Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
[w]e must resist the temptation into which many Western scholars fall today when they speak of a “global perspective” or of a world vision, which is a residue of a colonialist, or monocultural, mentality, even though today it is called scientific. Instead, it is a matter of a healthy pluralism and of an interreligious perspective for our diachronic age.
Panikkar feels that the doctrine of the Trinity should not be treated, as it often is, as recondite teaching about the inner life of God cut off from the rest of life and experience. Rather, so potent and rich a symbol it is that it invites further deepening and development, preferably by intercultural and interreligious communication.(Foreword, by Joseph Prabhu in Panikkar 2010, loc. 253)
Thus is born what is called the apophatism of the Christian East: the more man grows in the knowledge of God, the more he perceives him as an inaccessible mystery, whose essence cannot be grasped. This should not be confused with an obscure mysticism in which man loses himself in enigmatic, impersonal realities. On the contrary, the Christians of the East turn to God as Father, Son and Holy Spirit, living persons tenderly present, to whom they utter a solemn and humble, majestic and simple liturgical doxology. But they perceive that one draws close to this presence above all by letting oneself be taught an adoring silence, for at the culmination of the knowledge and experience of God is his absolute transcendence. This is reached through the prayerful assimilation of scripture and the liturgy more than by systematic meditation.
2. Sophiology as Eco-Theology and Public Theology
3. Solovyov’s Sophia
In the divine organism of Christ, the acting, unifying principle, the principle that expresses the unity of that which is, is the Word, or Logos. The second kind of unity, the produced unity, is Sophia in Christian theosophy. If we distinguish in the Absolute in general between the Absolute as such (that which is) and its content, essence, or idea, we will find the former directly expressed in the Logos and the latter directly expressed in Sophia, which is thus the expressed or actualized idea. And just as an existent being is distinct from its idea but is at the same time one with it, so the Logos, too, is distinct from Sophia but is inwardly united with her.(Solovyov quoted in Kornblatt 2009, pp. 7–8)
4. Bulgakov’s Sophia
5. Florensky’s Sophia
She is the Eternal Bride of the Word of God. Outside of Him and independently of Him, she does not have being and falls apart into fragments of ideas about creation. But in Him, she receives creative power. One in God, she is multiple in the creation and is perceived in creation in her concrete appearances as the idea person of man, as his Guardian Angel, i.e., as the part of eternal dignity of the person and as the image of God in man.
6. Conclusions
I have been saying that theisms are inadequate, that they often contradict each other, although they may also be mutually complementary if we enlarge the horizon from which they emerge. I have also been suggesting that theisms as such do not exhaust the human ways to encounter the divine Mystery. The world of theisms has been a domain of great power. Theism has persisted for millennia and will no doubt continue to survive in some form. “Right” or “wrong” are inapplicable epithets here. The world of theism is a universe in itself, which selects its own criteria for judging what is right and wrong. Yet theisms no longer seem able to satisfy the most profound urges of the contemporary sensibilities both in the civilizations that first nurtured these theisms, and in others as well. The world of theism is not alone in facing religious problems, as well as vital metaphysical issues. In short, the divine Mystery remains a mystery.
In other words, however far the world has fallen, it is always possible for the creatures to become saved, because the divine idea of creation, this wisdom of God or Sophia rooted in God’s will, is eternal and unchangeable, and serves as a guarantee for the ultimate goodness of every creature.
Wisdom (Sophia) is begotten and brought forth before the beginning of the earth. God’s Saying is connected with the bringing forth of Sophia from within God’s self. In Proverbs’ account of the beginning, Sophia is poured out of the depths of God’s self. God’s being is the One who is concerning the Word and the Spirit. The inner life of God through the Word and Spirit (Sophia) is directed toward the world.
An inclusivist theology of religion departs from theological exclusivism in its willingness to afford revelatory value to other religious traditions, but insists that other religious traditions are at best a less adequate path for adherents to achieve the enlightenment and salvation offered in one’s own religion.
Our task and our responsibility are to assimilate the wisdom of bygone traditions and, having made it our own, to allow it to grow. Life is neither repetition nor continuation. It is growth, which implies at once rupture and continuity. Life is creation.
Author Contributions
Funding
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | “Raimon Panikkar was born on 2 November 1918 in Barcelona, the son of a Spanish Christian mother and a Hindu father. Ordained a Catholic priest after being educated by the Jesuits, he earned doctorates in theology, philosophy, and chemistry between 1946 and 1961. Over a theological career that spanned almost half a century and encompassed dozens of published books, Panikkar probed both classic texts and contemporary societies in a synthetic quest for truth and cross-cultural understanding” (Denny 2016, p. 365). |
2 | See https://www.giffordlectures.org/lectures/trinity-and-theism (accessed on 30 November 2021). |
3 | However, one should be careful with claims such as “theology without walls” (Christopher Denny) in the global context beyond the West. For it was the imperialist mission of Western Christianity that built rigid walls and raised conflicts among religions in East Asia where multiple religions co-existed harmoniously without walls before Western Christianity came in for millennia. This antagonistic reality in the Non-Western world requires Western theologians, first and foremost, serious reflection on the deep metanoia for the tragic missiological errors of Western Christianity, especially in the 19th-century, before saying any new theological idea for interreligious and intercultural peace and cooperation. |
4 | For a fine description of ressourcement see https://ressourcementinc.com/about-ressourcement/about-the-name/ (accessed on 30 November 2021). Panikkar sees his task as follows: “My originality, if any, will be that of going to the origins—not to do archeology or to make anachronistic interpretations, as if the beginnings were always exemplary, but to perform the task of a latter-day hunter-gatherer, re-collecting life from the stupendous field of human experience on Earth since the days when our ancestors felt the need to consign their adventures to that mature fruit of language which we call script. This is our historical period” (Panikkar 2010, loc. 404). |
5 | See Bishop Butler’s interpretation of the background of aggiornamento: https://vatican2voice.org/3butlerwrites/aggiorna.htm (accessed on 30 November 2021). Panikkar has his version too: “If rhythm were not the very Rhythm of Being, the order thus created would become a competitive chaos. If, however, Being itself is Rhythm, the order is ever new and does not follow a preexistent or preordained pattern. It is the creatio continua I mentioned several times. The ontonomy that is referred to is not the blind following of an absolute and immutable norm or nomos (law), but the discovery of the ever-new or renewed nomos of the one. The mentioned inter-in-dependence becomes an intra-in-dependence” (Panikkar 2010, loc. 1824). |
6 | For the life and work of Solovyov see: https://www.britannica.com/biography/Vladimir-Sergeyevich-Solovyov (accessed on 30 November 2021). |
7 | |
8 | For a formal biography of Florensky see Pyman (2010). A more concise version is available on the web by Palini (2017) and the outline of these few biographical lines is taken from that. Available online: http://www.fondazionemicheletti.it/altronovecento/articolo.aspx?id_articolo=34&tipo_articolo=d_persone&id=145#sdfootnote19anc (accessed on 21 September 2021). |
9 | Hans-Urs von Balthasar was very impressed by Solovyov’s writings on Sophia and the church: “While avoiding Soloviev’s sophiological language, the movement of purified sexuality which Soloviev advocated is very congenial to the thought of Balthasar” (Gawronski [1995] 2015, p. 222). |
10 | Echeverria Eduardo (2014, p. 192) pays qualified recognition to the Dutch Reformed theologian Gerrit C. Berkouwer’s interpretation of the Second Vatican Council with his “hermeneutics of continuity” as discussed in his book, The Second Vatican Council and the New Catholicism (Berkouwer and Smedes 1965). |
11 | “The underlying concept is taken from 1 Corinthians 14:12 in the Greek New Testament, oikodomé, where it is used in reference to God’s household or total cosmology. Ecodomy looks at religious worldviews and norms but has a strong interdisciplinary research focus on aspects of global justice, human dignity, reconciliation, moral formation and responsible citizenship” (Buitendag 2019, pp. 5–6, See also Kok 2015, p. 3) for the linguistic reference: “The verb οἰκοδομέω occurs approximately 40 times in the New Testament. ‘According to Louw and Nida (1996: ad loc)—who put the words οἰκοδομέω, ἐποικοδομέω, οἰκοδομή and ῆς f: in the semantic domain 74.15—in the NT these terms denote the following meaning: “to increase the potential of someone or something, with focus upon the process involved … to strengthen, to make more able, to build up.” The verbs οἰκοδομέω, οἰκοδομεῖν’ and οἰκοδομὴ (ν) (noun) (1 Cor 14:12) denote the act of building or constructing or edifying, or the result thereof (a building/construction), whereas the noun οἰκοδóμος refers to the “builder of a house” or “architect” (Ac 4:11; cf. Lk 20:17)”. (Kok 2015, p. 3). |
12 | “The advaitic knowledge is knowledge of reality and not the abstract knowledge of a formal pattern of reality. This is why I spoke of advaitic spiritual experience: the awareness of relationship is not a secondary knowledge derived from the knowledge of individual things. It is a primary knowledge, a spiritual knowledge indeed, but knowledge after all. It belongs to the third eye” (Panikkar 2010, loc. 6083). |
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Buitendag, J.; Simuț, C.C. Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology. Religions 2022, 13, 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040296
Buitendag J, Simuț CC. Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology. Religions. 2022; 13(4):296. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040296
Chicago/Turabian StyleBuitendag, Johan, and Corneliu C. Simuț. 2022. "Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology" Religions 13, no. 4: 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040296
APA StyleBuitendag, J., & Simuț, C. C. (2022). Emerging Religious Consciousness—A Cosmotheandric Understanding of Reality in the Light of Sophiology of Some Russian Theologians towards an Eco-Theology. Religions, 13(4), 296. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13040296