N.T. Wright on the Tsunami
Meanings of Christmas: In the new world there will be no more sea
Does God have a responsibility to stop earthquakes and tidal waves? The story of Jesus raises much subtler questions
Tom Wright, 01 January 2005
The ancient Jewish writers saw the sea as evil. It floods and destroys the world. It stands between the Israelites and freedom. It rages horribly; monsters come out of it. There is a hint that God had to overcome the dark primal waters in order to create the world in the first place.
Ancient symbols spring into unwelcome new life. The murderous mountain of water that charged across the Indian Ocean on Boxing Day rivals the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 in its deadly power. Lisbon caused a sea-change in the Enlightenment itself: before it, Bishop Butler could gaze at the natural world and infer Christian theology, but Lisbon drove a wedge between God and the world, giving fresh impetus to the idea of God as an absentee landlord and then, not long after, a mere absentee. Since then, it has been assumed that "God" has a responsibility to stop things like earthquakes and tidal waves; if He doesn't, they constitute a standing disproof. What's the point in saying "The heavens declare the glory of God", if tidal waves declare His incompetence? Western culture hasn't advanced much beyond that sterile stand-off. This week's horror won't change it any more than did the man-made nightmare of 11 September 2001.
People today assume that a "religious" view of life must address "the problem of evil", the toughest part of which is so-called "natural evil". Evil isn't as bad as it seems, say some; or it's all someone's fault (or, with natural evil, Satan's fault); or it offers a chance for greater moral virtue (courage, and so on). One major tsunami does to theories like that what it does to buildings and people: it crushes them to matchwood.
In a culture heavily influenced by Judaism and Christianity, one might have hoped that the Bible would play a part in the discussion. People seem to assume that it's irrelevant. The general view is that the Bible offers an escape from the world into a personal religion. But that view is itself the result of the Enlightenment's reductionism.
The Bible itself resists such treatment. It constantly acknowledges evil - "human" and "natural" alike - as a terrible reality. It doesn't try to minimise it, to explain that good will come of it, or to blame someone (reactions which correspond uncomfortably closely to the excuses offered by immoral or warmongering politicians). It tells a story about the Creator's plan to put the world to rights, a plan which involves a people who are themselves part of the problem as well as the bearers of the solution.
That people, the family of Israel, are brought through the sea to the promised land, despite grumbling on the way. Through long years of Babylonian exile, they cry out for a new Exodus, for their God again to overrule the mighty waters from which came the monsters of pagan empire. This is the people whose prophets tell of God's intention to deal with evil itself, so that the wolf and the lamb would lie down together, and the earth be awash with the knowledge of the Lord as the waters cover the sea. The healing of creation will result from the Servant of the Lord going down to the depths, taking evil's weight on to himself, exhausting its power.
When the early Christians wrote about Jesus, this was the story they believed themselves to be telling. They didn't see him as simply a teacher, a moral example, or even as one who saved people from a doomed world. They told his story as the point where the dark forces of chaos converged, in the cynical politics of Herod and Pilate, the bitter fanaticism of the Pharisees, the wild shrieks of diseased souls, the sudden storms on the lake. They invite us to see his death on the analogy of Jonah's being thrown into the sea, there to be swallowed by the monster called Death. They insist that in this death God has taken upon Himself the full force of the world's evil. As a sign of that, the final book of the Bible declares that in the new world, now already begun with his resurrection, there will be no more sea.
Saying this precisely does not give Christian theology an easy explanation ("Oh, that's all right then") for the continuing presence of evil in the world. On the contrary, it tells a story about Jesus's own sense of abandonment, and thereby encourages us to embrace the same sense of helpless involvement in the sorrow of the world, as the means by which the world is to be healed. Those who work for justice, reconciliation and peace will know that sense, and perhaps, occasionally, that healing.
This isn't the kind of answer that the Enlightenment wanted. But maybe, as we launch into the deep waters of another new year, it is the kind of vocation we ought to embrace in place of shallow analysis and shrill reaction.
This article originally was published here.
4 Comments:
I'm sorry, John, but I'm less impressed than you with this. Its not so much what NTW affirms as what he denies I have a problem with. Your own post on Jeremiah shows that God can use even deliberate human evil for good in the end. There ARE passages in the Scriptures which teach that the ultimate origin of evil itself is in willful sin, whether the primordial sin of fallen angels or the later "original" sin of humanity. The traditional explanations of Christions re: evil, including natural evil, are Biblical and sound.
The tsunami has not changed this in the least. The first thing to remember is that life is a divine gift owed to no-one by God. So, there is no intrinsic injustice in people dying "before their time". Second, at the Final Judgement there will be a reckoning and setting to rights that is complete and perfectly just. It is surprising NTW would ignore the eschatological aspect. Third, there is reason to believe satanic and human sin have affected the natural world processes and our relationship with them. Fourth, trials and sufferings DO often lead to greater gain in the long-term. (Witness the astonishing response in aid and human compassion and solidarity to the disaster.) Etc., etc.
Yes, Jesus conquered evil at the Cross, having absorbed and overcome all that it could throw at him. Very biblical, very patristic. But the above points also match that description. The questions answered by these points were asked long before the Enlightenment. Just look at the Psalms!
Fr M. Kirby
First a disclaimer: I've read a fair bit of N.T.Wright and while I don't agree with everything he writes 100% of the time, I like him a lot.
I understand where NT is coming from in this article and I don't have any problems with it. While I am neither a pastor nor theologian, I nevertheless think Fr Kirby is a bit hasty to suggest BT "denies" something.
I can't see any denial in this article.
From what I know of Wright's work, I would even say that NT would probably agree in principle to Fr Kirby's statements and also give you a mini dissertation on slippery terms like eschatology etc. etc.
If Fr Kirby is aware of such denials in other writings by NT, they would be interesting to read.
Or is the allegation of 'denial' simply because NT didn't mention something in this article alone? If that is the basis for the denial then, wouldn't NT have editorial restrictions like other authors when writing for a paper? Could he have simply chosen to emphasize one aspect of a theme? He has said as much when criticised over other articles. Maybe just criticize his choice of theme or what he actually wrote?
FWIW, I feel sorry for ministers during times like this. They often feel pressured either by others, or themselves to provide some response - like an editorial piece on theodicy, suffering, whatever. When they do, they inevitably get themselves into hot water. Curiously, I can never work out who is asking the question and why.
So can you tell us a little more about Creation and Chaos in Creation and Eschatology ? It sounds like an extremely interesting and relevant subject.
Lisbon caused a sea-change in the Enlightenment itself: before it, Bishop Butler could gaze at the natural world and infer Christian theology, but Lisbon drove a wedge between God and the world, giving fresh impetus to the idea of God as an absentee landlord and then, not long after, a mere absentee.
Hey this requires that you have some serious background before you can understand this piece. Like who the heck is Bishop Butler? And again what is the Enlightenment?
Post a Comment
<< Home