Franz Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies: Complications of Agape in the Secularized World
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Political Theology and the Transformations of Virtues and Vices
The modern world is not evil; in some ways the modern world is far too good. It is full of wild and wasted virtues. When a religious scheme is shattered (as Christianity was shattered at the Reformation), it is not merely the vices that are let loose. The vices are, indeed, let loose, and they wander and do damage. But the virtues are let loose also; and the virtues wander more wildly, and [inflict their] damage. The modern world is full of the old Christian virtues gone mad. The virtues have gone mad because they have been isolated from each other and are wandering alone.
Modernity was and continues to be, in its transformed postmodern stage, an age of revolutions with promised utopias. […] The lesson of the political and philosophical revolutions of modernity and postmodernity is that it is impossible to move forward without taking the past with you. Taking the past into the future for the sake of the future, however, requires creative strategies—strategies of repetition, interpretation, and mediation—that sublimate and re-present the past as a usable past.
“The Past […] Stuck like Glue […] and Caused an Excess Weight”
[W]hich was overly encumbered with miracles and now suspicious, could be thrown overboard, and it could be imagined that the ship of faith, already dangerously shaken without this ballast, yet could still safely cross the sea of the present. But this does not say that what was sunk also really—sank. Far from pleasing theology by really sinking, the past stuck like glue to the exterior of the vessel from which it had been thrown and caused an excess weight, worse than previously when it had been stowed inside, which is the proper nature of things.(The Star 110–11/Der Stern 111–12)
1.2. Rosenzweig within the Thicket of Political Theology, War and Love
2. Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies
2.1. Rosenzweig on/against Agapic Love
What we experience is that God loves, not that God is love [Daß Gott liebt, erfahren wir, nicht daß Gott die Libe ist]. In the love, he draws too near to us for us still to say: he is this or that. In his love, we experience only that he is […] but not what he is. The what, the essence, remains hidden. It hides precisely by revealing itself.(Der Stern 424/The Star 403–4)
2.2. Rosenzweig on the (Agapic) Love of Enemies
Loving One’s Enemies Of old you’ve been the heavenly vest of love, my loving settled with you in the nest. Angry words of my enemy, I enjoy them, for Your sake; Leave him—he will pressure him whom you have long pressured. Your enemy learned Your anger: that’s why I love him; for his fist meets Your blow head on. If You would cast me away, on that day I would cast myself away, how could I wish the best for him, whom You cast away! Until some day Your anger disappears and You send salvation to the remnant of the heirs redeemed by You. (Rosenzweig 2000a, p. 196) | Feindesliebe Von eh warst Du der Liebe Himmelsveste/mein Lieben nistete bei Dir im Neste. Scheltworte meines Feinds, sie freun mich, Deinethalb/laß ihn—sein Druck preßt, den dein Druck längst preßte. Es lernte Deinen Grimm der Feind: drum lieb ich ihn/den seine Faust trifft Deines Schlags Gebreste. Verwarfst du mich, den Tag verwarf ich selber mich/wie gönnt’ ich dem, den du verwarfst, das Beste! Bis einst dein Groll vergeht und Du Erlösung schickst/des einst von Dir erlösten Erbes Reste. (Rosenzweig 1927, pp. 108/233) | מֵאָז מְעוֹן הָאַהֲבָה הָיִיתָ מֵאָז מְעוֹן הָאַהֲבָה הָיִיתָ חָנוּ אֲהָבַי בַּאֲשֶׁר חָנִיתָ תּוֹכְחוֹת מְרִיבַי עָרְבוּ לִי עַל-שְׁמָךְ עָזְבֵם יְעַנּוּ אֶת-אֲשֶׁר עִנִּיתָ לָמְדוּ חֲרוֹנְךָ אוֹיְבַי וָאֹהֲבֵם כִּי רָדְפוּ חָלָל אֲשֶׁר הִכִּיתָ מִיּוֹם בְּזִיתַנִי בְּזִיתִינִי אֲנִי כִּי לֹא אֲכַבֵּד אֶת-אֲשֶׁר בָּזִיתָ עַד יַעֲבָר-זַעַם וְתִשְׁלַח עוֹד פְּדוּת אֶל-נַחֲלָתְךָ זֹאת אֲשֶׁר פָּדִיתָ. (cited in Rosenzweig 2011, p. 272) |
One does as little justice to the dictum “Love your enemies”, [Liebet eure Feinde] from the Sermon on the Mount [Bergpredigt], as one does to other great realities if one views it as an ethical demand and thus from the point of view of unreality. The Christian’s love for his enemies [Die christliche Feindesliebe] is a reality [Wirklichkeit]—wherever it cannot be anything else. And it enters this state of not being able to be anything else wherever the church or an individual obeys Christianity’s original command: to missionize [zu missionieren; (Glatzer 1972, p. 348), translates: “the proselytize”]. Loving one’s enemies here becomes the most powerful weapon for world conquest: the enemy is loved as a future brother [künftige Bruder].
So Jewish love for an enemy must be something totally different [ganz andres10] if it is to be real. For here the reality is a community that has been granted not the blessings of victory [Gnaden des Siegens] but instead those of defeat [Unterliegens begnadeten]. Thus love for one’s enemies arises here at the point that Yehuda Halevy reveals in this poem, for what we have here is truly a revealing. The real is rarely that which is spontaneously expressed, and a word easily falls into unreality when it attempts to become objective. But what is here revealed is the objective truth, precisely because it is expressed in an entirely subjective manner. The Jew loved in his enemy, the executor of divine judgment [Der Jude liebt im Feind den Vollstrecker des göttlichen Gerichts], a judgment he accepts. In contrast to all other people, he has no other choice since he alone does not have at his disposal the Jews whose fault it is—and therefore makes his own [und es bleibt ihm im Gegensatz zu allen andern Menschen nichts andres übrig, denn er als einziger hat nicht die Juden zur Verfügung, die daran schuld sind]. A man’s love for God becomes the law of life for all the love with which he can love other people [Die Liebe, mit der ein Mensch Gott liebt, wird zum Lebensgesetz aller Liebe, mit der er Menschen lieben kann], even, to take it to the extreme (but is there an extreme for love?), his enemies. “Of old you’ve been the heavenly vest of love.”(Rosenzweig 2000a, p. 197, [see also Galli 1995, pp. 252–53]; the bracketed German sentences are cited from Rosenzweig 1927, p. 233)
The Christian, Rosenzweig argues, demands Feindesliebe as a means of imperialistic love, that of a mission. With his love the Christian occupies the world. The Jewish Feindesliebe is, however, different, for it expresses the being of the occupied, the experience of destruction, defeat, and loss, which is related to and justified as the judgement of God. The Jewish love for the enemy is not a gesture of religious mission; its task is not an opening toward the world. It is not a gesture of Reformation, nor is it an attempt to enter Weltgeschichte […] it is rather a gesture of acceptance.(Shahar 2014, p. 169, see until 171)
Ha! Those who write out evil writs, and compose iniquitous documents. To subvert the cause of the poor, to rob of their rights the needy of my people; that widows may be their spoil, and fatherless children their booty! […] Ha! Assyria, rod of my anger, in whose hand, as a staff, is my fury! I send him against an ungodly nation, I charge him against a people that provokes me, to take its spoil and to seize its booty, and to make it a thing trampled, like the mire of the streets.(Isaiah 10:1–2, 5–6, trans. NJPS)
2.2.1. The Jew Does Not Have the Other “At His Disposal”
2.2.2. Accepting Divine Judgment as a Theological Safeguard against Gnosticism
2.3. Between Rosenzweig and Schmitt on the Love of Enemies
2.4. Conclusion: Rosenzweig, Agape, and Political Theology
3. Agape in the 21st Century—Some Reflections following Rosenzweig
3.1. The Significance of Political Theology and Its Secularizations
3.2. Rosenzweig’s Thought and the Quest for Humanist, Caring Approaches
3.3. Emotional Theology and the Covenant of Being-With
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
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Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | This essay is a part of a broader research project on intersections between Jewish Thought, Pragmatism and Agape. |
2 | Jacob Taubes wrote in his book Ad [To] Carl Schmitt (p. 25) that “For Schmitt Christianity was ‘Judaism for the Gentiles’, he always longed to stand up against its power” (cited in Gross 2007, p. 18). Raphael Gross remarks (Gross 2007, p. 17) that Schmitt in his public writing described himself Judenkritisch (critical of the Jews), but in the “notebooks, however, Schmitt refers to the Jews as ‘the true enemy’”. |
3 | This paragraph and the citation from Chesterton are borrowed from (Berman 2022a, p. 89). |
4 | See also (Rosenzweig 2000a, p. 25), and the remark by Yehoyada Amir in (Rosenzweig 2011, pp. 26–27). |
5 | On Rosenzweig’s understanding of divine love as expressed in Jewish liturgy, see the discussion by Steven Kepnes (2007, pp. 79–129). |
6 | See, e.g., the poems “The City on High” and “The Pilgrim”, in (Rosenzweig 2000a, pp. 232, 240). |
7 | Erich Fromm (1941, p. 81) viewed Luther’s approach of human submission to divine authority as one of the sources of the human “escape from freedom” in the modern era. |
8 | The category of the Possible has its basis and outcome in the psychological phenomenon of the unconscious (das Unbewußte); see (Santner 2001) and (Pinkas 2023). The latter states (121) that, for Rosenzweig, “the unconscious implies a spiritual potential”, of liberation from Idealist Absolutism on the one hand, and from idolatry on the other. |
9 | Rosenzweig wrote: “One could not do a greater injustice [to Christianity] than to present it in terms of its own catechism. [...] These legalistic machines, lacking humor and soul, whom the Christian so gladly represents under the [name] “Pharisees”, would be incapable of living; just as little as those pale lilies of heaven, whom the Jew, on the basis of reading the Sermon on the Mount, would recognize as the only “true Christians.” If one wants to understand a spirit, then one must not abstract it from the body that belongs to it” (Rosenzweig 2000b, pp. 100–1). |
10 | This is the spelling in the original. The capitalizations in the cited texts are according to the original. |
11 | In Freud’s own words: “The people of Israel had believed themselves to be the favourite child of God, and when the great Father caused misfortune after misfortune to rain down upon this people of his, they were never shaken in their belief in his relationship to them or questioned his power or righteousness. Instead, they produced the prophets, who held up their sinfulness before them; and out of their sense of guilt they created the overstrict commandments of their priestly religion. It is remarkable how differently a primitive man behaves. If he has met with a misfortune, he does not throw the blame on himself but on his fetish, which has obviously not done its duty, and he gives it a thrashing instead of punishing himself” (Freud 1961, p. 126; see also his elaborated remarks in Moses and Monotheism). |
12 | Exploring how Schmitt could run counter to Agape and the divine dictate of universal love, exceeds our discussion here (see Gross 2007, p. 311; Nirenberg 2014). On Schmitt’s critique of Christianity, and in particular its idea of Katechon, or “restrainer”, see (Lapidot 2020, pp. 41–43). Schmitt’s stance vis-à-vis Christianity is a mirror-picture of Rosenzweig, a Jewish philosopher who endorsed the agapic love of enemies, as we saw above. |
13 | Any proponent of such a conjecture would have to address David Nirenberg’s claim that Schmitt’s concept of the political, and more broadly the Christian image of the political, was heavily influenced by its negative approach to Judaism and used “figures of Judaism to think about Christian politics and law” (Nirenberg 2014, p. 2). |
14 | A similar grammatical form is found in the Hebrew words מַהוּת (lit. essence) which is derived from מַה (what), כַּמּוּת (quantity) which is derived from כַּמָּה (how many), and אֵיכוּת (quality), which is derived from אֵיךְ (what). |
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Berman, N.S. Franz Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies: Complications of Agape in the Secularized World. Religions 2024, 15, 806. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070806
Berman NS. Franz Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies: Complications of Agape in the Secularized World. Religions. 2024; 15(7):806. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070806
Chicago/Turabian StyleBerman, Nadav S. 2024. "Franz Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies: Complications of Agape in the Secularized World" Religions 15, no. 7: 806. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070806
APA StyleBerman, N. S. (2024). Franz Rosenzweig on Divine Love and on the Love of Enemies: Complications of Agape in the Secularized World. Religions, 15(7), 806. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15070806