Jan 092010
 

So next up ch.16. Here’s my version of what goes on in this chapter:

  1. Full wisdom and power can exist in only one person. If, per impossibile, there is only one divine person, he can still have fullness of wisdom and power.
  2. The pleasures of wisdom and love differ. The pleasure of wisdom can be drawn from oneself. The pleasure of love must be drawn from another. Anyone who loves and desires to be so loved but doesn’t receive such love is displeased. But the pleasure of wisdom is even better when one derives it from oneself.
  3. If, in divinity, there is only one person, such a person can have full wisdom. Full wisdom and full power can’t exist without each other. For suppose someone lacks omnipotence. If she doesn’t know how to obtain what she so lacks, then she lacks full wisdom. And anyone who unwillingly suffers some defect of wisdom lacks full power.  Therefore, if, in divinity, there is only one person, such a person can also have full power.

Re 1: I like the implicit distinction here between what is a real and only a conceptual possibility. There can’t really be only one divine person. For, as Richard is trying to demonstrate, there must be at least three divine persons. But the concepts of full wisdom and power don’t conceptually imply the concept of more than one divine person. Continue reading »

Jan 062010
 

I (and so we) took a break from the Richard posts. But we now return. Perhaps at some point I’ll blog on some conferences I’ve been to: the Metaphysics of the Incarnation conference at the University of Oxford last September. And I might share a very brief talk I gave on the Trinity at a local church last October. But for now, on to the main attraction.

Richard has already argued in various ways that if there is so much as one divine person, there are at least three divine persons. But the arguments have all been a bit here and there. So to make the reasons even more evident, he plans to gather them all up into one. So here it is:

Suppose there is only one divine person: P.

1)      Then P doesn’t share his greatness.

2)      Compare two situations. In the first, P is the only divine person. In the second, P is not the only divine person; there is another: Q. In the second situation, P and Q love each other and P has the pleasure that love brings. So in the first situation, P lacks in eternity not only such love but also such pleasure.

3)      Anyone supremely good shares her greatness. (Not so to share is to retain something greedily. But anyone supremely good does nothing greedily.)

4)      Anyone supremely happy has such pleasure. (Not to have such pleasure is not to have an abundance of pleasure. But anyone supremely happy has an abundance of pleasure.)

5)      P is supremely good and happy.

So if there is at least one divine person, there are at least two divine persons. Continue reading »

Dec 282009
 

Note: this review originally appeared in Religious Studies Review.

FAITH LACKING UNDERSTANDING: THEOLOGY ‘THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY. By Randal Rauser. Colorado Springs, CO: Paternoster, 2008.

This rausing little book is a work of popular philosophical theology which exhibits uncommon intellectual honesty, courage, humor, clarity, and insight. Each chapter but the first is devoted to a doctrine of the Apostles’ Creed: Trinity, Creation, Incarnation, Atonement, Ascension, and Final Judgment (heaven and hell).

In sometimes dense but riveting, concise, and clearly written prose, Rauser explores serious difficulties facing various ways of understanding these doctrines, arguing that “every one of these doctrines violates the basic dictates of logic, our our moral sense, or minimal plausibility in light of our scientific understanding of the world.” These “provide a serious cumulative challenge to Christianity.” No chapter contains a resounding resolution of difficulties; instead, we are reminded that theology is a realm of mysteries, and that a relationship with God is compatible with this admission.

The book demands a response from the reader. Some will explore other construals of various doctrine, others will revise or deny them, and yet others will agree to settle for mysteries. While Rauser puts much weight on mystery appeals, he’s far from being a mindless mystery-monger; he would prefer doctrines not beset by the above problems. It just that he can’t find such theories. The book is widely informed by recent literature in theology, philosophy of religion, and science-and-religion. Though accessible to the general reader, would provide high-octane discussion fuel for a graduate seminary course or an advanced undergraduate course at a Christian institution.

Sep 012008
 

Maria Rosa Antognazza teaches at King’s College London, where she also directs the Centre for the History of Philosophical Theology. She has written a highly praised forthcoming intellectual biography of the great Leibniz. After the break is my review of her book pictured above. The review is forthcoming in Religious Studies. Bottom line: Leibniz employs positive and negative mysterian moves, as well as rational reconstruction of the Trinity doctrine, in my view not very convincingly. I’m most bothered by his complacency about Bible interpretation. This is a very well done book, whatever the ultimate verdict is on Leibniz’s views. Continue reading »

Jul 292008
 

MACRUE!… Gesundheit

Man, this is getting to be a long series.

This installment is a book review I’ve written of philosophical theologian James Anderson’s Paradox in Christian Theology: An Analysis of Its Presence, Character, and Epistemic Status. It is forthcoming in the philosophy journal Faith & Philosophy, and is posted by the kind permission of its book review editor Charles Taliaferro.

The review is after the fold. Sorry – it’s written more for philosophy profs than for a general audience. I’ll expand on some of my objections to mysterianism later in this series. Continue reading »

Jul 282008
 


Roll up, folks.

We now move one the fourth R – what I call Mysterian Resistance (or Mysterianism). The Resistor is resisting the pressure to resolve the apparent contradiction, i.e. changing one of the apparently contradictory beliefs. Unlike the Redirector, the Resister doesn’t ignore the apparent inconsistency. And unlike the Resolver, he doesn’t think there’s a reasonable way to make the apparent contradiction go away. So the Resistor resists – he makes his stand – he comes up with a rationale for keeping his apparently contradictory beliefs. Continue reading »

Jul 212008
 

Father, Son, Holy Spirit?

A professor friend emailed me recently:

I’ve lately been reading a book (at a student’s request) …a piece of bad Christian fiction called “The Shack” by William P. Young. … it might interest you in light of your trinitarian research. The persons of the Trinity make an appearance in the story: God the Father as a large black woman, God the Son as middle-Eastern carpenter (go figure!), and the Holy Spirit as an Asian woman. I’m certain that there’s heresy lurking nearby.

Just thought I’d pass it along. It is apparently gaining some popularity among some segments of the evangelical subculture – hence, my student’s request that I read it. (link and emphases added)

I can’t speak to the book’s artistic merits, but I’ll trust my friend on that. As to theological merits, heresy or not, there’s certainly social trinitarianism lurking nearby! :-) Who would’ve guessed the Divine Society was so “diverse”? At least they let Jesus remain male… And it arguably beats the gay men’s chorus.

According to this much read review, this society is also maximally egalitarian (see the Trinity section of the review).

Update: a more sympathetic review at Christianity Today.

Jul 182008
 
Your average theologian’s response to recent Rational Reinterpretations.

Let me take four recent books off my shelf by current theologians. Now I’ll search through them to see if they have any reference at all to some of the more important Rational Reconstructions in the last 25 years or so, namely:

  • Tom Morris’s (1986, 1989) or Richard Swinburne’s two-minds approach to the Incarnation (1994)
  • Swinburne’s social trinitarian theory (1994)
  • Leftow’s earlier Latin Trinitarian speculations (1999, 2004) and his exploration and penetrating criticisms of various social theories (1999)
  • Peter van Inwagen’s relative identity construals of the Incarnation and Trinity (1995)

(To new readers – you can find many earlier posts on Swinburne and Leftow using the search box, below right.) I’m limiting myself to (1) uncontroversially top-notch work, (2) by prominent Christian philosopher-theologians, masters of their craft, that (3) has been out for a while, and which (4) is pretty well known among Christian philosophers. Now, for the search Continue reading »

Jun 302008
 
Moses Stuart (1780-1852), professor at Andover Theological Seminary,
and NOT a fan of Rational Reconstruction (image credit)


What, if anything, is wrong with with the strategy of Resolution through Rational Reinterpretation?
And why are most theologians so cold towards this strategy, while most Christian philosophers love it? Consider this quote by Moses Stuart on one of Leibniz’s takes on the Trinity:

The celebrated Leibniz was requested by a Loefler, who had undertaken to refute the writings of a certain English Antitrinitarian, to give him an affirmative definition of the persons in the Godhead. He sent for answer the following: – “Several persons in an absolute substance numerically the same, signify several, particular, intelligent substances essentially related.” On farther consideration, he abandoned this, and sent a second, which was, – “Several persons, in an absolute substance numerically the same, mean relative, incommunicable modes of subsisting.”

If Leibniz actually understood this, I believe he must have been a better master of metaphysics than any person who has ever read his definition. Continue reading »

May 052008
 


What’s up with that weird Angel/bird/snake thing? Is that supposed to be Arius?

At BBC – Radio 4 In Our Time – The Nicene Creed - A somewhat gassy and academic but nonetheless listenable discussion. Here’s the Real Audio file link. (I thought I listened to this in another audio format, but I can’t find any such files at the moment.)

Then we’ve got “Great Moves of God: The Nicene Creed” at the Australian Sight magazine. This story spins the Nicea council as being the arch-logician, perhaps rationalist scripture-twisting Arians vs. the modest, faithful upholders of Christ’s deity.

An authority is quoted here as saying: “The participating bishops merely affirmed the historic and standard Christian beliefs…”.

I think this last statement is not just misleading but demonstrably false. Further, the whole account is warped by the author’s allegiances, although the article contains some good information as well, which is why I pass it along.

Was that council, or part of it, or its resulting creed a “Great Move of God”? Read Hanson (if you have a lot of time), Ayres (if you have a good bit of time), or Rubenstein (if you have a few hours), and decide for yourself. If you’re interested in the Arians as such, the best place to start is probably with Wiles.

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May 042008
 

Here: Logic Matters: Philosophy of Religion 3: The Trinity Philosopher/blogger/Analysis editor Peter Smith of Cambridge discusses his reading of this book by Rea and Murray, which I’ve been looking forward to seeing. He’s, um, not terribly sympathetic, and tends towards a harsh and dismissive tone. But, he does (I assume, accurately) summarize their conclusions, and their main lines of argument. So the reviews are at least useful for that.

Also relevant: his take on the chapters on Incarnation, and the Liar, Lunatic, Lord argument for the divinity of Jesus. See the lively and lengthy discussion on this last one, with substantial contributions by Mike Rea, Mike Almeida, Victor Reppert, and others.

It’s very interesting to read another philosopher’s take on one’s colleague’s new textbook. It’s a sort of book review with the gloves off. On the other hand, I don’t relish the thought of my own work getting this kind of treatment, especially if it should be for a student or popular audience.

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Jun 202007
 

I learned some months ago of Triads and Trinity, by the late Classicist and Egyptologist John Gwyn Griffiths, a book which tries to trace outside influences on the development of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity. (HT: Matthew Mullins) I was skeptical about any such project, as I knew it has long been a staple of crackpot antitrinitarians to allege that the Trinity doctrine was illegally imported from (take your pick) Babylon, Neoplatonism, Hinduism, etc. This book, however, seemed legit. Continue reading »

Jul 242006
 

Thanks to reader Peter Tyson, for sending me a copy of The Threefold Art of Experiencing God: The Liberating Power of a Trinitarian Faith. It’s a short book by church growth guru Christian Schwarz, who has made his fortune advising churches on how to become healthier and grow, offering principles like these. Here is his official site. His approach goes by the name Natural Church Development.

I’ll mostly confine myself to his theological views, leaving aside most of the church growth stuff. But first, the book is misnamed. It is not a practical book about how to experience God. It is a hastily sketched theory, largely explicated in colored diagrams(!), about how proper thinking about the Trinity is supposed to diagnose and solve (most of?) the Christian church’s problems. Thus,

…the widespread lack of understanding of the God who reveals himself in a threefold way, is the main reason for the shocking paralysis of vast sectors of Christianity. … A new understanding of the Trinity… explains the conflicts which so often paralyze Christianity, and can become a creative key in directing the energy hidden beneath such conflicts toward a constructive process of change. (p. 4)

Schwarz sort of brags about his church growth research, and takes a stance as a practical problem-solver, not some pointy-headed intellectual who is going to “pursue theology for the sake of theology.” (p. 4) Fair enough. Pretty soon, though, this “new understanding” of the Trinity starts sounding modalistic. God is a person, we’re told, which

is perceived by people in different ways. …God cannot be found “per se,” but only in a relationship “to us”. …God revealed himself in three different ways. What we now call the “doctrine of the Trinity” was originally nothing more than a category of experience. The early Christians recognized God as Creator, experienced Christ as God through prayer, and sensed the power of the Holy Spirit in their lives. In other words, they experienced God in a threefold manner – and as a result they thought about the Trinity. (pp. 6-7)

Schwarz is saying, then, that God is (numerically identical to) one divine, personal being. And this one being appears in three ways. We have direct access only to to these appearances, and not to how God is in himself. (cf. p. 10) The terms “Father”, “Son”, and “Holy Spirit” refer to the three ways God relates to us (pp. 8, 9, 12), and through these appearances, God reveals “his own nature.” (p. 8 ) In short, he holds to some form of what I call FSH-modalism. (He doesn’t say enough to get more specific than that.)

In the misnamed third chapter, “The Mystery of the Trinity” Schwarz starts to collect threesomes of things, which are supposed to somehow correspond to the members of the Trinity. To give you a flavor for this, here’s a chart that lines of up some of his threesomes, which he puts in a series of tricolor charts.

“Persons” of the Trinity Father Son Holy Spirit
Works creation salvation sanctification
manners of being God above us God among us God in us
forms of address (of God to us) You shall! You may! You can!
levels of reality nature history existence
covenants Noah covenant Sinai covenant Abraham covenant
sources of knowledge science Bible experience

Schwarz assures us that originally, the ancient formulation that God is one substance but three persons “was supposed to express the same concept I have tried to present”. (p. 12) But although they did the best with the terms they had back then,

… when we apply our present understanding of “person” to the formula… immense confusion arises. It is simply impossible to think of “three persons” as anything else but “tri-theistic”… (p. 13)

He suggests that “our present conception of substance” makes trouble for us as well. (p. 13) But not to worry, for

…today we can express the same truth differently. We do not have to believe in the (Nicean) doctrine of the Trinity; but rather we should strive to encounter the God who has revealed himself in a threefold manner, holistically. If our resources – whether they be theological formulas or visual aids or meditation in solitude – help us to discover the fullness of God, they have fulfilled their purpose. (p.13)

I can’t help but wonder how many of the church leaders imbibing his church growth books know about his rather quick dismissal of the language of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan creed. I’m not exactly a staunch defender of it, but I don’t claim that it was supposed to be an expression of modalism. Nor do I endorse his vaporous claims about how the meanings of “person” and “substance” have changed.

But Schwarz goes further: not only was their language inadequate, it turns out, it was harmful as well:

It can be shown that the formulas… contributed in their historical effect toward a segmentation of God. Of course, God has not really been segmented, but what has been segmented is the possibility of experiencing God is a holistic way. Once we have put the three divine persons next to each other almost like “three gods” at least psychologically (theologically this possibility was, of course, rejected), then we are not far from giving each Christian the option to choose his or her own “favorite God” out of this Christian pantheon. This division corresponds to a segmentation among Christians, which is in turn the reason for numerous self-made blockages which dominate the Christian church of to this day. (p. 13)

To summarize the rest of the book: liberals prefer the Father (the creation revelation), the evangelicals prefer Jesus (the salvation revelation), and charismatics prefer the Holy Spirit (the personal revelation). These factions can’t get along because they glom onto one person/mode/revelation to the exclusion of the others. (pp. 14-5) They tend, respectively, towards the “heresies” of syncretism, dogmatism, and spiritualism (ch. 6), and you can try to diagnose what sort of Christian you are. (ch. 7) We need to learn the “law of polarity” (p. 20) and become “bipolar” (his term!) thinkers, lest we drift into the opposite errors of spiritualism or institutionalism (pp. 20-3), which are the root of most of the church’s problems. (p. 25) There’s some pop psychology thrown in, about the mindsets of the various types of Christians, and how to relate to each other in a helpful way. It’s all mercifully quick – the chapters are all 2-3 pages each, and the whole book is 31 pages.

I won’t be recommending this book. The author at the same time downplays the importance of theory, but clearly loves his own pet theories, which he almost hypes. (Hear the pitch straight from the horse’s mouth here.) His claims about the Nicene creed are dubious at best, and I doubt that one can make a historical case that the various segments of the church have unduly focused on one member or other of the Trinity to the exclusion of the others. For a number of reasons, theological traditionalists will break out in hives upon reading this book. But the main reason I didn’t like it, is that I think the claim that the Son is mode of God is false, and far from trivial in its theoretical and practical consequences. (I’ll outline these in a future post.) Moreover, I think Son modalism has been adequately refuted.

Perhaps what is most remarkable about Schwarz’s book is how little public stink his modalism has generated. The only evidence I could find of public complaint was this and this. My guess is that more alarm bells haven’t been rung because many Christians are modalists about the Son as well. Another reason – and this is purely a shot in the dark – might be that his modalism plays a lesser role in Schwarz’s other, bigger and more widely read books. Perhaps some of you out there can inform us about that in your comments on this posting, and supply us with some relevant quotes.

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