Participating in Cultural Witness
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. “Culture” and “Cultural”
2.1. Some History of Usage
Culture is one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language. This is so partly because of its intricate historical development, in several European languages, but mainly because it has now come to be used for important concepts in several distinct intellectual disciplines and in several distinct and incompatible systems of thought.(pp. 76–77)
(i) a general process of intellectual, spiritual and aesthetic development… (ii)… a particular way of life, whether of a people, a period, a group, or humanity in general… (iii)… the works and practices of intellectual and especially artistic activity.
2.2. Witness as “Cultural”
2.3. Witness by, to, and through: What Are We Qualifying with the Adjective “Cultural”?
3. Witness Within
3.1. “He Came to His Own”
3.2. Witness and Doctrine
[T]he world into which the apostles are sent is confessed to be one where Jesus Christ has already gone and is expecting them. Christian faith in God’s sending of Jesus Christ into the world refuses to believe that there is any ‘world’ of time and space and social circumstances into which the church is commissioned to go that Jesus Christ has not already gone. In this sense there are no ‘foreign missions’. ‘The true light, which enlightens everyone… was in the world’ is one way the Gospel of John testifies to this faith; through this Word ‘the world came into being’ so that the Word’s coming in flesh in Jesus is a coming ‘to what was his own’ (John 1.9–11). Resurrection testimonies in Matthew and Mark speak, from another angle of vision, of Jesus Christ as ‘ahead of’ the apostles and already at the very place to which the witnesses are sent. The message to the women at the tomb is, ‘Go quickly and tell his disciples, “He has been raised from the dead, and indeed he is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see him: …”’.(Morse 2009, p. 310, quoting Matt 28:7, with further reference to Mk 16:7)
the perfection of God’s revelation in Christ is not compromised—indeed, precisely implies—an ongoing historical dynamic whereby, in God, human beings are constantly invited to related to given to the found [and, I would add, the found to the given]… The God who has ‘stocked our backpack for the journey’, so to speak, also ‘places things in our path’, up ahead of us.(Quash 2013, p. xiv; and see Leith 2023)
3.3. The Humanism of a Christian Platonism
In John’s Anglo-Catholicism, this recovery of work [a theme central to his academic writing] had to go hand in hand with love of beauty and life ordered to the Good, that is, to God... Human beings, as Aquinas marvelously said, are naturally oriented to the Good, and because of this, even in our work, naturally at home in the world. And, this is why they are also attuned to Beauty, since the human mind is not ‘going against the grain of the Universe but in harmony with it’. And, this is because, in John’s Christian understanding, this world is creation, rather than chaos—a loving gift.
I think John seemed really interested because he was really interested, and this went right to the heart of his guiding theology and of how he understood the office of a priest in the College community. He would never have conceived this as a matter of ‘bringing the Gospel’ to dark corners, as though the Gospel were a large lardy cake to be deposited on the desks of unwitting and unwilling recipients. John did not need to bring God to people because according to his Anglican Thomism God was already there. His job was to make us glad and help us rejoice as we worked, whether as students, Fellows, or in one of the Colleges many other departments for, as he wrote in The End of Work, ‘labour whose only end is efficiency and functionality, labour free of responsibility, intellect and delight’, is not worthy of human beings.(ibid.)
3.4. Metaphysics of Participation
4. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I have advocated such an approach along these lines (Davison 2011), as have Elaine Graham (2017) and Holly Ordway (2017). I mention the method of analytic theology here, in as much as it tends towards what can be strictly proved, and it values univocal use of language, and is often at least somewhat disconnected from historical genealogies of thought. We can contrast that to a way of thinking, writing, and speaking that argues (or indeed simply witnesses) in a way that is more sympathetic to analogical uses of language, and is typically approached within a sense of an historical inheritance of textual traditions. |
2 | If we represent what I have called the agent as A, the medium as M, and the patient as P, and if a capital letter represents a position on Christian witness that stresses what I have been calling the cultural dimension of this aspect, and a lower case letter represents one that plays it down, the eight options would be AMP, AMp, AmP, aMP, Amp, aMp, amP, and amp. |
3 | For an excellent recent study and survey, see Hampton and Kenney (2020). |
4 | For a sense of the centrality of doctrine to witness, and of the place it occupied in the works of one of the principal examples of ‘cultural witness’ in England in the 20th century, Dorothy L. Sayers (1947) offers a good place to begin. |
5 | Among figures central to Eastern Orthodoxy, we could consider Gregory of Nyssa or Maximus the Confessor. (Cf. Balás 1966; Törönen 2007; Portaru 2012). |
6 | Here, we might, for instance, think of Philippians 2:15–16, or James 1:27. |
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Davison, A.P. Participating in Cultural Witness. Religions 2023, 14, 440. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040440
Davison AP. Participating in Cultural Witness. Religions. 2023; 14(4):440. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040440
Chicago/Turabian StyleDavison, Andrew P. 2023. "Participating in Cultural Witness" Religions 14, no. 4: 440. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040440
APA StyleDavison, A. P. (2023). Participating in Cultural Witness. Religions, 14(4), 440. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040440