Jewish and Christian Intertextuality and
Welcoming Islam
Peter Ochs University of Virginia
This year's SSR gathering features several events at once: two great
text-philosophers treating us to innovative reasonings about messianic/mystical
scripture in Judaism and Christianity; our group's achieving a new level of
Jewish/Christian intertextuality and cross-hermeneutics (as in
cross-culture, not the Cross, at least I don't think so!); and our
welcoming into shared study a sub-community of Muslim text reasoners. This
response focuses on the second item in particular: the inter- and cross-study.
Think of it. Elliot Wolfson, the Jewish text scholar-philosopher of
mysticism, examines the theological hermeneutics of a Christian kabbalist
(Kemper), a convert from Judaism, who comments on the trinitarianism -- and
christology -- implicit in Jewish kabbalah and in Jewish halacha. Whose
texts and interpretations are these? Which rule of interpretation rules which,
and for what end?
Think of it another time. David Ford, the Christian philosopher-text scholar
of theology, re-examines the performative force of scripture (Ephesians) for
Jewish-Christian relations; re-interpreting a Jewish study of the work of the
Christian philosopher Charles Peirce as a scriptural, in fact rabbinic-like,
semiotics. Do the Christian Scriptures suffer? Do they suffer for Jews? Does
the Christian theo-philosopher suffer with and for Scriptures in their
causing -- or caring for -- the suffering of Jews? That is to say, may
the Scriptures that heal also bring pain? Not only that, but may Ford's reading
ward against such potential violence, by reading the text Christologically as
guided by a rabbinically-inspired pragmatics, so that the healed Scripture
brings or introduces pleroma?
All this, even before Dr. Israr Ahmad brings to the dialogue his Muslim
reading of Sufi mysticism.
A first response is Baruch hashem, Praise God: both as an expression of
thanks for the wonder of this moment of study, but also as a caution against
the pleroma's overspilling. If it overspills, it is out of joy and
shared abundance, indeed, but this abundance also risks overstepping the
lingusitic, semiotic, hermeneutical, and performative borders of the text
communities. While carrying on such a set of readings, how do we both share and
protect the differences among our traditions?
My second responses are Blessings to the two authors.
I.
A blessing on my friend David Ford for finding any use for a technical study
of the arcane Peirce beyond intra-Peirce studies.... David gives his reasoning
habit up for a spell to try-on the pragmatic pattern of reading scripture
suggested or at least hinted by this book on Peirce. Then again, he has not
only given-up habits, for any of us who reads Ford's theo-philosophies knows
that his work already displays this deep tendency to release his-own
rationality before others and the Other. And we know that his
theo-phenomenology is already one that thematizes (in a humble way) the Face of
the other and the Other to whom one gives-up ones reasoning. Reasoning's
ex-stasis? Is this not already a habit of ecstatic reasoning? And is it not
remarkable that two major tropes in his writings are the other (object of this
self-offering) AND joy, superabundant joy? Shouldn't giving up connote more the
pain and suffering of self-abnegation and self-sacrifice? Whence this joy?
I won't enter here into the themes of Levinas/Jungel/Ford that some of you
may have seen already in David's recent writings and will see, with much more
to boot, in his profound theo-philosophy book on Self and Salvation, Being
Transformed (Cambridge, 1999). Later, I'll mention instead a small,
pastoral book he wrote for the Anglican Church, The Shape Of Life
(Harper Collins, 1997). It's about mundane things: a paperback with a cover
filled with the images and colors of everyday life, and also filled page by
page with the outburst of abundance that can be heard in the everyday even when
the everyday can seem, as ours does so much, too weighted down by the
overwhelming noise and distraction of modern life. Before turning to it,
however, a look at how his essay for us anticipates this book.
In his paper for our SSR, David achieves, in about 3 pages, a remarkably
clear and comprehensive statement of most of what I sought to argue, through
about 400 very dense pages on Peirce. He fully captures and then tests the
pragmatic (that is, reparative) logic of scripture as an invitation for
dialogic and performative responses to scripture's own enigmas and problems.
Here scripture is received as a word (and discourse) that redeems suffering and
repairs the conditions of violence that cause it. David clarifies this logic
and then tests it, performatively, by conducting a pragmatic reading of
Ephesians.
The pragmatic logic of scripture is also complemented by a SEMIOTIC (i.e.,
diagrammatic) logic of scripture, and this one is PERFORMED more than
thematized by David's paper. This logic is displayed in the way scripture
BRINGS TO LIGHT the unseen or enigmatic -- that is, in the way it clarifies
and in that sense diagrams what is already here but not recognized. David
performs this dimension of scriptural logic through the way he brings light to
my book and to any usefulness Peirce's work might have to the work of
scriptural reasoning.
What relation does the logic of repair have to the logic of clarification?
Or in what are they co-present? Here, they are co-present, for one, in David's
performance: as his essay could be redescribed as a simultaneous activity of
bringing light to what is unclear or hidden AND of illustrating how to bring
healing to what is wounded. HOW are these co-present in David's activity of
reading and reasoning: by what rule or through what source?
I have already mentioned the copresence of JOY and RESPONSE TO THE FACE OF
THE OTHER as tropes and as performances in David's theo-philosophic work. Does
that mean the co-presence of these two is already a sign of the scriptural
logic inherent in his previous writing? If so, in what, by what are these two
complements co-present in his work? Perhaps in the form of Two seeking a
Third. Here the Two refers to the co-presence of a principle
for bringing-light with a principle for bringing redemption
or repair. The Third refers to David's search for the rule or
practice that brings these two principles to cooperative, rather than
competitive, co-presence. What is this Third? By what name is it called?
Time to return to The Shape of the Living. HERE there are two
dominant tropes: what David calls bad overwhelmings and good
overwhelmings. Of the bad he mentions our being overwhelmed so much and
in such painful ways today: by the excessive presence of the computer and
information bits; by excessive news and talk and noise; by addictions; and by
all ways in which relationship(s) is and are interrupted, postponed, and
broken. Beyond these, he speaks as well of the excess of death and loss that
characterizes this century.
Of the good, he mentions moments when we taste the overwhelming generosity
of others, or of overwhelming resources and potential, or of this and that
reason for our sometimes feeling overwhelming gratitude. Gratuitous,
beyond our fathom, both binding and freeing, this love re-invades us, shifts
the boundaries of our being (from Michael O'Shiadhail, HAIL! MADAM
JAZZ[Bloodaxe, 1992]; Michael O. is David's poet of joy and, at times, of
brokenness; his poetry is also a place of both logics and for it too there is
reason to want to name a Third that binds both). Here, he writes of joy and
feasting. And he cites Ephesians, a plan for the fullness of time, to
gather up ... all things in Christ, things in heaven and things on earth.
By his last chapter, the joy is perichoresis, dancing -- Michael O's
Dance -- and the dance of the hospitality of God.
So, David's paperback gives at least a couple of names to the Third in which
the two logics of scripture are one. Scripture is identified as the place where
that One is known by way of a relation between the reasoning that repairs
suffering and the reasoning that brings light to the hidden.
II.
My second blessing is on my friend Elliot Wolfson for portraying, in that
infinitely recursive detail of the Jewish textualist, the way suffering and
light may mix in the bi- or cross-covenantal kabbalah of the Jew cum Christian
kabbalist Kemper. Leave it to Elliot to bring to light various pockets of as
yet undisclosed darkness and enigma in what we may have thought we had seen
clearly.
Placed together, Elliot's and David's papers generate comparisons of
unexpected fertility and danger. First note the serendipity of this attractive
danger. Stimulated by Wolfson's work, the SSR had planned this year to examine
mysticism in the scriptural traditions. Elliot's work on the Jewish mystic
Cordosa led to a theme of messianism within the mystical corpus, and that led
to David's paper on Ephesians. What would have led to this rabbinic pragmatism,
or led Elliot to move on to messianic mysticism in this Christian kabbalist?
I believe that this unexpected coincidence provides an appropriate vehicle
for analyzing the ongoing work of SSR.
In the academic study of scriptural traditions, we have already ridden over
the crest of an exclusively historical paradigm for intra- and inter-religious
scriptural study. That paradigm already prepared us appropriately to take up
the anti-foundationalism of more recent philosophical theology and religious
studies. But our legitimate cautions against conceptualist reductions of
scriptural study should not scare us away from disciplined, POST-CRITICAL
PRACTICES OF FORMAL REASONING. Elliot is very disciplined, and there is much in
the way he has set up the study of Kemper that remains hidden from a
reductively explicit view. But this hiddenness can also mean a deferral of
certain conclusions that can be articulated ONLY WITHIN SOME COMMUNITY-SPECIFIC
VOCABULARY of analysis. In this sense, one could say that the hidden in
Elliot's work (not just in this essay, but also in his growing corpus of work)
serves as an unspoken RULE for re-reading certain aspects or forms identified
in the texts he has studied AS TYPES WHOSE ANTITYPES WE MUST YET IDENTIFY
WITHIN OUR OWN COMMUNAL DISCOURSE. I suggest we identify, for example, the
formal reading of Elliot's paper as a reading that proposes for a particular
community a particular way of identifying this implicit RULE in his work
-- which is a rule for rereading certain text tropes as TYPES that will
have various antitypes in various different communities.
In other words, I am suggesting that we resuscitate a KIND OF FIGURAL
READING as ONE KIND OF POSTCRITICAL FORMAL REASONING WE COULD CONDUCT WITHIN
THE SSR. And I suggest that both David's and Elliot's papers introduce contexts
and unspoken ways of conducting this. Hans Frei, of blessed memory, sought to
reintroduce figural reading in this way in postcritical Christian discourse,
with support from George Lindbeck. In our case of SSR, we would be supporting
this AND also saying something in addition: that a religious society for the
study of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim scriptures may need to include among its
inter-communal discourses a mode of figuration that is one degree more formal
or more abstract than the one we may conduct WITHIN our several scriptural
communities. Here is an initial, quick list of some of the rules of such an SSR
practice of figuration -- and I believe something like this list could be
an unspoken subtext of Elliot's paper:
#1: reintroduce a working distinction between everyday-religious-communal
discourse AND that esoteric discourse that may serve gatherings like the SSR.
Assume that all members of the SSR participate and contribute to everyday
communities in which their discourse remains within the intratextual bounds of
their various religions and denominations -- and that all members of the
SSR defend the everyday integrity of those bounds. BUT assume also that in the
SSR scholars from these communities come together in ways that are irreducible
to the patterns of EITHER intra-communal study OR the extra-communal historical
or conceptual work typical of academic religious studies. In other words,
assume that we have another, third, very serious business here and that IT
REQUIRES MODES OF DISCOURSE SPECIFIC TO IT.
#2 protect the difference between this THIRD discourse conducted
within the SSR AND THE DISCOURSE OF OUR EVERYDAY RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES. AND
also, in a different direction, protect the difference of this THIRD discourse
from standard academic inquiry.
#3 to whatever degree figural reading is reintroduced to the local
scriptural communities in which we participate, INTRODUCE ANOTHER KIND OF
FIGURAL READING INTO the SSR community.
Before suggesting any initial, abstract description of this INTER-communal
figuration, let me illustrate how I think it is already working between the
lines of Elliot's paper. First, I'll guess that Elliot wants us to REJECT BOTH
of two customary responses to the Kemper material -- and to reject it both
in our SSR work and in our intracommunal work:
(supercessionist): according to this response, Kemper is
correct on a simple, plain sense level of his figural reading: the Jews and
their law are a shadow, and a Christian kabbalah fully discloses this fact.
(merely communitarian): according to
this response, Kemper is simply wrong on any level in his effort to learn
something from his (bastard) manner of reading half-Christianly and
half-rabbinic-kabbalistically. Second, I'll propose that
Elliot wants us, instead, to maintain a third claim that emerges
from out of our contributions to our various everyday religious communities:
that kabbalah is an esoteric matter within the religious communities.
Third, I'll propose that Elliot WANT US NOW TO INSTITUTE an additional
esotericism WITHIN OUR INTER-RELIGIOUS SSR dialogue. This, second kind of
esotericism would enable us to recognize that Elliot's reflection on Kemper's
kabbalah is itself doubly esoteric belonging neither to traditional
esotericism (like Kabbalah), nor to the specialized discourses of academe, BUT
ONLY TO THE KIND OF ESOTERIC REFLECTION THAT IS SUITABLE, perhaps alone, for
something like the SSR. Here esoteric would mean: not directly
translatable into the normal discourses of our communities, but useful ON
BEHALF of those discourses for some other work we are carrying on. Doubly
esoteric implies that it is also not directly translatable into our
normal academic discourses. ANY attempts to translate into either of these
communities would cause dangerous confusion (for them and for us).
Fourth, I'll propose that Elliot might suffer this addition: that a group
like the SSR needs to adopt a language of inter-communal scriptural
interpretation that is stripped of the associative meanings that members of our
religious communities would attach, confusedly, to it. This means that the
language SSR would be uttered, for example, independently of the various
noun-forms that signal our doctrine-specific rules of scriptural reading (names
of God, of God's people, of the Trinity, of the land, and so on). Independently
of these noun-forms, what remains would be a FORMAL LANGUAGE meaningful to us
but perhaps none other. The process of stripping away these
noun-forms would be a processing of substituting certain formally defined RULES
(R) for the relations between type and antitype that appear in the
figural discourses of our various communities and that, on another level, also
appear in Elliot's inter-communal study of Kemper's inter-communal rhetoric.
Let me illustrate. Elliot has uncovered these figurations in Kemper's
Christian kabbalah:
Jesus as logos is type of SON, is type of Chokhma/Sophia is type
of Torah is type of...zeir anpin ... Jesus as God incarnate is type of
DAUGHTER, is type of Binah is type of Shekhina (machut), is type of zeir anpin,
is type of metatron... Now, you'll note that some
confusions remain in this particular illustration, either because Kemper's
usages cannot be fully clarified into the two sub-figurations, or because I
need someone else to re-read Elliot more carefully for me. EITHER WAY, the
point I am after is this: that our FORMAL REASONING would interpose a RULE (R)
between every binary pair of type'/anti-types, for example:
Incarnation -- - Ri -- Shekhina. Or Messiah --
Rm -- - Torah . In this example, one of the esoteric
discourses of SSR would be about Ri and Rm, the POLES OF WHICH RELATIONS would
be identified through communal-text-language-specific discussions of
Incarnation, for example, or Torah. But the relations between these poles could
be formalized in extra-textual language for use only in SSR-like discussions,
which would correspond to only certain intra-communal meanings and
relations.
Now it seems I have used an impenetratable code even in this little
response. This is for want of space, but also for the sake of offering only
allusions to a process that SSR members may or may not warm to, and in the
warming give such allusions clearer meaning for us. WHEN I referred in David's
paper to poles of JOY or SUFFERING in his popular work, I was suggesting that
these appear in explicit terms in the intra-communal settings for the sake of
which we carry on our work; but they appear in different terms in our esoteric
analyses. In the Peirce study, for example, one appears as a pragmatic or
reparative rule for reading scripture, the other appears as a semiotic or
diagrammatic rule of reading. In either case and in both settings, such poles
are mediated only in the presence of a Third, who is named with different names
in the individual communities and perhaps in the SSR. This one alone, of
course, would bring any sense to the cross-terminologies in Kemper's kabbalah.
(By the way, the book on Peirce rereads Peirce's pragmatism as having been
seriously re-written by his pragmaticism -- and I re-read the latter as
antitype of a trinitarian type of patristic philosophical theology. The only
reason I believe such a pragmatism is useful as one of two poles of reading
scripture is that it restates an intra-scriptural rule in formal terms.)
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