I mentioned this essay in a previous post (from Fr Longenecker). For your convenience here it is in full. Originally entitled ‘Modern Theology and Biblical Criticism’, Lewis read it at Westcott House, Cambridge [a Church of England theological college], on 11 May 1959. Published under that title in Christian Reflections (1981), it is now in "Fern-seed and Elephants and Other Essays on Christianity."
FERN-SEED AND ELEPHANTS
This paper arose out of a conversation I had with the Principal one night
last term. A book of Alec Vidler’s happened to be lying on the table and I
expressed my reaction to the sort of theology it contained. My reaction was a
hasty and ignorant one, produced with the freedom that comes after dinner. One
thing led to another and before we were done I was saying a good deal more than
I had meant about the type of thought which, so far as I could gather, is so
dominant in many theological colleges. He then said, ‘I wish you would come and
say all this to my young men.’ He knows, of course, that I was extremely
ignorant of the whole thing. But I think his idea was that you ought to know
how a certain sort of theology strikes the outsider. Though I may have nothing
but misunderstandings to lay before you, you ought to know that such
misunderstandings exist. That sort of thing is easy to overlook inside one’s
own circle. The minds you daily meet have been conditioned by the same studies
and prevalent opinions as your won. That may mislead you. For of course as
priests it is the outsiders you will have to cope with. You exist in the long
run for no other purpose. The proper study of shepherds is sheep, not (save
accidentally) other shepherds. And woe to you if you do not evangelize. I am
not trying to teach my grandmother. I am a sheep, telling shepherds what only a
sheep can tell them. And now I begin my bleating.
There are two sorts of
outsiders: the uneducated, and those you are educated in some way but not in your
own way. How you are to deal with the first class, if you hold views like
Loisy’s or Schweitzer’s or Bultmann’s or Tillich’s or even Alec Vidler’s, I
simply don’t know. I see - and I’m told that you see - that it would hardly do
to tell them what you really believe. A theology which denies the historicity
of nearly everything in the Gospels to which Christian life and affections and
thought have been fastened for nearly two millennia - which either denies the
miraculous altogether or, more strangely, after swallowing the camel of the
Resurrection strains at such gnats as the feeding of the multitudes - if
offered to the uneducated man can produce only one or other of two effects. It
will make him a Roman Catholic or an atheist. What you offer him he will not
recognize as Christianity. If he holds to what he calls Christianity he will
leave a Church in which it is no longer taught and look for one where it is. If
he agrees with your version he will no longer call himself a Christian and no
longer come to church. In his crude, coarse way, he would respect you much more
if you did the same. An experienced clergyman told me that the most liberal
priests, faced with this problem, have recalled from its grave the late
medieval conception of two truths: a picture-truth with can be preached to the
people, and an esoteric truth for use among the clergy. I shouldn’t think you
will enjoy this conception much once you have put it into practice. I’m sure if
I had to produce picture-truths to a parishioner in great anguish or under
fierce temptation, and produce them with that seriousness and fervor which his
condition demanded, while knowing all the time that I didn’t exactly - only in
some Pickwickian sense - believe them myself, I’d find my forehead getting read
and damp and my collar getting tight. But that is your headache, not mine. You
have, after all, a different sort of collar. I claim to belong to the second
group of outsiders: educated, but not theologically educated. How one member of
that group feels I must now try to tell you.
The undermining of the old
orthodoxy has been mainly the work of divines engaged in New Testament
criticism. The authority of experts in that discipline is the authority in
deference to whom we are asked to give up a huge mass of beliefs shared in
common by the early Church, the Fathers, the Middle Ages, the Reformers, and
even the nineteenth century. I want to explain what it is that makes me
skeptical about this authority. Ignorantly skeptical, as you will all too
easily see. But the skepticism is the father of the ignorance. It is hard to
persevere in a close study when you can work up no prima facie confidence in
your teachers.
First then, whatever these men
may be as Biblical critics, I distrust them as critics. They seem to me to lack
literary judgement, to be imperceptive about the very quality of the texts they
are reading. It sounds a strange charge to bring against men who have been
steeped in those books all their lives. But that might be just the trouble. A
man who has spent his youth and manhood in the minute study of New Testament
texts and of other people’s studies of them, whose literary experience of those
texts lacks any standard of comparison such as can only grow from a wide and
deep and genial experience of literature in general, is, I should think, very
likely to miss the obvious thing about them. If he tells me that something in a
Gospel is legend or romance, I want to know how many legends and romances he
has read, how well his palate is trained in detecting them by the flavour; not
how many years he has spend on that Gospel. But I had better turn to examples.
In what is already a very old
commentary I read that the fourth Gospel is regarded by one school as a
‘spiritual romance’, ‘a poem not a history’, to be judged by the same canons as
Nathan’s parable, the book of Jonah, Paradise Lost ‘or, more exactly, Pilgrim’s
Progress’. After a man has said that, why need one attend to anything else he
says about any book in the world? Note that he regards Pilgrim’s Progress, a
story which professes to be a dream and flaunts its allegorical nature by every
single proper name it uses, as the closest parallel. Note that the whole epic
panoply of Milton goes for nothing. But even if we leave our the grosser
absurdities and keep to Jonah, the insensitiveness is crass - Jonah, a tale
with as few even pretended historical attachments as Job, grotesque in incident
and surely not without a distinct, though of course edifying, vein of typically
Jewish humour. Then turn to John. Read the dialogues: that with the Samaritan
woman at the well, or that which follows the healing of the man born blind.
Look at its pictures: Jesus (if I may use the word) doodling with his finger in
the dust; the unforgettable en de nux (13:30). I have been reading
poems, romances, vision-literature, legends, myths all my life. I know what
they are like. I know that not one of them is like this. Of this text there are
only two possible views. Either this is reportage - though it may no doubt
contain errors - pretty close up to the facts; nearly as close as Boswell. Or
else, some unknown writer in the second century, without known predecessors, or
successors, suddenly anticipated the whole technique of modern, novelistic,
realistic narrative. If it is untrue, it must be narrative of that kind. The
reader who doesn’t see this has simply not learned to read. I would recommend
him to read Auerbach.
Here, from Bultmann’s Theology
of the New Testament is another: ‘Observe in what unassimilated fashion the
prediction of the parousia (Mark 8:38) follows upon the prediction of the
passion (8:31). What can he mean? Unassimilated? Bultmann believes that
predictions of the parousia are older than those of the passion. He therefore
wants to believer - and no doubt does believe - that when they occur in the
same passage some discrepancy or ‘unassimilation’ must be perceptible between
them. But surly he foists this on the text with shocking lack of perception.
Peter has confessed Jesus to be the Anointed One. That flash of glory is hardly
over before the dark prophecy begins - that the Son of Man must suffer and die.
Then this contrast is repeated. Peter, raised for a moment by his confession,
makes his false step: the crushing rebuff ‘Get thee behind me’ follows. Then,
across that momentary ruin which Peter (as so often) becomes, the voice of the
Master, turning to the crowd, generalizes the moral. All his followers must
take up the cross. This avoidance of suffering, this self-preservation, is not
what life is really about. Then, more definitely still, the summons to
martyrdom. You must stand to your tackling. If you disown Christ here and now,
he will disown you later. Logically, emotionally, imaginatively, the sequence
is perfect. Only a Bultmann could think otherwise.
Finally, from the same
Bultmann: ‘the personality of Jesus has no importance for the kerygma either of
Paul or John... Indeed, the tradition of the earliest Church did not even
unconsciously preserve a picture of his personality. Every attempt to
reconstruct one remains a play of subjective imagination.’
So there is no personality of
our Lord presented in the New Testament. Through what strange process has this
learned German gone in order to make himself blind to what all men except him
see? What evidence have we that he would recognize a personality if it were
there? For it is Bultmann contra mundum. If anything whatever is common to all
believers, and even to many unbelievers, it is the sense that in the Gospels
they have met a personality. There are characters whom we know to be historical
but of whom we do not feel that we have any personal knowledge - knowledge by
acquaintance; such are Alexander, Attila, or William of Orange. There are
others who make no claim to historical reality but whom, none the less, we know
as we know real people: Falstaff, Uncle Toby, Mr. Pickwick. But there are only
three characters who, claiming the first sort of reality, also actually have
the second. And surely everyone knows who they are: Plato’s Socrates, the Jesus
of the Gospels, and Boswell’s Johnson. Our acquaintance with them shows itself
in a dozen ways. When we look into the apocryphal gospels, we find ourselves
constantly saying of this or that logion, ‘No. It’s a fine saying, but not his.
That wasn’t how he talked’ - just as we do with all pseudo-Johnsoniana. We are
not in the least perturbed by the contrasts within each character: the union in
Socrates of silly and scabrous titters about Greek pederasty with the highest
mystical fervor and the homeliest good sense; in Johnson, of profound gravity
and melancholy with that love of fun and nonsense which Boswell never
understood though Fanny Burney did; in Jesus of peasant shrewdness, intolerable
severity, and irresistible tenderness. So strong is the flavour of the
personality that, even while he says things which, on any other assumption than
that of divine Incarnation in the fullest sense, would be appallingly arrogant,
yet we - and many unbelievers too - accept him as his own valuation when he
says ‘I am meek and lowly of heart’. Even those passages in the New Testament
which superficially, and in intention, are most concerned with the divine, and
least with the human nature, bring us fact to face with the personality. I am
not sure that they don’t do this more than any others. ‘We beheld his glory,
the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of graciousness and
reality... which we have looked upon and our hands have handled. What is gained
by trying to evade or dissipate this shattering immediacy of personal contact by
talk about ‘that significance which the early Church found that it was impelled
to attribute to the Master’? This hits us in the face. Not what they were
impelled to do but what impelled them. I begin to fear that by personality Dr.
Bultmann means what I should call impersonality: what you’d get in a Dictionary
of National Biography article or an obituary or a Victorian Life and Letters of
Yeshua Bar-Yosef in three volumes with photographs.
That then is my first bleat.
These men ask me to believe they can read between the lines of the old texts;
the evidence is their obvious inability to read (in any sense worth discussing)
the lines themselves. They claim to see fern-seed and can’t see an elephant ten
yards way in broad daylight.
Now for my second bleat. All
theology of the liberal type involves at some point - and often involves
throughout - the claim that the real behavior and purpose and teaching of
Christ came very rapidly to be misunderstood and misrepresented by his
followers, and has been recovered or exhumed only by modern scholars. Now long
before I became interested in theology I had met this kind of theory elsewhere.
The tradition of Jowett still dominated the study of ancient philosophy when I
was reading Greats. One was brought up to believer that the real meaning of
Plato had been misunderstood by Aristotle and wildly travestied by the
neo-Platonists, only to be recovered by the moderns. When recovered, it turned
out (most fortunately) that Plato had really all along been an English Hegelian,
rather like T.H. Green. I have met it a third time in my own professional
studies; every week a clever undergraduate, every quarter a dull American don,
discovers for the first time what some Shakespearean play really meant. But in
this third instance I am a privileged person. The revolution in thought and
sentiment which has occurred in my own lifetime is so great that I belong,
mentally, to Shakespeare’s world far more than to that of these recent
interpreters. I see - I feel it in my bones - I know beyond argument - that
most of their interpretations are merely impossible; they involve a way of
looking at things which was not known in 1914, much less in the Jacobean
period. This daily confirms my suspicion of the same approach to Plato or the
New Testament. The idea that any man or writer should be opaque to those who
lived in the same culture, spoke the same language, shared the same habitual
imagery and unconscious assumptions, and yet be transparent to those who have
none of these advantages, is in my opinion preposterous. There is an a priori
improbability in it which almost no argument and no evidence could
counterbalance.
Thirdly, I find in these
theologians a constant use of the principle that the miraculous does not occur.
Thus any statement put into our Lord’s mouth by the old texts, which, if he had
really made it, would constitute a prediction of the future, is taken to have
been put in after the occurrence which it seemed to predict. This is very
sensible if we start by knowing that inspired prediction can never occur.
Similarly in general, the rejection as unhistorical of all passages which
narrate miracles is sensible if we start by knowing that the miraculous in
general never occurs. Now I do not here want to discuss whether the miraculous
is possible. I only want to point out that this is a purely philosophical
question. Scholars, as scholars, speak on it with no more authority than anyone
else. The canon ‘If miraculous, then unhistorical’ is one they bring to their
study of the texts, not one they have learned from it. If one is speaking of
authority, the united authority of all the biblical critics in the world counts
here for nothing. On this they speak simply as men; men obviously influenced
by, and perhaps insufficiently critical of, the spirit of the age they grew up
in.
But my fourth bleat - which is
also my loudest and longest - is still to come.
All this sort of criticism
attempts to reconstruct the genesis of the texts it studies; what vanished
documents each author used, when and where he wrote, with what purposes, under
what influences - the whole Sitz im Leben of the text. This is done
with immense erudition and great ingenuity. And at first sight it is very
convincing. I think I should be convinced by it myself, but that I carry about
with me a charm - the herb moly - against it. You must excuse me if I now speak
for a while of myself. The value of what I say depends on its being first-hand
evidence.
What forearms me against all
these reconstructions is the fact that I have seen it all from the other end of
the stick. I have watched reviewers reconstructing the genesis of my own books
in just this way.
Until you come to be reviewed
yourself you would never believe how little of an ordinary review is taken up
by criticism in the strict sense; by evaluation, praise, or censure, of the
book actually written. Most of it is taken up with imaginary histories of the
process by which you wrote it. The very terms which the reviewers use in
praising or dispraising often imply such a history. They praise a passage as
‘spontaneous’ and censure another as ‘labored’; that is, they think they know
that you wrote the one currenete calamo and the other invita Minerva.
What the value of such
reconstructions is I learned very early in my career. I had published a book of
essays; and in the one into which I had put most of my heart, the one I really
cared about and in which I discharged a keen enthusiasm, was on William Morris.
And in almost the first review I was told that this was obviously the only one
in the book in which I had felt no interest. Now don’t mistake. The critic was,
I now believe, quite right in thinking it the worst essay in the book; at least
everyone agreed with him. Where he was totally wrong was in his imaginary
history of the causes which produces its dullness.
Well, this made me prick up my
ears. Since then I have watched with some care similar imaginary histories both
of my own books and of books by friends whose real history I knew. Reviewers,
both friendly and hostile, will dash you off such histories with great
confidence; will tell you what public events had directed the author’s mind to
this or that, what other authors had influenced him, what his overall intention
was, what sort of audience he principally addressed, why - and when - he did
everything.
Now I must record my
impression; then distinct from it, what I can say with certainty. My impression
is that in the whole of my experience not one of these guesses has on any one
point been right; that the method shows a record of 100 per cent failure. You
would expect that by mere chance they would hit as often as the miss. But it is
my impression that they do no such thing. I can’t remember a single hit. But as
I have not kept a careful record my mere impression may be mistaken. What I
think I can say with certainty is that they are usually wrong.
And yet they would often sound
- if you didn’t know the truth - extremely convincing. Many reviewers suggested
that the Ring in Tolkein’s The Lord of the Rings was suggested by the atom
bomb. What could be more plausible? Here is a book published when everyone was
preoccupied by that sinister invention; here in the centre of the book is a
weapon which it seems madness to throw away yet fatal to use. Yet in fact, the
chronology of the book’s composition makes the theory impossible. Only the
other week a reviewer said that a fairy-tale by my friend Roger Lancelyn Green
was influenced by fairy-tales of mine. Nothing could be more probable. I have
an imaginary country with a beneficent lion in it; Green, one with a beneficent
tiger. Green and I can be proved to read one another’s works; to be indeed in
various ways closely associated. The case for an affiliation is far stronger
than many which we accept as conclusive when dead authors are concerned. But
it’s all untrue nevertheless. I know the genesis of that Tiger and that Lion
and they are quite independent.
Now this surely ought to give
us pause. The reconstruction of the history of a text, when the text is
ancient, sounds very convincing. But one is after all sailing by dead
reckoning; the results cannot be checked by fact. In order to decide how
reliable the method is, what more could you ask for than to be shown an
instance where the same method is at work and we have facts to check it by?
Well, that is what I have done. And we find, that when this check is available,
the results are either always, or else nearly always, wrong. The ‘assured
results of modern scholarship’ as to the way in which an old book was written,
are ‘assured’, we may conclude, only because the men who know the facts are
dead and can’t blow the gaff. The huge essays in my own field which reconstruct
the history of Piers Plowman or The Faerie Queen are most unlikely to be
anything but sheer illusions.
Am I then venturing to compare
every whipster who writes a review in a modern weekly with these great scholars
who have devoted their whole lives to the detailed study of the New Testament?
If the former are always wrong, does it follow that the later must fare no better?
There are two answers to this.
First, while I respect the learning of the great Biblical critics, I am not yet
persuaded that their judgement is equally to be respected. But, secondly,
consider with what overwhelming advantages the mere reviewers start. They
reconstruct the history of a book written by someone whose mother-tongue is the
same as theirs; a contemporary, educated like themselves, living in something
like the same mental and spiritual climate. They have everything to help them.
The superiority in judgement and diligence which your are going to attribute to
the Biblical critics will have to be almost superhuman if it is to offset the
fact that they are everywhere faced with customs, language,
race-characteristics, class-characteristics, a religious background, habits of
composition, and basic assumptions, which no scholarship will ever enable any
man now alive to know as surely and intimately and instinctively as the
reviewer can know mine. And for the very same reason, remember, the Biblical
critics, whatever reconstructions they devise, can never be crudely proved
wrong. St. Mark is dead. When they meet St. Peter, there will be more pressing
matters to discuss.
You may say, of course, that
such reviewers are foolish in so far as they guess how a sort of book they
never wrote themselves was written by another. They assume that you wrote a
story as they would try to write a story; the fact that they would so try,
explains why they have not produced any stories. But are the Biblical critics in
this way much better off? Dr. Bultmann never wrote a gospel. Has the experience
of his learned, specialized, and no doubt meritorious, life really given him
any power of seeing into the minds of those long dead men who were caught up
into what, on any view, must be regarded as the central religious experience of
the whole human race? It is no incivility to say - he himself would admit -
that he must in every way be divided from the evangelists by far more
formidable barriers - spiritual as well as intellectual - than any that could
exist between my reviewers and me.
My picture of one layman’s
reaction - and I think it is not a rare one - would be incomplete without some
account of the hopes he secretly cherishes and the naïve reflections with which
he sometimes keeps his spirits up.
You must face the fact that he
does not expect the present school of theological thought to be everlasting. He
thinks, perhaps wishfully thinks, that the whole thing may blow over. I have
learned in other fields of study how transitory the ‘assured results of modern
scholarship’ may be, how soon the scholarship ceases to be modern. The
confident treatment to which the New Testament is subjected is no longer
applied to profane texts. There used to be English scholars who were prepared
to cut up Henry VI between half a dozen authors and assign his share to each.
We don’t do that now. When I was a boy one would have been laughed at for
supposing there had been a real Homer: the disintegrators seemed to have
triumphed for ever. But Homer seems to be creeping back. Even the belief of the
ancient Greeks that the Mycenaeans were their ancestors and spoke Greek has
been surprisingly supported. We may without disgrace believe in a historical
Arthur. Everywhere, except in theology, there has been a vigorous growth of
skepticism about skepticism itself. We can’t keep ourselves from muttering
multa renascentur quae jam cecidere (“Many now in disuse will be revived”—Horace).
Nor can a man of my age ever
forget how suddenly and completely the idealist philosophy of his youth fell.
McTaggart, Green, Bosanquet, Bradley seemed enthroned for ever; they went down
as suddenly as the Bastille. And the interesting thing is that while I lived
under that dynasty I felt various difficulties and objections which I never
dared to express. They were so frightfully obvious that I felt sure they must
be mere misunderstandings: the great men could not have made such very
elementary mistakes as those which my objections implied. But very similar
objections - though put, not doubt, far more cogently than I could have put
them - were among the criticisms which finally prevailed. They would now be the
stock answers to English Hegeliansim. If anyone present tonight has felt the
same shy and tentative doubts about the great Biblical critics, perhaps he need
not feel quite certain that they are only his stupidity. They may have a future
he little dreams of.
We derive a little comfort,
too, from our mathematical colleagues. When a critic reconstructs the genesis
of a text he usually has to use what may be called linked hypotheses. Thus
Bultmann says that Peter’s confession is ‘an Easter-story projected backward
into Jesus’ life-time’. The first hypothesis is that Peter made no such
confession. Then, granting that, there is a second hypothesis as to how the
false story of his having done so might have grown up. Now let us suppose -
what I am far from granting - that the first hypothesis has a probability of 90
per cent. Let us assume that the second hypothesis also has a probability of 90
per cent. But the two together don’t still have 90 per cent, for the second
comes in only on the assumption of the first. You have not A plus B; you have a
complex AB. And the mathematicians tell me that AB has only an 81 per cent
probability. I’m not good enough at arithmetic to work it out, but you see that
if, in a complex reconstruction, you go on thus superinducing hypothesis on
hypothesis, you will in the end get a complex in which, though each hypothesis
by itself has in a sense a high probability, the whole has almost none.
You must, however, not paint
the picture too black. We are not fundamentalists. We think that different
elements in this sort of theology have different degrees of strength. The
nearer it sticks to mere textual criticism, of the old sort, Lachmann’s sort,
the more we are disposed to believe in it. And of course, we agree that
passages almost verbally identical cannot be independent. It is as we glide
away from this into reconstructions of a subtler and more ambitious kind that
our faith in the method waivers; and our faith in Christianity is
proportionally corroborated. The sort of statement that arouses our deepest
skepticism is the statement that something in a Gospel cannot be historical
because it shows a theology or an ecclesiology too developed for so early a
date. For this implies that we know, first of all, that there was any
development in the matter, and secondly, how quickly it proceeded. It even
implies an extraordinary homogeneity and continuity of development: implicitly
denies that anyone could have greatly anticipated anyone else. This seems to
involve knowing about a number of long dead people - for the early Christians
were, after all, people - things of which I believe few of us could have given
an accurate account if we had lived among them; all the forward and backward
surge of discussion, preaching, and individual religious experience. I could
not speak with similar confidence about the circle I have chiefly lived in
myself. I could not describe the history even of my own thought as confidently
as these men describe the history of the early Church’s mind. And I am
perfectly certain no one else could. Suppose a future scholar knew I had
abandoned Christianity in my teens, and that, also in my teens, I went to an
atheist tutor. Would not this seem far better evidence than most of what we
have about the development of Christian theology in the first two centuries?
Would not he conclude that my apostasy was due to the tutor? And then reject as
‘backward projection’ any story which represented me as an atheist before I
went to the tutor? Yet he would be wrong. I am sorry to have become once more
autobiographical. But reflection on the extreme improbability of his own life -
by historical standards - seems to me a profitable exercise for everyone. It
encourages a due agnosticism.
For agnosticism is, in a
sense, what I am preaching. I do not wish to reduce the skeptical elements in
your minds. I am only suggesting that it need not be reserved exclusively for the
New Testament and the Creeds. Try doubting something else.
Such skepticism might, I
think, begin at the very beginning with the thought which underlies the whole
demythology of our time. It was put long ago by Tyrrell. As man progresses he
revolts against ‘earlier and inadequate expressions of the religious idea...
Taken literally, and not symbolically, they do not meet his need. And as long
as he demands to picture to himself distinctly the term and satisfaction of
that need he is doomed to doubt, for his picturings will necessarily be drawn
from the world of his present experience.’
In one way of course Tyrrell
was saying nothing new. The Negative Theology of Pseudo-Dionysius had said as
much, but it drew no such conclusions as Tyrrell. Perhaps this is because the
older tradition found our conceptions inadequate to God whereas Tyrrell find it
inadequate to ‘the religious idea’. He doesn’t say whose idea. But I am afraid
he means man’s idea. We, being men, know what we think; and we find the
doctrines of the Resurrection, the Ascension, and the Second Coming inadequate
to our thoughts. But supposing these things were the expressions of God’s
thoughts?
It might still be true that
‘taken literally and not symbolically’ they are inadequate. From which the
conclusion commonly drawn is that they must be taken symbolically, not
literally; that is, wholly symbolically. All the details are equally symbolical
and analogical.
But surely there is a flaw
here. The argument runs like this. All the details are derived from our present
experience; but the reality transcends our experience: therefore all the
details are wholly and equally symbolical. But suppose a dog were trying to
form a conception of human life. All the details in its picture would be
derived from canine experience. Therefore all that the dog imagined could, at
best, be only analogically true of human life. The conclusion is false. If the
dog visualized our scientific researches in terms of ratting, this would be
analogical; but it thought that eating could be predicated of humans only in an
analogical sense, the dog would be wrong. In fact if a dog could, per
impossible, be plunged for a day into human life, it would be hardly more
surprised by hitherto unimagined differences than by hitherto unsuspected
similarities. A reverent dog would be shocked. A modernist dog, mistrusting the
whole experience, would ask to be taken to the vet.
But the dog can’t get into
human life. Consequently, though it can be sure that its best ideas of human
life are full of analogy and symbol, it could never point to any one detail and
say, ‘This is entirely symbolic.’ You cannot know that everything in the
representation of a thing is symbolical unless you have independent access to
the ting and can compare it with the representation. Dr. Tyrrell can tell that
the story of the Ascension is inadequate to his religious idea, because he
knows his own idea and can compare it with the story. But how if we are asking
about a transcendent, objective reality to which the story is our sole access?
‘We know not - oh we know not.’ But then we must take our ignorance seriously.
Of course if ‘taken literally
and not symbolically’ means ‘taken in terms of mere physics,’ then this story
is not even a religious story. Motion away from the earth - which is what
Ascension physically means - would not in itself be an event of spiritual
significance. Therefore, you argue, the spiritual reality can have nothing but
an analogical connection with the story of an ascent. For the union of God with
Goad and of man with God-man can have nothing to do with space. Who told you
this? What you really mean is that we can’t see how it could possibly have
anything to do with it. That is a quite different proposition. When I know as I
am known I shall be able to tell which parts of the story were purely
symbolical and which, if any, were not; shall see how the transcendent reality
either excludes and repels locality, or how unimaginably it assimilates and
load it with significance. Had we not better wait?
Such are the reactions of one bleating layman to Modern Theology. It is
right that you should hear them. You will not perhaps hear them very often
again. Your parishioners will not often speak to you quite frankly. Once the
layman was anxious to hide the fact that he believed so much less than the
vicar; now he tends to hide the fact that he believes so much more. Missionary
to the priests of one’s own church is an embarrassing role; though I have a
horrid feeling that if such mission work is not soon undertaken the future
history of the Church of England is likely to be short.
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