2.1. The Missing Kingdom Narrative
Zizioulas follows liturgical theologians such as Alexander Schmemann in describing Orthodox Christian worship as eschatological, concretely symbolising our participation in the life of the age to come: it begins with “the invocation of the Kingdom, continues with the representation of it, and ends with our participation in the Supper of the Kingdom, our union and communion with the life of God in Trinity” (
Zizioulas 2011, p. 39). Although it is “glaringly obvious” that the Divine Liturgy is an image of the kingdom of God, John Zizioulas laments the disappearance of the kingdom of God in Orthodox Christian consciousness “under the weight of other kinds of questions and other forms of piety” (ibid., p. 40). He notes that “our theology in recent years does not seem to have given appropriate weight to the eschatological dimension of the Eucharist” (ibid., p. 39)—clarifying elsewhere that by “in recent years” he means everyone since Maximus in the seventh century, and not a few before him! This loss of an eschatological consciousness has had “very grave consequences for the way the Liturgy is celebrated, the piety of the faithful and the whole life of the Church.” It is a serious distortion of the Orthodox faith for “we are misled into notions alien to the true Orthodox tradition, often thinking that we are defending Orthodoxy, whereas in fact we are reproducing and promoting ideas foreign to its tradition” (ibid., p. 40).
Throughout his many works of New Testament scholarship, NT Wright echoes the same concern about the profound distortion of Christian faith that results from missing the eschatological dimension of the kingdom of God as a present and coming reality. Like Zizioulas, Wright insists that the full narrative is right in front of our eyes—in the gospels and other writings of the New Testament—but even the sincerest biblically grounded Christians miss it. The main cause of this blindness is an Enlightenment worldview founded on a split-level world similar to ancient Epicureanism: God lives in his heaven, away from human affairs on earth, and the goal of Christian faith becomes salvation conceived as ultimately escaping from this world and going to heaven. The result is a dichotomy between the sacred and secular, a focus on individual piety and salvation, and a reduction of the spiritual life to simply one strand of human existence. Through the lens of this distorted worldview, we miss the essential message of the kingdom of God and the whole of the gospel is reinterpreted. Even the “majestic creeds, full as they are of solemn truth and supple wisdom” prove to be of little use: written to safeguard against specific heresies, without a fuller liturgical and narrative context they do not expound the full story, let alone “the main thing the gospels are trying to tell us,” and they even imply the kingdom only comes at the end of time (
Wright 2012, p. 16). Echoing the grave consequences Zizioulas observes, Wright notes that this missing kingdom narrative affects everything, including “our discipleship, our preaching, our hermeneutics, and even our praying” (ibid., p. 20).
Wright and Zizioulas are agreed that Christians have strayed away from the eschatology of the early church and inadvertently fallen into a form of gnosticism or Platonism, “substituting ‘souls going to heaven’ for the promised new creation” (
Wright 2016, p. 147). Wright points to the misunderstanding of ζωὴ αἰώνιος (literally “life of the age”) as an everlasting life understood as “timeless heavenly bliss,” rather than as the long-promised age to come in which God would decisively act to bring “justice, peace, and healing to the world as it groaned and toiled within the ‘present age’” (
Wright 2012, pp. 44–45). We need to realise instead that
heaven is not our destined place outside of space and time, but it refers rather to “God’s space” and earth to “our space” and that heaven and earth, “made from the start to overlap and interlock, did so fully and finally in Jesus” (
Wright 2016, p. 162). The kingdom of heaven therefore means God’s rule coming to earth—“Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6.10, RSV)—not that good people will go in the future to some kind of disembodied heaven. For Wright, to screen out the inauguration in Jesus of God’s kingdom coming on earth as in heaven is not only to adopt a form of gnostic detached spirituality rejected by the early church, but it also leads us away from our true image-bearing vocation as humans to “live as worshipping stewards within God’s heaven-and-earth reality” (ibid., p. 77).
Where Wright sees a creeping in of ancient errors under modern cultural worldviews unleashed by the Enlightenment, Zizioulas delves directly into the philosophical underpinnings of the missing kingdom narrative. As early as the third century, in authors such as Clement and Origen of Alexandria, Zizioulas sees the development of a Christian gnosticism in which salvation “no longer means the hope of a new world, with a new community and structure” but rather “purifying the soul so that it may be re-united with the Logos who is before all society and before the created and material world” (
Zizioulas 2008, p. 129). Christianity is transformed from its purpose of gathering a community “imaging the future kingdom” (ibid., p. 130) into a matter of personal spirituality, of individual piety—the “going to heaven” business, Wright laments. For Zizioulas, this individualistic spirituality, which he admits has sadly dominated since the third century, is theologically and philosophically grounded in a view of causality that looks to what comes
before, rather than to the
eschaton and “the future recapitulation of human history” (ibid., p. 131). He turns to Maximus for the solution, for in the seventh century confessor he finds a renewed eschatology and emphasis on the future kingdom of God that radically overturns the Greek notion of causality (
Zizioulas 2011, p. 42). Zizioulas refers to Maximus’
Scholia on Dionysius’ Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, in which Maximus follows Dionysius in calling the rites of the liturgy images (εικόνες) of what is true: they are “symbols,” not “the truth,” for “what is accomplished visibly” represents “the things that are unseen and secret, which are the causes and archetypes of things perceptible.” In other words, the “perceptible symbols” are the effect, whereas the “noetic and spiritual” realities are the causes (ibid., p. 44). Zizioulas points out that at first blush this seems to fit that common reading in Orthodox thought in which the liturgy celebrated on earth is
symbolic, imaging forth the true heavenly and eternal liturgy: “one seems to be moving in an atmosphere of Platonism.” However, Maximus ends his passage on a surprising note, saying: “For the things of the Old Testament are the shadow; those of the New Testament are the image. The truth is the state of things to come.” In this phrase, Zizioulas detects in Maximus a new philosophy of causality and an
eschatological ontology in which the eucharistic liturgy and the church are founded neither in a cosmological past nor in a Platonic type of ideal reality, but “in a ‘reality of the future’, in the Kingdom which is to come” (ibid.). In other words, the “eschaton projects an image of itself backwards” (
Zizioulas 2008, p. 137) and what is enacted in the Divine Liturgy is “
what is to come,
He who comes, and the
Kingdom which He will establish” (
Zizioulas 2011, p. 45).
For Zizioulas, Maximus’ eschatological ontology restores the understanding of the church, constituted by the eucharistic assembly, as the image of the kingdom of God from a dangerously Platonic model to a solidly biblical one. Like Wright, Zizioulas is keen to resist and roll back the Platonising trends in Christian theology to return to a fully biblical eschatology and theology of the age to come. Despite the worrying developments in third century Alexandria and their ongoing distorting effect on Christian faith, for Zizioulas it is Maximus who ensures that the biblical understanding of the kingdom is “securely established on an ontological basis: the Eucharist is not simply connected with the Kingdom which is to come, it draws from it its being and truth” (
Zizioulas 2011, p. 45). He therefore frequently laments that Christians approach worship without any eschatological awareness. He especially criticises Orthodox clergy who “dangerously distort” the Divine Liturgy’s eschatological character and destroy “the ‘image’ of the Kingdom that the Liturgy is meant to be,” saying that it “would take an entire volume to describe what our Liturgy has suffered at the hands of its clergy” (ibid., p. 46). With that grim warning in mind, we now turn to what Zizioulas and Wright describe as the principles of a properly kingdom-oriented worship.
2.3. Renewing the Narrative of the Age to Come
As we have seen in their description of kingdom-oriented worship, both John Zizioulas and NT Wright emphasise the indispensable role of worship in the experience here and now of the life of the age to come, and they both clearly teach that liturgy shapes people for the kingdom. For Zizioulas, the key to participating in the kingdom is an awareness of eschatological identity, an understanding that true causality is the future not the past, and that the true nature of all people and things is what they will be in the age to come (
Zizioulas 2010, p. 15). This knowledge is itself transformative, allowing human beings to fulfil their image-bearing vocation to be kingdom-builders: the “more of your eschatological identity you carry with you, the more you will love and come to the aid of whomever needs your help, whatever it costs you” (
Zizioulas 2008, p. 32). Apart from insisting on our iconological participation in the eschaton through the Divine Liturgy, however, Zizioulas never articulates in any practical way how awareness of this eschatological identity is to be acquired, how eschatological ontology works through worship to make us into people who belong in and derive their being from the age to come. A pragmatic solution is sorely needed, though: we have already seen just how scathingly he decries clergy who, lacking the proper eschatological awareness, have turned the liturgy into “a distortion of the image of the last times” (
Zizioulas 2011, p. 46).
Throughout this paper, we have seen that, while sharing Zizioulas’ concern for the dearth of awareness among Christians of an experience here and now of the new way of life of the age to come, Wright perceives the real solution will come with the recovery the full kingdom
narrative. He emphasises that it is in the telling of the
story that the work of God in Jesus to establish his kingdom becomes the “mandate and pattern” for the church: “The more you tell the story of Jesus and pray for his Spirit, the more you discover what the church should be doing in the present time” (
Wright 2012, p. 119). What Wright says of the gospels could equally be said of the kingdom worship of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy: the story has a “dense and complex centre,” and we need to regularly “be struck anew by the thick, rich, multilayered nature” of this narrative, “so full of vivid human scenes, but so evocative in their resonance of meaning about the world, God, life and death, and pretty much everything else” (ibid., p. 157). In the telling of God’s story in worship, there is the potential for the transforming encounter and renewal of our minds that we need:
God has to sweep away all our ideas, including all our ideas about God, in order to draw us, unwilling as we are, face to face with the reality, which is both greater and gentler than we can imagine. And if that is true in our praying and thinking—if it is true that we have to be stripped of our own noisy jumble of thoughts in order to hear afresh the word of the triune God—it is just as true in our living.
In liturgy, then, God’s story shapes our own, the narrative of the age to come moulding us to be citizens and bringers of the kingdom.
The difficulty, of course, is that as Zizioulas and Wright have both identified, it is possible to participate in liturgy or read the gospels and completely miss the clear and overarching narrative of the kingdom that pervades the Christian story. As Wright points out, we have cut the narrative “down to size” and have allowed it “only to speak about the few concerns that happened to occupy our minds already,” rather than setting it “free to generate an entire world of meaning in all directions, a new world in which we would discover not only new life, but new vocation.” What occupy our minds already are competing narratives that create what Wright calls “bad habits of thought” (
Wright 2012, p. 158). These result in perception filters that blind us to even the most obvious elements of God’s story, in cognitive biases or subjective perceptions of reality that distort our apprehension of the truths revealed in the narrative and experienced in worship. Wright lays the blame primarily on worldviews arising from a triad of cultural movements over successive centuries—the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and existentialism—that have severely distorted our lenses and prevented us from engaging fully with God’s story. As we have already seen, the Enlightenment, “with its ugly ditch between ideas and facts, the eternal truths of reason and the contingent events of history,” split religion from real life, divorcing heaven from earth, and subtly pushed the privatisation of faith (
Wright 2002). The church swallowed this rhetoric and became content to sell its faith as a means of individuals qualifying for some kind of supratemporal and immaterial heaven after death. Romanticism further distorted the picture by privileging feelings over thoughts and deeds, focusing on the heart, not in the biblical sense as the seat of will and real, personal knowledge, but as the seat of fickle emotions: “it invited you to look within, to see what feelings you had, and to make them the centre of your world, rather than seeing the love of the heart for the true God as the gift of God through gospel, Word, and Spirit.” Thirdly, Wright sees the existentialist movements of the 20th century as a blatant return to a form of gnosticism: each of us “has inside ourselves a true self which, though long buried, is now to be discovered and enabled to flourish.” This leaves no room for anyone to be confronted, challenged and transformed by the gospel, for it says we need, not redemption, but “to be helped to discover ‘who you really are’” (ibid.) These cultural lenses have profoundly affected our ability to read and understand God’s story, whether written in the scriptures or proclaimed in liturgy. To these distorted lenses, we can also add the imagination-warping dangers of “secular liturgies” such as consumerism. Within our modern life, countless narrative spaces call us to enter in and participate; these stories and spaces form our desires and imaginations, and they alienate us from the kingdom narrative of our true human existence.
In the face of these challenges and competing narratives, it is not adequate simply to declare that liturgy proclaims the new life of the kingdom and forms our “eschatological identity.” What we need is a model for the way the liturgy of the kingdom works in practice as a counter-formative influence. We need to understand how participants in kingdom-oriented worship may be converted from the distorted narratives of the present age and begin to apprehend the full divine narrative—how through the words and actions of the liturgy they may begin to imagine and live the way God desires. In NT Wright’s comprehensive understanding of the way narrative itself works, the foundation of his own New Testament scholarship, we may discern and adapt just such a model.
In his New Testament studies, Wright sets out a hermeneutical model called “critical realism.” Unlike Enlightenment positivism’s detached and objective observer, critical realism submits that the observer has a distinctive
point of view, that the observer interprets through a matrix of expectations, memories, stories, and psychological states, and that the observer’s interpretive lenses arise from the communities and contexts belonged to. Rather than working from observations and sensory data to “confident statements about external reality” as in positivism, here realism survives “within the larger framework of the story or worldview which forms the basis of the observer’s way of being in relation to the world” (
Wright 1993, p. 37). Knowledge takes place “when people
find things that fit with the particular story or (or more likely) stories to which they are accustomed to give allegiance.” As Wright explains, stories “are one of the most basic modes of human life” (ibid., p. 38). Narratives are not accounts derived from human words and action: rather, what we say and do are “enacted narratives.” In other words, “the overall narrative is the more basic category, while the particular moment and person can only be understood within that context.” All of our life is based on the overt and hidden narratives that we tell ourselves and one another. Together, they form what critical-realist theoretician Michael Polanyi calls “tacit knowledge,” the precognitive filter that enables to sort out what new sensory data and ideas are to be believed. As story-telling humans, we inhabit a story-laden world; our observations, embedded within narratives, are challenged by critical reflection on ourselves as story-tellers, but with new or revised stories we can find “alternative ways of speaking truly about the world” (ibid., p. 44).
This critical-realist framework suggests how kingdom-oriented liturgy may work in practice to shape participants with what should be its “devastating and challenging” narrative. As story-laden creatures, we all come to worship bearing our own complex of explicit and implicit narratives. We are often not aware of them at all, for we have not stopped to perform any
narrative criticism on our own lives—we have yet to ponder the plot, the structure, the characters of the stories in which we inhabit. In the readings from the scriptures, the ritual actions and prayers, the liturgy of the kingdom presents us with a myriad of sensory data, ideas and symbols, story-laden events derived from the new life of the age to come. The stories and worldview embedded in the liturgy are meant to subvert all competing stories, for they are in essence revolutionary, proclaiming the dethroning and reversal of all tyrannical powers, the victory of God in Jesus that transforms sorrow into joy, darkness into light, and death into life. As Wright explains, this narrative-shaping role of worship is intentional:
Stories are, actually, peculiarly good at modifying or subverting other stories and their worldviews. Where head-on attack would certainly fail, the parable hides the wisdom of the serpent behind the innocence of the dove, gaining entrance and favour which can then be used to change assumptions which the hearer would otherwise keep hidden away for safety. […] Tell someone to do something, and you change their life—for a day; tell someone a story and you change their life.
Yet, we are almost completely oblivious and immune to this subversive message if there is no point of intersection between our complex of personal stories and the public narrative of the liturgy. Our existing tacit knowledge or matrix of stories prevents us from even seeing the obvious symbol system of the kingdom that pervades the liturgy. For any new story to be subversive, it must come “close enough to the story already believed by the hearer for a spark to jump between them,” and when it does, “nothing will ever be quite the same again” (ibid.).
Much of what liturgy needs to address lies beneath the surface in the deeply embedded implicit stories and tacit knowledge that people hold. These deeper stories may be precisely the source of the filters that prevent us from seeing in liturgy the obvious narrative and symbol set of the kingdom of God, yet they may not easily be addressed with explicit teaching. Drawing directly on the critical realism and related ideas of Michael Polanyi, Susan Wood calls the kind of knowledge that liturgy gives us access to
participatory knowledge: “we acquire this knowledge by entering into the symbolic time and space of liturgical action. Within the liturgy we enter a formative environment that shapes our vision, our relationships, and our knowing” (
Wood 2001, pp. 95–96). She explains that this form of knowledge is less rational, and more kinaesthetic, incarnate and embodied. Great emphasis must therefore be placed on participation in liturgy—not strictly speaking, on a rational level, but on the rituals, movement and embodied action by which we dwell within the liturgy. This is what James Smith also emphasises in his works on worship: repeated bodily practices, whether they be the liturgy or our secular rituals, create narrative spaces which shape our imagination, desires and character far more than we are consciously aware (
Smith 2013). For Smith, so important is ritual action that even the imagination becomes a bodily form of intelligence (or
praktognosia) that surpasses conscious reflection, and the mind seems only to be involved in organising thoughts after the real work is done. A balanced view of worship should see the liturgy as a place of dialogue between body and mind, of embodied imagination and values repatterned by ritual practice, and of conscious theological reflection on the participative, tacit knowledge perceived within the in-dwelt
whole.
The narrative of the kingdom of God as inaugurated in the paschal mystery is precisely that
whole within which we dwell in liturgy. To function properly as a narrative that shapes the participants in liturgy, it is therefore essential that the story of God’s kingdom be fully proclaimed within worship. In liturgical proclamation and ritual enactment, the texts of the scriptures move from being literary narratives to being the typological interpretation of the events of salvation present in the life of the eucharistic community; they recount the transformation taking place within it, and the community assumes the story as their own. In this way, the narrative content of liturgy begins to work as an interpretive lens for our life, and it becomes what Polanyi describes as an interiorised faculty of tacit knowledge, much like the knowledge of a language or a tool, bestowing meaning on the world. Wright himself specifically says that the proclamation of the scriptures in liturgy is not primarily about teaching or “to impart information,” but to “acclaim and celebrate God’s mighty acts” (
Wright 2017). He underscores the dynamic sacramental and prophetic role of the scriptures in worship, and laments that the whole narrative is seldom told, that many congregations are not even aware of the story of the kingdom. The story is “so explosive,” he believes, that “the church in many generations has found it too much to take and so has watered it down, cut it up into little pieces, turned it into small-scale lessons rather than allowing its full impact to be felt” (
Wright 2012, p. 276). Renewal of the liturgy as an event in which we can be shaped by the proclamation of the word and in which it becomes a tacit interpretive lens for our lives depends necessarily on the renewal of the lectionary, an initiative frequently raised as an issue needing urgent attention within Orthodox liturgical celebration. Wright makes a number of proposals that may be of use to Orthodox Christians, including reading longer sections to provide narrative context to lections, providing space within liturgy for continual reading (including of whole books, more often than just during Orthodox holy week), and interspersing reading with prayer, for instance praying “Our Father” after each chapter or section of a gospel (ibid. pp. 274–75). He also suggests that homilists take care to allow shorter readings within liturgy to become “windows on the larger narrative.” In this way, he says, the scriptures may “provide fuel for the sacrificial flame which burns in our hearts, to bring us into the true Temple; to point ahead to God’s new world and, by anticipating that new world in the present, actually to contribute by the Spirit to its effective realization” (
Wright 2017).