Dramatic Theology: A Hermeneutical Framework for Discerning the Cultural Realities and the Role of Christianity in India
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Dramatic Theology: An Advanced Method of Theologizing
2.1. Raymund Schwager and the Concept of “Dramatic”
2.2. Mimetic Theory as an Auxiliary Tool of Dramatic Theology
Once his basic needs are satisfied (indeed, sometimes even before), man is subject to intense desires, though he may not know precisely for what. The reason is that he desires being, something he himself lacks and which some other person seems to possess. The subject thus looks to that other person to inform him of what he should desire in order to acquire that being. If the model, who is apparently already endowed with superior being, desires some object, that object must surely be capable of conferring an even greater plenitude of being. It is not through words, therefore, but by the example of his own desire that the model conveys to the subject the supreme desirability of the subject. … We must understand that desire itself is essentially mimetic, directed toward an object desired by the model.
2.3. Dramatic Process of Christian Revelation
3. Indian Cultural Realities and Christianity: An Overview
3.1. All-Encompassing Nature of Indian Culture
3.2. Multiplicity of Religions and Gods
3.3. Caste System and Social Values
4. Dramatic Theological View of Indian Realities
4.1. Collective Social Identity and Victimage Mechanisms
4.2. Cyclical Incarnation of Gods
“Yada yada hi dharmasya glanirbhavati bharata
Abhyuthanamadharmasya tadatmanam srijamyaham.
Paritranaya sadhunang vinasaya cha dushkritam
Dharmasangsthapanarthay sambhavami yuge yuge”(Bhagavad Gita 4: 7, 8)
4.3. Caste System and the Broken World of Sacrifice
4.4. Challenging Role of Christianity in India
5. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Kirsteen Kim explains different theological methods and approaches which are used to try to find out the relevance of Christian revelation among the cultural and religious realities in India. She gives details of the main authors and arguments of the Theologies of Inculturation, Liberation, and Dialogue. We can summarize them as follows: The Theology of Inculturation was first started by Indian Hindu reformist, Raam Mohan Roy (1772–1833) and his successor Keshub Chandra Sen (1838–1884), who interpreted Jesus in Hindu traditions, and developed by Brahmabandhav Upadhyaya, who tried to interpret Christian doctrines, especially the doctrine of the Trinity in terms of the Hindu philosophy of Advaita or non-dualism. The Christian Ashram Movements also tried to present Jesus in terms of the Hindu Sanyasi or the renouncer. Prompted by Latin American liberation theology and recognizing its limitations, the Indian Theology of liberation wants to develop spirituality of liberation which draws on indigenous cultural traditions and experiences. Samuel Rayan, Xavier Irudayaraj, Sebastian Kappen, Felix Wilfred, and T.K. John argued that the role of Christianity in India is to reinforce the people’s movements and to prevent poverty and the Caste system in Indian society. Authors such as Raimundo Panikkar and Stanley J. Samartha, as representatives of the theology of Dialogue, tried to find the identity of Christianity by understanding, adapting, and assimilating Hindu cultural elements into the Christian way of life. |
2 | Rene Girard presents his theory in his numerous books and articles. There are several books, which summarize the mimetic theory of Rene Girard in different languages. The whole bibliography of Girard is available at: https://violenceandreligion.com/bibliography/ (accessed on 10 September 2022). |
3 | Schwager distinguishes the meaning of the term “scapegoat” in the modern sense as follows: “the victim or third parties however are of the opinion that an injustice is being done to the accused and that the accusers only want to shift their own problems and faults onto him”. This is based on the representation of the goats in the framework of the Jewish Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) (Schwager 1999, pp. 91–92). |
4 | India consists of different ethnic groups such as Indo-Aryan (72 percent), Dravidian (25 percent), and others (3 percent). Some 16 percent are listed as members of Scheduled Castes, and 8 percent as members of Scheduled Tribes. |
5 | “Sanskritization is a process by which a ‘low’ Hindu caste, or tribal or other group, changes its customs, ritual, ideology, and way of life in the direction of a high, and frequently, ‘twice-born’ caste.” (Srinivas 1997, p. 6). |
6 | M.N. Srinivas used the term westernization “to characterize the changes brought about in Indian society and culture as a result of 150 years of British rule, and the term subsumes changes occurring at different levels—technology, institutions, ideology, values.” (Srinivas 1997, p. 50). |
7 | “The term Secularization implies that what was previously regarded as religious is now ceasing to be such, and it also implies a process of differentiation that results in the various aspects of society, economic, political, legal and moral, becoming increasingly discrete in relation to each other.” (Srinivas 1997, p. 125). |
8 | Sudheer mentions, for instance, Hari-Hara, who is an amalgam of Hari (Krishnan, who is an incarnation of Vishnu) and Hara (Shiva). This fusion of the two principal deities, Vishnu and Shiva, was undertaken to ease the dualism in the Hindu religion due to the existence of the two principal sects of Vaishnavism (worshippers of Vishnu) and Shaivism (worshippers of Shiva), who were frequently at loggerheads with each other (Sudheer Birodkar, accessed on 12 July 2022). |
9 | There are three kinds of Karma in Hindu religious thinking. The first one is Parabadha Karma, the binding Karma, which is the Karma of one’s past life. One cannot change this Karma in one’s lifetime. The life situations of “one’s economic status, one’s family or lack of family, one’s body type and look” are determined by the impressions of one’s past life. The second type is Samchita Karma, related to one’s thoughts, inclinations, talents, personality, etc. This type of Karma is alterable through practices such as yoga and meditation. The third one is Agami Karma, which is the Karma of the present life over which the soul has complete control. One creates one’s fate in the present through it for the future (Glasenapp 1978, p. 239ff). |
10 | Referring to such an attitude of Hinduism, Edward Luce says: “Each cell in the body of Indian society would have to conform to the whole. In their imagined community, Indian would be defined as someone who saw India not just as his fatherland, but also his holy land. This would obviously exclude Indians who looked to Mecca or Rome for their spiritual sustenance. ‘The foreign races in Hinduism must either adopt the Hindu culture and language, must learn to respect and hold in reverence Hindu religion, must entertain no ideals but those of glorification of the Hindu race and culture… or may stay in the country, wholly subordinated to the Hindu nation, claiming nothing, deserving no privileges, far less any preferential treatment- not even citizen’s rights” (Luce 2007, pp. 152–53). |
11 | Indian sacred and classical literature consists of Srutis, which are in Vedas and Smritis, or traditional, which are in eighteen Puranas. Two epics in Indian tradition are Mahabharata and Ramayana (Thomas 1950, p. viii). |
12 | For example, Donald A. Mackenzie and Warwick Goble quote, from the Rig Vedic hymn: “When the gods performed a sacrifice with Purusha as the oblation, the spring was its butter, the summer its fuel and the autumn its (accompanying) offering. This Victim, Purusha, born in the beginning, they immolated on the sacrificial grass.” (Donald A. Mackenzie and Warwick Goble, 89). P Thomas also gives a number of explanations about the cosmogonic myths in Indian culture. All these myths give similar indications regarding the origin of the world from the body of the primordial man (Thomas 1950, pp. 1–3). |
13 | Explaining the concept of purity in studies of the Indian caste system, Diana Mickeviciene says: “Dharmasutras mostly give advice to higher classes, especially Brahmins. Personal purity lowers down because of the contact with the polluting element which are death, birth, physical dirt, contact with a low-caste (even an eye-contact or shadow thrown by him), bad deeds, etc. This pollution is so common and frequent that after naming the polluting cases the law books immediately indicate purifying methods to be followed in each particular case: bath, a sprinkling of water, shaving off a head, using cow products (which are sacred by nature, therefore, have strong purifying powers)” (Mickeviciene 2003, p. 241). |
14 | M. Ruthnaswamy says: “social ideas and practices of the highest value come easy to the Christians in India as elsewhere, easier to them than to others. The spirit of social equality entered India with Christianity. Christianity is repugnant in the idea of caste. Not that the practice of caste has been eliminated altogether among Christians in India.” (Ruthnaswamy 1964, p. 123). |
15 | John Thattunkal says that with the mass conversions of the Paravas, Kadayars, and the Mukkuvars (fisherfolk) on the Malabar coast, Ezhunnutykar (those belonging to sub-caste seven hundred), Anjuttikar (those of sub-caste five hundred), and Munnuttykar (those of sub-caste three hundred) in the diocese of Cochin in Kerala, and the converts from high-caste people in the Madura Mission—through the efforts of Robert de Nobili in Tamil Nadu—are evidence of different caste groups among the Latin Rite Catholic Church in India (Thattunkal 1983, pp. 159–94). |
16 | An Indian Theologian, John Peter Sandanam says: “What Jesus tried to abolish through his table-fellowship with the socially marginalized and the despised (outcast), continues to dominate the Indian Christian communities till date. In one form or another, caste discrimination (purity system) finds expression in Christian communities even at the Eucharistic table. Caste discrimination in any form within the Christian community is an aberration and anomaly. It destroys “the very essence of the Eucharist” (Sandanam 2000, p. 21). |
17 | Brian Collins says: “Doing fieldwork in the districts of Etah, Saharanpur, Gorakhpur, and Mirzapur, Crook studied the local sects devoted to the fierce goddess Durga and her associated guardian deities and found numerous references to human sacrifices in the ethnographic reports as well as official records.” (Collins 2014, p. 32). |
18 | According to mimetic theory, in all cultures, the surrogate victim became the sacred king who achieved power because of his state as a future victim. But, from the explanation of Heesterman, we notice that an important shift in this development happened in Indian culture. There was a stage of renouncement of the worldly power by the surrogate victim in Indian Vedic tradition. The surrogate victim did not fully become a sacred king. The surrogate victim either renounced his kingship or his potentiality as a sacred king in India was thrown away. But, Heestermann sees this idea of renunciation as being equally to ritual sacrifice (Heesterman 1985, p. 42f). |
19 | P. Thomas explains that Yugas are calculated according to the days of Brahma, the creator. He says: “Brahma creates in the morning, and at night the three worlds, Akasa, Bhumi and Patala (Heaven, Earth, and Hell) are reduced to chaos, every being that has not obtained liberation retaining is an essence which takes form according to its Karma when Brahma wakes up in the morning. Thus, the eventful days and nights pass on, till Brahma reaches the hundredth year of his life when‚ not only the three worlds but all plants, all beings, Brahma himself, Devas, Rishis, Asuras, men, creatures, and matter’ are all resolved into Mahapralaya (the great cataclysm). After hundred years of chaos, another Brahma is born… The day of Brahma is divided into 1000 Mahayugas (great ages) of equal length consisting of four Yugas or ages, namely, Krita, Threta, Dwapara, and Kali.” (Thomas 1950, p. 4). |
20 | P. Thomas says: “the Hindu pantheon has undergone many changes, and as it stands today is an evolved system (if it can be called system) of deities. Gods who once occupied high positions lost their importance and were replaced by others; while the worship of some of them was totally discarded, others were given subordinate positions and remembered once or twice a year. Some gods fell defeat of their devotees on the battlefield, and sectarian quarrels sealed the fate of many others.” (Thomas 1950, p. 8). The replacement of the positions of gods and the quarrels between the gods are clear indications that all these gods originated in a mimetic circle and were venerated by society, which was immersed in a mimetic crisis. |
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Kuzhippallil, G.T. Dramatic Theology: A Hermeneutical Framework for Discerning the Cultural Realities and the Role of Christianity in India. Religions 2022, 13, 954. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100954
Kuzhippallil GT. Dramatic Theology: A Hermeneutical Framework for Discerning the Cultural Realities and the Role of Christianity in India. Religions. 2022; 13(10):954. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100954
Chicago/Turabian StyleKuzhippallil, George Thomas. 2022. "Dramatic Theology: A Hermeneutical Framework for Discerning the Cultural Realities and the Role of Christianity in India" Religions 13, no. 10: 954. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100954
APA StyleKuzhippallil, G. T. (2022). Dramatic Theology: A Hermeneutical Framework for Discerning the Cultural Realities and the Role of Christianity in India. Religions, 13(10), 954. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100954