Trinity by
any other name (?)
"If
Orthodox Christians continue to insist on the appropriateness of
'Father/Son/Spirit' to designate the three divine Persons, and are
reluctant to admit any other 'Names,' it is because of ecclesial
experience as well as of scriptural revelation. Our life in the Church –
including, among other elements, personal prayer, liturgical
celebration, participation in the sacraments, and ascetic struggle
toward “holiness” or sanctification – confirm what we know of God from
the way he reveals himself to us in Scripture."
Written by the Very Rev. John Breck
Yesterday’s local paper relegated the brutal war in Afghanistan and Iraq
to page eight and didn’t even mention that California is in imminent
danger of breaking off at the San Andreas Fault and floating out into
the Pacific. The lead article on page one read “Episcopalians
‘regret’ gay rift.” This was conjoined with another piece, titled
“Trinity by any other name just as holy, Presbyterians say.”
This juxtaposition was hardly fair to the Presbyterians, since it seemed
to place the two issues in the same dubious category, as though their
struggle to “reclaim the Trinity” in their theology and worship stems
from and raises problems equivalent to those that are creating turmoil
in the Episcopal Church. In fact, they are entirely different matters.
The latter turns on a fundamental moral question: the appropriateness of
ordaining as bishops or other clerics those who are active homosexuals.
The Presbyterians, on the other hand, while facing similar ethical
issues with regard to the pastoral ministry, are engaged in a serious
quest to reclaim “the doctrine of the Trinity in theology, worship, and
life.”
1.
The way the Associated Press article addressed this effort toward
renewing Trinitarian faith among Presbyterians made it seem rather
farcical. It pointed out that the church’s national assembly tentatively
approved a modification of the way traditional terminology, “Father, Son
and Holy Spirit,” is used in theological discourse and worship. In
addition to those classic Names, parishes may now opt for metaphors such
as “Mother, Child, Womb”; or “Rock, Redeemer, Friend.” It was enough to
make an Orthodox reader wince (“Glory to the Rock”? “O Heavenly Womb”?)
The documents cited here in the footnote nevertheless represent a
serious and commendable effort to present traditional Trinitarian
doctrine as it is rooted in Scripture and developed throughout Church
history (particularly Augustine). The authors lament the fact that by
eliminating masculine names for God in the interests of “inclusive”
language, Presbyterians have come to use the single expression “God” to
the exclusion of Trinitarian designations. This has led to what Charles
Wiley calls a “functional Unitarianism.” He goes on to show the
inadequacy of other popular names for the Triune God, such as
“Creator/Christ/Spirit,” or “Creator/Redeemer/Sustainer.” Then he
proposes, in addition to the biblical designations “Father/Son/Spirit,”
other expressions that conform to three criteria (presented in the
original statement, “The Trinity: God’s Love Overflowing”): the terms
must have an inner relationship; they must be personal or functional
(the two should not be mixed); and the functional terms cannot replace
personal terms, “but can amplify and enrich our understanding of God.”
It is this last phrase that raises the most serious questions for
Orthodox and others who treasure traditional Christian Faith. Although
these images may be found scattered throughout the two Testaments, to
what extent do designations such as “The One to Whom, the One by Whom,
and the One in Whom we offer our praise”; or “Overflowing Font, Living
Water, Flowing River”; or “Rock, Cornerstone and Temple”; or “The Fire
that Consumes, the Hammer that Breaks, the Storm that Melts Mountains”
really “amplify and enrich our understanding of God”?
Reading these texts gives the impression that they confuse two separate
issues. On the one hand, there is a genuine concern to recover an
authentic, traditional vision of God, provided by his self-revelation in
the person of Jesus Christ. This concern has led those responsible for
the documents to synthesize in a very positive way traditional
Trinitarian dogma, stressing the inner relationships of the three
Persons (God ad intra) as well as their unique and undivided operation
within history, the divine economy of salvation (God ad extra).
On the other hand, in order to adapt this traditional vision of the
Trinity to modern forms of worship and integrate it into the church’s
mission activity, the authors feel it necessary to find metaphors and
other figures that respond to what is basically a sociological and
political issue: the perceived need to eliminate masculine names for the
three Persons of the Godhead because of abuses that have, throughout the
history of the Church, led to male domination and the subordination of
women. Confusion between these two leaves the reader with the impression
that the proposed new names or figures for the Trinity result more from
a need for political correctness than from a concern for theological
accuracy.
If Orthodox Christians continue to insist on the appropriateness of
“Father/Son/Spirit” to designate the three divine Persons, and are
reluctant to admit any other “Names,” it is because of ecclesial
experience as well as of scriptural revelation. Our life in the Church –
including, among other elements, personal prayer, liturgical
celebration, participation in the sacraments, and ascetic struggle
toward “holiness” or sanctification – confirm what we know of God from
the way he reveals himself to us in Scripture. God of course is “beyond
gender.” Nevertheless, in our experience he relates and reveals himself
to us precisely as Father: the Father of his eternal Son, Jesus Christ,
and the Father of us all, a Father who, through the revelatory work of
the Son and the sanctifying grace of the Holy Spirit, transforms us into
“children of God” (John 1:12-13, 18; Rom 8:12-17). Jesus is the
incarnate Son of the Father, who assumes the fullness of our nature,
dies and rises from death, in order to sanctify and glorify us: a truth
and a reality that is sadly distorted by such inadequate figures as
“Ray,” “Cornerstone,” or “Hammer that Breaks”(!). And the Spirit remains
the Holy Spirit of God, who “proceeds from the Father” and is sent into
the world by the Father and the Son to create, inspire, reveal and
sanctify. As the divine Breath (ruah, pneuma – yes, feminine in Syriac
tradition), the Spirit “is everywhere present, filling all things”;
Spirit is the divine Life-force who brings beauty and harmony to the
creation, while leading us from futility to saving hope (Gen 1:2; Rom
8:18-25).
Interpreted and used properly, a great many biblical images can, without
doubt, illumine our understanding of God’s person and work. But to
substitute those figures, those metaphors, for the personal Names that
God himself has revealed to us leads inevitably to spiritually
destructive heresy, a tragic distortion of the true image and identity
of the Triune God, as he has made himself known to us throughout history
and within our own life and experience. Moreover, the very idea that
some Presbyterians ministers might “baptize” using those metaphors
suggests that there exist between them and us basic and irreconcilable
differences in our respective understandings of the nature and person of
God.
---------------------->
1. “The Trinity: God’s Overflowing Love,”
statement of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.),
<http://www.pcusa.org/theologyandworship>
.
See as well
the summary paper by Charles Wiley, “Reclaiming the Trinity,”
<http://www.pcusa.org/today/believe/past/may05/trinity.htm>
,
with the link to
William E. Phipps, “The doctrine of the Trinity is not irrational.”
From the web site of the Orthodox Church in America: <http://www.oca.org>
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