some
of the way he portrays Patristic exegesis; see e.g. Pro Ecclesia 6
(1997), pp. 413-428). Many patristic writers operate with an understanding of
the life with God that the just may expect. This understanding is focused
around how our union with Christ enables the life of the Just to be a real
participation in the divine exchange of love. This is so because, on the one
hand, the union of natures in Christ draws us to Christ and, on the other hand,
the consubstantiality of Son with the Father and Spirit means that union with
the Word in Christ is a union with the life of God. The achievement of the
Kingdom is thus the achievement of God's being "all in all" through our union
in Christ. This exegesis is developed through a variety of texts, of which some
key examples would be John 17:5 and 21-24, 1Cor.15, 2Cor. 5, Col. 1:15-20 and
Eph. 4:4-16.
Some of the most interesting exegesis of 1 Cor. 15 (I think especially of
Augustine and Gregory of Nyssa) focus on how the order of the last things
intimately reflects the content and goal of God's salvific activity. The Son
exercises the gift of life itself and of being God's power in drawing humanity
into him and leading them, as the head of the body, to the Father. And yet the
life of the Father is a continuously being-given and returned life between
Father, Son and Spirit: hence for the Son to draw all into this life it is only
fitting that at the end the kingdom is returned to the Father (1Cor. 15:28):
the end is completed through the just sharing in the Son's eternal return to
the Father. This style of reading emerges in full texture during the fourth and
fifth centuries but, I would allege, remains determinative for a period well
beyond the Reformation. Most importantly, it is a reading which links together
the soteriological action of God with Christology, and sets that linkage firmly
in a trinitarian context. However, when I say that it emerges in the fourth and
fifth century, much weight should be placed on my adjectival phrase "in full
texture". The elements of this reading appear, it seems to me, within the first
century texts that became scriptural for Christians and in commentators on
those texts from the earliest times. If ever there was a well-founded
persistent pattern of Christian figuration it was this!
This reading often (but not exclusively) does treat a text such as Romans
9-11 in a broadly supercessionist way. However, I would suggest that it is
consonant with Christian exegesis that insists on the continuity of God's
promise to and covenant with Israel (while insisting that Christians see
themselves as drawn into this covenant). Moreover, this reading embodies some
Christological and trinitarian principles about the structure and process of
redemption that are central to Christian orthodoxy and which there is no good
reason to abandon. Indeed, an attempt to abandon them or to always read the
texts on which this position is based in terms of Fordian ambiguity
seems to result only in an avoidance of something fairly central to scriptural
accounts of the eschaton. Of course one may offer an alternative reading
of the texts which were used in the development of this synthesis. But, I
suggest, the attentive theological exegete will have to do so in part by
demonstrating how those same texts maybe read otherwise, not simply by
attempting to use the ambiguity of the eschaton as a prior
interpretative guide.
However, while I think David's account (along with some other recent
patterns of exegesis) may serve to subvert a traditional and fundamental
Christological theme, an almost more substantive point needs to be made, and
that is to reiterate my very first point. It does not seem to me that there is
any necessary connection between Christian anti-semitism and these two readings
of the eschaton. I suggest, as I hinted two paragraphs ago, that David's
perfectly laudable anti-supercessionist goal could better be accomplished by
attention to those who have begun to read Romans 9-11 in such interesting ways
in the past few years. We can indeed say that the basic narrative of history
and providence that Christians should tell is a Jewish one. Yet, this
assumption goes along with a reading of Romans that emphasises Christian faith
in the incorporation of gentiles into Israel through God's grace. Of
course Christian will disagree over this point with many Jews, but that
disagreement should not surprise anyone - nor should it lead to supercessionist
ways out of the problem. There is here an ambiguity that can be extremely
fruitful for discussion between Christians and Jews, and I suggest it is an
ambiguity that can also serve as the focus for strong resistance to any form of
Christian anti-semitism or supercessionism.
It might seem that these comments take us a long way from the
mysticism with which we are concerned this year. I think not.
During the week in which I was writing this response I spent time in a class on
'Medieval Theology' looking at Bernard of Clairvaux's account of the goal of
mystical ascent in his series of homilies on the Song of
Songs. Two points deserve notice. In the first case Bernard insists that we
never directly have the "kiss" of God: we never directly see or know or
kiss the Father. We may, however, be blessed with the kiss of
his mouth. By this Bernard refers to the Incarnation and to the union or
kiss between Son and Father. Christ is the only one who has the
kiss of the mouth because of the Word's consubstantiality with the
Father. Nevertheless, through our consubstantiality with Christ we may be drawn
by grace into the life of God within Christ. The Patristic exegesis to which I
referred earlier is thus repeated in the early twelfth century! But we may go a
little further: Bernard is clear that no person has known the Father and that
the goal of the Christian life is not to be conceived as an experience, in the
sense of some inner mental seeing of God completely beyond what we
are as soul and body. Rather, we can narrate and contemplate that goal only
through narrating and contemplating the Word as present in Christ and as
consubstantial with the Father in the Spirit. Thus, it is this theological
narrative that provides the essential material for the construction of
appropriate Christian hope and faith in the eschaton and in the goal of
Christian life - and, as Denys Turner has perhaps most recently shown, the
resources for resisting a vision of mysticism as either pure
experience or as indeterminate vagueness. Loss of such language thus
might have a range of effects within Christian thought that scriptural
reasoners should surely resist.
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