Divine ‘Pastness’ and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est…
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Historical Background
3. Hermeneutical Alternatives
4. Jesus’ Burial in the Dogmatics
5. The Sepultus in Credo
6. Implications of God’s ‘Pastness’ for the Creation of Hope
The hopeful future into which we are called to live is, therefore, one that is lived within this world, and this life, even—and perhaps especially—when this life is marred by chaos and crisis. Like Barth’s theology itself, it is a future that is deeply engaged in the here-and-now, and in which we bear witness to the fact that, by his burial—which, as we have seen, assumed and, thus, heals the empty ‘pastness’ that would otherwise have been our destiny—we are set free into hope, joy, and paradoxically, life.Christian hope…realize[s] its true subjectivity…[in its] turn to the subject (Jesus Christ) that is paradoxically also a decentring of the subject (away from ourselves as secure hopers) in realizing subjecthood (that we are called to live hopefully). Jesus, as the subject and object of Christian hope determines to set us on our way as ourselves subjects of hope for the world in and through him, participating in his hope-fulness.50
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | ‘In der Gegenwart und für die Gegenwart wird die Dogmatik nicht nach den Stimmen der Zeit, sondern nach der Stimme Gottes für die Zeit fragen.’ KD I/2, 946; CD I/2, 843. |
2 | As just a very small sample of recent contributions, see: S. Brettmann Busch (Brettmann 2014), Theories of Justice: A Dialogue with Karol Wojtyla and Karl Barth, (Eugene: Pickwick, 2014); Hancock (2013), Karl Barth’s Emergency Homiletic, 1932-1933: A Summons to Prophetic Witness at the Dawn of the Third Reich, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2013); Haddorff (2011), Christian Ethics as Witness: Barth’s Ethics for a World at Risk, (Eugene: Cascade: 2011); M. Beintker, M. Trowitzsch & C. Link (eds), Karl Barth im europäischen Zeitgeschehen: Widerstand–Bewährung–Orientierung, (Theologischer Verlag Zürich, 2010). |
3 | As he said in his well-known explanation for the change of title from Christian Dogmatics to Church Dogmatics, ‘Dogmatik is keine “freie” sondern eine an den Raum der Kirche gebunden, da und nur da mögliche und sinnvolle Wissenschaft.’ KD I/1, 3. ET ‘Dogmatics is not a “free” science but, on the contrary, is bound to the church, and there–and only there–is it possible and meaningful.’ |
4 | ‘1935! To the Ministers. Hans Asmussen, Hermann Hesse, Karl Immer, Martin Niemöller, Heinrich Vogel. In memory of all who stood, stand, and will stand.‘ In K. Barth (Barth 1936), Credo: A Presentation of the Chief Problems of Dogmatics with Reference to the Apostles’ Creed, trans. J.S. McNab, (London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1936), v. [German edition–Credo: Die Hauptprobleme der Dogmatik, dargestellt im Anschluß an das Apostolische Glaubensbekenntnis. 16 Vorlesungen gehalten an der Universität Utrecht, (Munich: Christian Kaiser Verlag, 1935)–hereafter cited as GE]. |
5 | E. Busch, Karl Barths Lebenslauf: Nach seinen Briefen und autobiographischen Texten, (Munich: Christian Kaiser Verlag, 1975), 268. ET Karl Barth: His Life from Letters and Autobiographical Texts, trans. J. Bowden, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994) (Busch 1994, pp. 257–58). Remarkably, the Confessing Church refused to support Barth in his appeal against the Cologne judgment, even when he made his continuing role in the Church’s leadership conditional upon this support being forthcoming. |
6 | Busch, Karl Barth, 259. |
7 | Credo, 173–75; GE, 150–51. |
8 | Eberhard Busch confirms that Barth himself drew a direct connection between these personal and professional difficulties, and the content of the lectures that he delivered at this time. ‘He considered the stern tone of his lectures to be founded on the fact that he was speaking from the situation of a struggling church…’ E. Busch, ‘Intellectual and Personal Biography II: Barth in Germany (1921–1935)’, in P.D. Jones and P. Nimmo (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Karl Barth, (Oxford University Press, 2019), 49–50. |
9 | The broader literature on Christ’s descent into hell is voluminous, and so even a select listing of sources is not possible here. For Barth’s own understanding of this part of the Creed, see D. Lauber, Barth on the Descent into Hell: God, Atonement and the Christian Life, (Aldershot: Ashgate), (Lauber 2004). |
10 | Augustine, Enarrationes in Psalmos, 120.6. Cited in G. O’Collins, Rethinking Fundamental Theology, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), 138n2. |
11 | K. Barth, The Heidelberg Catechism for Today, trans. S. Guthrie, (London: The Epworth Press), (Barth 1964, p. 69). |
12 | World Council of Churches, Confessing the One faith: An Ecumenical Explication of the Apostolic Faith as it is confessed in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed (381), Faith and Order Paper No.153, (Geneva: WCC Publications), (World Council of Churches 1991, pp. 54–64). |
13 | Probably the most notorious example of this theory in recent years has been the late Barbara Thiering’s book, Jesus the Man: Decoding the Real Story of Jesus and Mary Magdalene, (Transworld), (Thiering 1992). |
14 | Melito, On the Passover, 8–9. |
15 | J. Moltmann, The Crucified God, (London: SCM Press, 1974), 160. ET Der gekreuzigte Gott, (Munich: Chr. Kaiser), (Moltmann 1972, p. 147). |
16 | Irenaeus, Adv.h.3.4.2 |
17 | The same could be said for more modern writers, such as Helmut Thielicke who, in his I Believe, fails even to mention Jesus’ burial in the chapter headed ‘Crucified, Dead and Buried.’ See. H. Thielicke, I Believe: The Christian’s Creed, trans. J. W. Doberstein & H. George Anderson, (Philadelphia: Fortress Press), (Thielicke 1968, pp. 108–21). |
18 | As Gustav Aulén stressed (Aulén 2003), Irenaeus is perhaps the archetypal representative of that view of the atonement that regards it as a ‘continuous Divine work…’ And again, ‘Irenaeus is altogether free from the tendency…to emphasise the death of Christ in such a way as to leave almost out of sight the rest of His earthly life…[The] earthly life of Christ as a whole is thus regarded [by Irenaeus] as a continuous process of victorious conflict…’ G. Aulén, Christus Victor: An Historical Study of the Three Main Types of the Idea of the Atonement, trans. A.G. Hebert, (Eugene: Wipf & Stock, 2003), 5, 29–30. |
19 | Irenaeus does make one brief mention of the ‘buried body’ of Jesus, but this is done to illustrate his true humanity, as opposed to docetic traditions. See Irenaeus, Adv.h.4.23.2. |
20 | See Crossan (1994), Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography, (Harper San Francisco, 1994); and Who Killed Jesus? Exposing the Roots of Anti-Semitism in the Gospel Story of the Death of Jesus, (Crossan 1996). See also Dijkhuizen (2011), ‘Buried Shamefully: Historical Reconstruction of Jesus’ Burial and Tomb’, Neotestamentica, 45.1 (2011), 115–29. |
21 | KD IV/1, 171-172; CD IV/1, 157. |
22 | B.L. McCormack, Karl Barth’s Critically Realistic Dialectical Theology: Its Genesis and Development 1909-1936, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, McCormack 1997, pp. 142–48). |
23 | Congdon (2015), The Mission of Demythologizing: Rudolf Bultmann’s Dialectical Theology, (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2015), 181–84. Or, as Paul Daffyd Jones puts it: Geschichte is that mode of history that ‘identifies a narratable story, grounded in a delimited sequence of concrete events, that is received in faith and that bears witness to faith.’ P.D. Jones, ‘The Riddle of Gethsemane: Barth on Jesus’s Agony in the Garden’, in D. Migliore (ed), Reading the Gospels with Karl Barth, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans), (Jones 2017, p. 124). |
24 | KD IV/1, 172; CD IV/1, 158. |
25 | Congdon, 183. |
26 | KD IV/1, 181; CD IV/1, 166. |
27 | KD IV/1, 183–184; CD IV/1, 168. This, of course, does not detract from the equally true and important point, on which Barth also insists, that the divinity of the Son is in no way changed or diminished by its union with the man Jesus. The kenotic incarnation is a ‘free divine activity’ (‘eines freien göttlichen Handelns’), in which God is always God (‘Gott bleibt Gott’) even in the humiliation of assuming flesh (KD IV/1, 196; CD IV/1, 179). Ultimately, where this leads to, is the characterization by Barth of Jesus’ suffering as a real suffering that is experienced not only by the human Jesus but by God himself; ‘Gott wider Gott’, [Gott] scheitert und zerbricht an Gott’ (KD IV/1, 191, 201; CD IV/1, 175, 184). |
28 | KD IV/1, 181; CD IV/1, 165. |
29 | KD IV/1, 329; CD IV/1, 299. |
30 | See Congdon, 182. |
31 | See also KD IV/1, 336 (CD IV/1, 305), where Barth (1953a) says that Jesus’ being in the grave was ‘as One who had been and had ceased to be…’ (‘Ausgelöschter, Vergangener, Gewesener’); also KD IV/2, 169 (CD IV/2, 151) (Barth 1953b), in which the grave is confirmatory of Jesus’ death: ‘Und dann war er in unzweideutiger Feststellung und Bestätigung des ihm Widerfahrenen begraben worden.’ The same is broadly true of the references to Jesus’ burial in KD II/2, 453 (CD II/2, 409) (Barth 1942); KD III/2 (Barth 1948) 540 (CD III/2, 450). |
32 | Barth says that the sepultus, along with all the other creedal pronouncements about Jesus’ life that are made between the conceptus and the resurrexit ‘all have, in addition to their own meanings, the significance of emphasizing the vere homo’. See CD I/2, 147; KD I/2, 161. |
33 | |
34 | Credo, 83; GE, 75. |
35 | Credo, 83; GE, 75. |
36 | Credo, 84; GE, 76. |
37 | Lauber, Barth on the Descent into Hell, 7–8. |
38 | Credo, 87; GE, 78. In the Dogmatik, Barth speaks of burial – not specifically Jesus’ burial, but any example of the same act–as an act that denotes something that is pure past. The war of the Spirit against the flesh is a war against a form of life that ‘is to be treated as a thing of the past. It is to be demolished and buried.’ ‘Jenes Leben im eignen Konflikt ist in der Tat als Vergangenheit zu behandeln: es ist abzubauen und zu begraben.’ KD II/2, 816; CD II/2, 729–30. |
39 | Credo, 87; GE, 78. |
40 | Credo, 85; GE, 77. |
41 | Credo, 87; GE, 78. |
42 | Credo, 86; GE, 77. |
43 | Credo, 93; GE; 83. |
44 | CD IV/2, 74. Emphasis added. |
45 | B.L. McCormack, ‘“We have ‘actualized’ the doctrine of the Incarnation…”: Musings on Karl Barth’s Actualistic Theological Ontology’, Zeitschrift für Dialektische Theologie, 32.1 (McCormack 2016, p. 184). |
46 | Credo, 93; GE, 83. |
47 | See especially J.C. McDowell, Hope in Barth’s Eschatology: Interrogations and Transformations Beyond Tragedy, (Ashgate), (McDowell 2000); J.C. McDowell, ‘Karl Barth, Emil Brunner and the Subjectivity of the Object of Christian Hope’, International Journal of Systematic Theology, 8 (McDowell 2006, pp. 26–41); G. Sauter, ‘Why is Karl Barth’s Church Dogmatics not a “Theology of Hope”? Some Observations on Barth’s Understanding of Eschatology’, Scottish Journal of Theology, 52 (Sauter 1999, pp. 407–29); J. Stewart, ‘Hermeneutics and Teleology in Ethics across Denominations–Thomas Aquinas and Karl Barth’, Religions, (September 2017), 5 (Stewart 2017). |
48 | In the 1923 edition of his work on Martin Luther, Karl Holl chastised the ‘Barthian school’ for its lack of ‘moral concern’ or indeed of any ‘positive relation to the world.’ See E. Thurneysen to K. Barth, 30 October 1923, in GA V.4, 230. Even more recent commentators have fallen into the same interpretive falsehood. Alister McGrath, for example, has described Barth’s ethics as being ‘peculiarly abstract’, and not being ‘adequately grounded in the realities of human existence.’ See A.E. McGrath, A Life of John Calvin, (Oxford: Basil Blackwell), (McGrath 1990, pp. 219–20). Stanley Hauerwas (1988) makes a similar claim in his ‘On Honour: By Way of a Comparison Between Barth and Trollope’, in N. Biggar (ed), Reckoning with Barth: Essays in Commemoration of the Centenary of Karl Barth’s Birth, (Oxford: Mowbray, 1988), 145–69. |
49 | McDowell, ‘Karl Barth, Emil Brunner and the Subjectivity of the Object of Christian Hope’, 35, 37. |
50 | McDowell, ‘Karl Barth, Emil Brunner and the Subjectivity of the Object of Christian Hope’, 39. |
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Lindsay, M.R. Divine ‘Pastness’ and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est…. Religions 2021, 12, 439. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060439
Lindsay MR. Divine ‘Pastness’ and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est…. Religions. 2021; 12(6):439. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060439
Chicago/Turabian StyleLindsay, Mark R. 2021. "Divine ‘Pastness’ and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est…" Religions 12, no. 6: 439. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060439
APA StyleLindsay, M. R. (2021). Divine ‘Pastness’ and the Creation of Hope: The Significance of the Sepultus est…. Religions, 12(6), 439. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060439