(This is a reblog of a piece I put up several years ago--one of my most important posts, especially if you've never experienced Christian theology outside of a Western frame of thinking.)
Over the past couple years I've been reading a fair dose of the early
church fathers' writings, as well as a few secondary sources on their
theology. Specifically, my reading has included Athanasius, Augustine,
John Cassian, Gregory of Nyssa, Gregory of Nazianzus, Gregory the Great,
Ephrem the Syrian, Maximus the Confessor, Irenaeus of Lyons, Basil of
Caesarea, Origen, Pseudo-Macarius, Aphrahat the Persian, and Eusebius of
Caesarea. I take the time to list them merely to point out that most of
my readings have focused on the eastern end of the early Christian
world. (Only two of my sources--Augustine and Gregory the Great--fall
securely in the western tradition. Two others fall somewhere in the
middle: John Cassian lived and worked in the West, but his thought was
derived almost entirely from the eastern desert fathers, and Irenaeus of
Lyons, though also in the West, grew up in the East and developed a
theology that was carried on largely by the eastern tradition).
In
the midst of this reading, what I discovered from the East was a
theological milieu that developed and flourished with some very
different points of emphasis than the western-Christian theology that I
was familiar with. And those differences struck down to the very root of
the Gospel. I grew up with the normal evangelical-Protestant
understanding of salvation: humans are sinful, including me, and my sins
have separated me from the all-holy God; those sins need to be paid for
somehow, or else I'll be damned to spend eternity in hell; and so,
because of his love for me, and to save me from hell, Jesus paid the
price for my sins; now that my sins are atoned for, I can be accepted by
God and spend eternity in heaven. That's overly simplistic, of course,
but that's the gist of it.
But the Eastern Fathers had
quite a different way of looking at salvation. They didn't seem to talk
about sin as much as good evangelicals do. In fact, although they
acknowledged sin as a problem, they didn't seem to talk about it as the root problem. And they had a different sense of the goal of
salvation--although they would acknowledge the fact that whether an
individual spends eternity in heaven or hell was part of the answer,
their solution was more all-encompassing. And while they focused on the
cross of Christ, they also made a much bigger deal over other aspects of
Christ's life--the fact of the Incarnation itself, the Resurrection,
and the Ascension--each one integral in their theology of salvation.
I'll
try to trace out the basics of the Eastern Fathers' view of salvation,
now largely carried on by the theology of the Eastern Orthodox churches.
First of all, the problem of humanity is sin, death, and Satan. Sin, in
the fathers' view, is both a description of the human condition and of
an individual's actions. Urged on by Satan, sin is what causes spiritual
death; and now that spiritual death is in force over humanity, sin is
as much a symptom as a cause of our separation from God. While we
evangelicals speak of the problem of sin largely in legal, penal
terms--sin as a crime against God, a crime that must be punished or
atoned for--the fathers prefer to speak of it in relational terms--sin
as separation. So now, enslaved by sin and Satan, we are separated from
God and subject to death, both spiritual and physical. In the fathers'
view, this element--death--is much more the problem of humanity than is
humanity's ledger of sinful crimes against God's authority. But, on the
whole, it's just a different point of emphasis than the evangelical
view.
But here's where the fathers' theology adds a few
elements that might be a bit less familiar to us. Since separation from
God--which is the very meaning of death--is the problem, the solution
as revealed in Jesus Christ is a solution defined by the overcoming of
that separation. Thus, the very fact of the Incarnation is
foundationally more essential than even the events that arise from
it--the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension. And to understand how
the Incarnation accomplishes the annulment of our separation from God,
we must step outside of our western individualism for a moment. The
fathers conceived of human nature in a mystical sense, as something that
all humans everywhere share--it is the stuff of our being, that which
defines us as human beings, and it means that we are all connected to
one another in a very real and essential way.
In the words of Gregory of Nyssa (Catechetical Orations):
"It is the same for humanity as a whole, which forms, so to speak, a
single living being: the resurrection of one member extends to all, and
that of a part to the whole, by virtue of the unity and cohesion of
human nature."
Because all humans share collectively in
"human nature," the fact of the Incarnation means that humanity itself
has been united with the Divine life. Human nature--the very human
nature that is essentially connected to you and me--was taken into the
life and being of the Godhood in the person of Jesus Christ. As God and
Man, he shares in our humanity. And we, by extension, may share in his
divinity.
Gregory of Nyssa (Against Apollinarius):
"The Word, in taking flesh, was mingled with humanity, and took our
nature within himself, so that the human should be deified by mingling
with God: the stuff of our nature was entirely sanctified by Christ."
And listen to how Irenaeus describes the purpose of Jesus Christ's life,
death, and resurrection, in terms of union and "absorption" rather than
in terms of sin and atonement: "This is the reason why the Word of God
was made flesh, and the Son of God became the Son of Man: so that we
might enter into communion with the Word of God, and by receiving
adoption become Sons of God...How could we have united ourselves with
immortality if immortality had not become what we are, in such a way
that we should be absorbed by it?"
It is at this point
that we evangelicals run up against a doctrine that's awfully hard for
us to swallow: deification. Instead of pointing to the goal of salvation
as individual redemption from the punishment of sin, the fathers,
almost unanimously, point to something more breathtaking and
all-encompassing--the envelopment of human beings into the life of the
Godhood itself. While we would not lose our individual essence and
nature, we are granted to share in the deepest energies of the life of
God himself. The fathers, from Irenaeus to Athanasius to the Cappadocian
Fathers, emphasize this to the point where they regularly speak of
Christians "becoming God"--that is, sharing in his very life. In the
words of an anonymous Easter Homily inspired by Hippolytus' Treatise on Easter:
"God has shown himself as man and humanity has ascended and become
God!" While it takes some careful, thoughtful reading to get to the
heart of what the fathers are really saying when they spout what sound
like blasphemies to us, this doctrine has grown more and more appealing
to me: How great is the love of God, that he would not only forgive us,
but gather us in to share in the depths of who he is in a union so
intimate and rich as to defy description!
And all of
this, though also supported by a few references from the NT epistles,
comes mainly from the idea of the Incarnation itself--the union of
humanity and divinity in Christ as the firstfruits and sign of the union
that we may someday enjoy with God. By Christ's intimate union with us,
he has bridged the separation between man and God. The Crucifixion,
then, is largely his act of union with us--embracing all the murder,
depravity, and violence that lies at the heart of fallen human nature.
It is his act of undergoing death--taking head-on the deepest curse of
our separation from God--and defeating it, thus opening the way for all
humanity to share in the Resurrection, both spiritual and (eventually)
physical. (By contast, with merely a penal substitution model of the
atonement, we're forced to reduce the meaning of Resurrection to a
"sign" of Christ's victory, since the main work of gaining forgiveness
for sins had already been accomplished on the Cross.) As Cyril of
Alexandria says, "He put on our flesh to set it free from death." And in
the words of Gregory of Nyssa: "He mingled himself with our being to
deify it by contact with him, after he had snatched it from death...For
his resurrection becomes for mortals the promise of their return to
immortal life." And this is all echoed by Gregory of Nazianzus, "Is it
not evident that the Father accepts the sacrifice [of Christ on the
cross], not because he demands it or feels some need for it, but in
order to carry out his plan? Humanity had to be brought back to life by
the humanity of God...It was necessary that God should take flesh and
die so that we might have new life...Nothing can equal the miracle of my
salvation; a few drops of blood redeem the whole universe!"
The
Ascension is the final act of this wonderful drama--it is the ultimate
symbol of what Christ has done for humanity, bringing it into the
presence of God in heaven. As Christ the God-Man shares in the divine
communion of the Trinity, so do we also share that communion, because we
share in Christ's human nature. Maximus the Confessor writes: "Christ,
having completed for us his saving work and ascended to heaven with the
body which he had taken to himself, accomplishes in his own self the
union of heaven and earth."
So that's the picture that
the fathers paint for us--a picture of salvation that is much more than
merely the forgiveness of sins, but rather of the dynamic union of
humanity and divinity, an act of love that welcomes us to share in the
life and nature of God himself. I present these thoughts not as a
challenge to the evangelical gospel and the penal substitution model of
the atonement--I don't think they're mutually contradictory. But I do
think we may have settled for one rather small piece of a much grander
picture. It's worth considering. It's worth reading the Fathers to
explore for yourselves.