“Humbled onto Death”: Kenosis and Tsimtsum as the Two Models of Divine Self-Negation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Diminish the infinite, diminish ad infinitum, why not?Jacques Derrida, Veils, 24.
Nemo contra deum nisi deus ipse […] Goethe believes that “A god can only be balanced by another god. That power should restrict itself is absurd. It is only restricted, in turn, by another power” [2] (p. 42).
2. Kenosis: Death of Christ Versus the Trinitarian Life
One must dare to say that the goodness of Christ appears greater, more divine, and truly in the image of the Father, when he humbles himself in obedience onto death—the death of the Cross—than had he clung onto his equality with the Father as an inalienable gift, and had refused to become a slave for the world’s salvation4.
Let the same mind be in you that was in Christ Jesus,who, though he was in the form of God,did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited,but emptied himself, taking the form of a slave, being born in human likeness.
One implies that Christ’s condescension was a contravention of his true identity, while the other implies that it was the embodiment of his true identity […] God, we must now say, is essentially kenotic, and indeed essentially cruciform. Kenosis, therefore, does not mean Christ’s emptying himself of his divinity (or of anything else), but rather Christ’s exercising his divinity, his equality with God [8] (p. 26, p. 28).
God makes the world to be itself, to have integrity and completeness and goodness that is—by God’s gift—its own. At the same time, God makes the world open to a relation with God’s own infinite life that can enlarge and transfigure the created order without destroying it […] And all this is summed up in our belief in a Christ who is uninterruptedly living a creaturely, finite life on earth and at the same time living out of the depths of divine life and uninterruptedly enjoying the relation that eternally subsists between the divine Source or Father and the divine Word or Son. It is in this sense that we can rightly speak of Jesus as the heart of creation, the one on whom all the patterns of finite existence converge to find their meaning. While the relation between Jesus and the eternal divine Word—the ‘hypostatic union’, which is an uninterrupted continuity of distinct, self-identifying, active life between the Word and Jesus—is unique, it can only be understood in connection to a general conception, a metaphysical model, of how the finite and the infinite relate to one another [9] (xiii).
… the significance of what is (following Phil. 2.7) regularly called the kenōsis, the self-emptying, of Christ is not that it involves a sort of collision between divine action and human action, such that one or the other element must be denied, qualified or diminished, but that a certain mode of finite life (self-sacrifice, other-directed love) is so attuned to the eternal mode of divine action that it becomes the occasion and vehicle of that infinite agency within the finite world [9] (p. 56).
3. Hegel’s Speculative Good Friday
God has died, God is dead—this is the most frightful of all thoughts, that everything eternal and true is not, that negation itself is found in God. The deepest anguish, the feeling of complete irretrievability, and the annulling of everything that is elevated, are bound up with this thought [11] (p. 465).
The Platonic relationship of image and archetype, which Origen and Augustine set up between earthly history and heavenly guidance, is transformed for Joachim into a powerful chain of events within history: the Kingdom of Haven becomes the final realm of the spirit […] Joachim depicts the displacement of the papal Church by the ecclesia spiritualis as a withering away. He often describes this displacement by the church of the spirit as a passing over [Übergehen], a transire. Joachim’s transire coincides with Hegel’s sublation [Aufhebung]. Both transire and sublation are ambiguos, depending on whether they mean entering into a new form of historical existence or passing into death [15] (p. 89, p. 93).
Pain is the prerogative of living natures; because they are the existent Notion, they are an actuality of infinite power, such that they are within themselves the negativity of themselves [as finite—A. B.-R.] […] It is said that contradiction is unthinkable; but in fact, in the pain of a living being it is even an actual existence [17] (p. 770).
The self-knowing Spirit knows not only itself but also the negative of itself, or its limit: to know one’s limit is to know how to sacrifice oneself. This sacrifice is the externalization in which Spirit displays the process of its becoming Spirit in the form of free contingent happening, intuiting its pure Self as Time outside of it, and equally its Being as Space. This last becoming of Spirit, Nature, is its living immediate Becoming; Nature, the externalized Spirit, is in its existence nothing but this eternal externalization of its continuing existence and the movement which reinstates the Subject […] But the other side of its Becoming, History, is a conscious, self-mediating process—Spirit emptied out into Time; but this externalization, this kenosis, is equally an externalization of itself; the negative is the negative of itself. This Becoming presents a slow-moving succession of Spirits, a gallery of images, each of which, endowed with all the riches of Spirit, moves thus slowly just because the Self has to penetrate and digest this entire wealth of its substance. As its fulfilment consists in perfectly knowing what it is, in knowing its substance, this knowing is its withdrawal into itself in which it abandons its outer existence and gives its existential shape over to recollection. Thus absorbed in itself, it is sunk in the night of its self-consciousness; but in that night its vanished outer existence is preserved, and this transformed existence—the former one, but now reborn of the Spirit’s knowledge—is the new existence, a new world and a new shape of Spirit [18] (p. 492).
Time, therefore, appears as the destiny and necessity of Spirit that is not yet complete within itself, the necessity to enrich the share which self-consciousness has in consciousness, to set in motion the immediacy of the in itself, which is the form in which substance is present in consciousness; or conversely, to realize and reveal what is at first only inward (the in itself being taken as what is inward), i.e., to vindicate it for Spirit’s certainty of itself [18] (p. 487).
4. Tsimtsum in Kabbalah
Creation out of nothing, from the void, could be nothing other than the creation of the void, that is, of the possibility of thinking of anything that was not God. Without such an act of self-limitation, after all, there would be only God—and obviously nothing else. A being that is not God could only become possible and originate by virtue of such a contraction, such a paradoxical retreat of God into himself. By positing a negative factor in Himself, God liberates creation [36] (p. 283).
Here we have the origin of the term tsimtsum, while the thing itself is the precise opposite of this idea: to the Kabbalist of Luria’s school tsimtsum does not mean the concentration of God at a point, but his retreat away from a point […] One is tempted to interpret this withdrawal of God into his own Being in terms of Exile, of banishing Himself from His totality into profound seclusion […] The first act of all is not an act of revelation but one of limitation [38] (pp. 260–261).
One is tempted to interpret this withdrawal of God into his own Being in terms of Exile, of banishing Himself from His totality into profound seclusion. Regarded this way, the idea of tsimtsum is the deepest symbol of Exile that could be thought of [38] (p. 261).
This “breaking” introduces a dramatic aspect into the process of Creation, and it can explain the Galut […] In other words, all being is in Galut […] Here we have a cosmic picture of Galut, not the Galut of the people of Israel alone, but the Galut of the Shekhinah at the very inception of its being. All that befalls in the world is only an expression of this primal and fundamental Galut. All existence, including “as it were”, God, subsists in Galut. Such is the state of creation after the breaking of the vessels […] In all the expanse of creation, there is imperfection, flaw, Galut [35] (p. 45).
And when it arose in the Simple Will to create worlds […] then the Infinite tsimtsem [contracted] itself at the central point within itself, at the exact centre of its light, and tsimtsem that light, and withdrew to extremities surrounding the central point, and then a vacant place and environment, and an empty space remained [42] (p. 3).
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1. | Schmitt comments here on Gregory Nazianzus’ famous thesis that the Trinity is in the state of stasis, ‘civil war’: “The One is always in rebellion against itself [stasiazon pros heauto]” [2] (p. 41). |
2. | “Das Wort sein bedeutet im Deutschen beides: Dasein und Ihmgehören” [3] (p.46). |
3. | The paradigmatic tsimtsum, in which God “takes in his breath” and restricts his glory for the sake of something else to emerge, derives already from Iasaiah, as described by Elliot Wolfson in his interpretation of one of the bahiric texts: “The notion of withdrawal, itself withdrawn and thus not stated overtly, is a secret exegetically derived from the verse lema‘an shemi a’arikh appi u-tehillati ehetam lakh le-vilti hakhritekha, ‘For the sake of my name I will postpone my wrath and my glory I will hold in for you so that I will not destroy you’ (Isa 48:9). The plain sense of the prophetic dictum relates to divine mercy expressed as God’s long-suffering, the capacity to restrain his rage. The expression tehillati ehetam, literally “my glory I will hold in”, is parallel to a’arikh appi, ‘I will postpone my wrath.’ One may surmise that at some point in ancient Israel, the notion of a vengeful god yielded its opposite, the compassionate god who holds in his fury” [5] (pp. 132–133). |
4. | Quot. in [6] (p. 15). One of the most outspoken advocates of kenotic Christianity today is John D. Caputo who emphasizes the ‘folly’ of kenosis as going against the monotheistic logic of absolute power: “The internal logic of the kingdom is the alogic—the folly—of the cross. Its dynamics are the movements of a kenotic abdication of supreme power of a Supreme Being for the powerless power of mercy and compassion” [7] (p. 105). |
5. | In Von Konzilis und Kirchen, Luther refers to the hymn of Johann Richter: “O Traurigkeit,/O Herzeleid!/Ist das nicht zu beklagen?/Gott des Vaters einig Kind/Wird ins Grab getragen./O grosse Not!/Gott selbst ist tot,/Am Kreuz ist er gestorben,/Hat dadurch das Himmelreich/Uns aus Lieb‘ erworben”. Luther’s teaching, however, was not fully accepted by the Lutheran orthodoxy who soon decided to neutralise the revolutionary potential of the phrase “Gott selbs ist tot” and replaced it with a more acceptably Trinitarian one: “Gotts Sohn liegt tot” [10] (p. 152). |
6. | On the influence of nominalism and anti-analogical Scotist concept of univocity of being on Martin Luther’s hyperrealist take on the death of God, see [12]. |
7. | Compare Schelling’s comment on the Hegelian interpretation of the Trinitarian stasis, which strongly emphasizes the material actualisation of the world as the finite other of God: “According to all philosophical concepts, it is here that the son is explicitly made into the matter of the world; for through this, that he is not merely a different being, but that he is also posited as a different being, will he become the world. Consequently, as long as he is still the son, as in the stated distinction, the son comports himself as the possibility, as the matter of the world to come [13] (p. 175). |
8. | Theodor Adorno sums up the defining moment of modern dialectics in a succinct epigram: “No theological content will last untransformed; every single one will have to face the test and enter the sphere of the profane” [16] (p. 108). Adorno’s remark refers both to the Hegelian legacy and the historical effects of the kabbalistic notion of tsimtsum. |
9. | See Hegel’s critique of the Trinitarian parachresis as ein eitles Spiel, an “idle game” which lacks seriousness necessary to conceive the breaking point of kenosis: “Thus the life of God and divine cognition may well be spoken of as disporting of Love with itself; but this idea sinks into mere edification, and even insipidity, if it lacks the seriousness, the suffering, the patience, and the labour of the negative. In itself, that life is indeed one untroubled equality and unity with itself, for which otherness and alienation, and the overcoming of alienation, are not serious matters” [17] (p. 11). In Heterodox Hegel, Cyril O’Regan leans towards the Gnostic-Neoplatonic reading of Hegel’s “Immanent Trinity”, which attempts to reconcile Proclus with Boehme: the Neoplatonic continuum as always based on the unbroken “everlasting circle” with the Gnostic intuition of the cosmic catastrophe or the Event proper. Within the “Immanent Trinity”, the “infinite differentiation”, although still a play, nonetheless proleptically prepares the proper “finite differentiation” and the fully serious encounter of the Notion with the other of the world: the Godhead in its original aseitas is not a synclastic, hermetically sealed pleroma, but is anaclastic, open to future narrative developments and in that sense the opposite of self-enclosed fullness, even “ontologically deficient”: “Hegel considers the immanent divine to be infected with what we can call, following Milan Kundera, the unbearable lightness of being […] [Hegel] suggests that the process of overcoming the lightness of being does not commence with the order of finitude that plays the role of being the contradictory of the divine; it already begins or has begun, in the formal sphere of being. The general upshot of this is that need and/or eros characterizes the divine even on the level of the “Immanent Trinity”, despite Hegel’s fairly consistent recall of the classical aseity tradition. Interestingly, Boehme not only erotically characterizes the immanent divine, as Hegel does; there is an overlap even on the level of metaphor. From an ontotheological point of view, the immanent divine is ‘thin’ (dün). To be thin has the technical sense of being ineffable and spiritual. Yet it is unmistakably the case that Boehme goes with the metaphorical drift of thin, for the thin divine seeks or hunger for substance, for fulfilment” [19] (p. 187). While Ciril O’Regan finds Böhmian-Valentinian themes in Hegel’s concept of holy history, Gilles Quispel makes a comparison with another important Alexandrian Gnostic of the 2nd century, Basilides, who created a highly innovative system of Christocentric Gnosticism, elaborated in the tractate called Elenchos. The Basilidian cosmic evolution begins with the “original confusion”, which marks the state of the primordial nothingness as—in O’Regan’s formulation—ontologically deficient. It is out of this confusion that the creation of the “original germ” of the world proceeds, then gradually developing in the three consecutive historical epochs: of the pagan Satan as the lord of nature, of the Judaic God as the first law-giver, and finally of Christ as the Gnostic messiah. The third epoch constitutes the pinnacle leading towards the final clarification and separation of the mixed elements of spirit and matter: “This germ is a potential world, comparable to a mustard seed which contains a whole plant, a world in which everything was present in an undifferentiated state [20] (p. 119). Yet, unlike in Origenes, who also imagined the emergence of the world via the seed metaphor, the Basilidian origin lacks the pleromatic calm: “In the beginning, then, there was confusion” [20] (p. 119). Just as in Hegel, therefore, the origin is imperfact, but the obvious difference is that while for Hegel, the “Immanent Trinity” will have brought the seed of the world out of love, the Basilidian “non-existent God” produces the germ out of a blind impulse (thus more in harmony with Böhme and then Schelling’s Weltalter. |
10. | On the importance of Luther’s translation of kenosis as Entäußerung for Hegel, see [21] (p. 82): “This injury [of the divine self-emptying] is made clear in the Hegelian concept of a divine alienation, central to the dialectical conception of kenosis and its principle. ‘Kenosis’ means the lowering or humbling of God in his Incarnation and the Passion […] Luther translates κeνωσις as Entäußerung, literally ‘the separation from the self through an externalisation.’ Now from this Entäußerung or ‘alienation’, Hegel forges a logical movement which becomes constitutive of the development of the divine essence. God necessarily departs from himself in His self-determination”. On the crucial significance of kenosis for Hegel’s thought, see also Thomas Altizer, the theologian of the “death of God”: “A decisive clue to a uniquely Hegelian negativity is the word kenosis itself, a word appearing not only at many of the most decisive points of the Phenomenology, but a word unveiling as no other word does the whole movement of Hegel’s thinking, a movement that is nothing less than an absolute self-negation, and a self-negation that the Science of Logic can know as an absolute self-emptying […]: a dawning that […] Hegel understands as the self-negation of a heavenly transcendence, one absolutely transfiguring that transcendence, so that transcendence itself is now only here and now” [22] (p. 45). |
11. | Hegel resorts to this esoteric metaphor—die Rose auf dem Kreuz der Gegenwart—few times: “To recognize reason as the rose in the cross of the present, and to find delight in it, is a rational insight which implies reconciliation with reality” [23] (p. 19); and later on, in 1824: “in order to pluck reason, the rose in the cross of the present, one must take up the cross itself” [10] (p. 248). On the hermetic meaning of this Hegelian phrase see [24] (p. 248). |
12. | In the words of Böhme’s English translator and commentator, W. Scott Palmer: “the turba is the essence of hell” [25]. The turba is what disturbs the divine inward calm (Ruhe) and inaugurates the “hellish” series of events that lead towards the curse of the Real. |
13. | “Die Wahrheit ist der Tod der Intention” [26] (p. 18). |
14. | Hegel’s concept of Anderssein or otherness is highly dialectical: on the one hand, it signifies the moment of the spirit’s ordeal in the process of self-realization through the tarrying with the negative—on the other, however, it is also meant as the future vessel for the fully incarnate spirit in the redemptive moment of their reconciliation. In order to combine both moments, Hegel must reach for a new narrative that would allow him to develop his procosmic intention: the Goethean concept of Bildung as a model of maturation in which the beautiful soul is forced to venture out in the world and learn about itself through the encounters with otherness in order to achieve a self-recognition and peace with the world, even if at the cost of Entsagung, the resignation from the highest ideals cherished by the soul in its youth. Cyril O’Regan strongly emphasizes “the correspondence between Hegelian thought and narrative, especially between Hegelian thought and that genre of narrative called the Bildungsroman that has the story of the genesis of personhood as its subject. Hegel may have broadened its expanse and projected the model of individual becoming onto the historical network as a whole, yet the model remains determina tive throughout all of its applications” [19] (pp. 8–9). It is, therefore, Bildung that forms the model for reconciliation between the rose and the cross: the adversarial negativity of matter as the Luciferian “first-born” Real is necessary for the realization of the Idea, the Concept or the Notion, which the rose represents in its purely inward noetic sense of a “seed”. Without this inertia (Trägheit) and hindrance, for which the cross stands, the rosy Idea, initially self-contended in the “game of love with itself”, would have never blossomed and brought fruits: it would have remained a beautiful soul. The radical otherness of the world, therefore, which the “Immanent Trinity” must include and take into account, has an autonomous value of its own. It is not merely a test-ordeal, as in Böhme, where it serves the purpose of the “clarification” of the spirit. It is a test, but of a different kind: it teaches the inner “game of love” the value of existence—that is is better to be than to not be. |
15. | A similar metaphysical intuition combining the two terms, tsimtsum (concentration) and kenosis (descent), emerges also in Schelling. In the notes to his lectures in 1810, he also draws on Goethe’s authority, but this time using his quote against Blumenberg’s later defence of unlimited power: “A passive limitation is indeed a mere insufficiency or a relative lack of power; however, to limit oneself, to concentrate oneself in one point, yet also to hold on to the latter with all one’s might and not to let go until it has been expanded into a world, such constitutes the greatest power and perfection. As Goethe says: ‘Whoever wills greatness must concentrate himself/Only in self-restriction is the artist revealed’ […] Concentration, then, marks the beginning of all reality. For this reason, it is the concentrating rather than the expanding nature that possesses a primordial and grounding force. Thus the beginning of creation amounts indeed to a descent of God; He properly descends into the Real, and contracts Himself entirely into the Real. Yet such an act does not imply anything unworthy of God but it is this descent that marks the greatest act for God and, indeed, for Christianity as well” [27] (p. 75). This conflation does not come as a surprise, considering Schelling’s long acquaintance with one of the most prominent Christian kabbalists, Franz Molitor, the author of Die Philosophie der Geschichte. In the second volume, Molitor claims to have found the doctrine of incarnation in the “ancient teaching of the kabbalah”: “Daß die Gottheit es nicht verschmähe, aus Liebe zu der Creatur in die irdische Form und Schranken einzugehen, ist eine wesentliche Grundidee, die dem Juden- und Christenthume gemeinschaftlich unterliegt (That the Godhead did not despise to take the earthly form and undergo limitation: this is the fundamental notion that underlies both Judaism and Christianity)” [28] (p. 136). |
16. | Already in the 19th century, Hegel was accused by Christian Baur of developing a “Christian Gnosis” due to the influence of the Jewish kabbalah. Cyril O’Regan describes it very efficiently in terms of the “divine vicissitudes” and the “dramatic narrative ontology” whose drama consists precisely in the mystical dwelling into God’s inner vulnerability, cruciformity and stasis: “Thus Gnostic return has to do with the repetition in modern Christian discourses of a narrative focused on the vicissitudes of (divine) reality’s fall from perfection, its agonic middle and its recollection into perfection. In identifying Gnostic return in this way, Baur offers one of the two major paradigms of Gnostic genealogical assessment not only for the 19th but also for the 20th century” [29] (p. 29). Indeed, Baur is right: the most dramatic account of the divine vicissitudes derives from the Lurianic kabbalah which reached Hegel via its Christian—mostly Rosicrucian—appropriations. On the kabbalistic background of German Idealism, see also [30] (pp. 30–52). |
17. | In Kabbalah, in the section on Isaac Luria, Scholem writes: “At the same time, side by side with the Gnostic outlook, we find a most astonishing tendency to a mode of contemplative thought that can be called ‘dialectic’ in the strictest sense of the term as used by Hegel. This tendency is especially prominent in attempts to present formal explanations of such doctrines as that of tsimtsum, the breaking of the vessels, or the formation of the partsufim” [32] (p. 143). Derrida too spots the affinity in Dissemination, where he notices that the idea of tsimtsum is “linked to the mythology of ‘Louria,’ but it can also arise by way of ‘Hegel,’ ‘Boehme,’ etc.” [33] (p. 344). |
18. | On the affinities, but also differences, between tsimtsum and kenosis, especially in the context of Moltmann’s theology, see [37] (pp. 311–338). |
19. | For the critique of Scholem, see [39] (pp. 39–60). |
20. | According to David Biale, the event of the expulsion, the consequences of which Scholem saw for the first time in the “risk theology” of Abraham Miguel de Cardozo, influenced his thinking about the whole Lurianic legacy: “The Lurianic Kabbalah taught that the cosmos started with the self-expulsion of God; the world could only be created in the empty space from which God was absent. Luria’s myth of creation thus involved a catastrophe of divine exile. God not only reveals himself; he also hides himself. This paradoxical theology could not have arisen, in Scholem’s view, without the catastrophe of 1492” [40] (p. 114). |
21. | For Böhme, the First Desire has no power to properly create out of nothing. As the Gnostic demiurge who makes his world based merely on pretence, the Böhmian Begierde is equally powerless: “For the Nothing hungers after the Something and the Hunger is a Desire, viz. the first Verbum Fiat, or creating Power. For the Desire has nothing that it is able to make or conceive; it conceives itself, and impresses itself; it coagulates itself; it draws itself into itself, and comprehends itself, and brings itself from Abyss into Byss, and overshadows itself with its Magnetical Attraction; so that the Nothing is filled, and yet remains as a Nothing” [24] (3:5). |
22. | The idea that creation is mostly concerned with the letting be of radical alterity also suggests a new vision of redemption, which differs from the notion of Great Return, Homecoming, or the Kabbalistic tikkun, all deriving from the Neoplatonic tradition. While the latter envisages the redemptive finale as the grand closing of the “everlasting circle”, however, delayed by the historical detour, the former sees the moment of reconciliation (if it ever comes) as the affirmation of the worldly finitude as no longer privative about the divine Infinite. This view comes very strongly to the fore in Derrida’s critique of Hegel, whose concept of Versöhnung is still tinged with the Neoplatonic notion of return: instead, Derrida proposes a “non-closure” which will defer the parousiastic return to the origin and allow the world to disseminate and realize the ultimate differentiation within the realm of finitude. In “The Pit and the Pyramide”, Derrida modifies thus Hegel’s conception of the sign as the time of referral in transition between the original and the final presence and transforms it into a time of deferral which suspends and “subverts every kingdom”: “In determining Being as presence (presence in the form of the object, or self-presence under the rubric of consciousness), metaphysics could treat the sign only as a transition […] As the site of the transition, the bridge between two moments of full presence, the sign can function only as a provisional reference of one presence to another. The bridge can be lifted [relevé]. The process of the sign has a history, and signification is even history comprehended: between an original presence and its circular reappropriation in a final presence. The self-presence of absolute knowledge and the consciousness of Being-near-to-itself in logos, in the absolute concept, will have been distracted from themselves only for the time of a detour and for the time of a sign. The time of the sign, then, is the time of referral. It signifies self-presence, refers to presence to itself, and organizes the circulation of its provisionality. Always, from the outset, the movement of lost presence already will have set in motion the process of its reappropriation” [43] (pp. 71–72). |
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Bielik-Robson, A. “Humbled onto Death”: Kenosis and Tsimtsum as the Two Models of Divine Self-Negation. Philosophies 2024, 9, 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050134
Bielik-Robson A. “Humbled onto Death”: Kenosis and Tsimtsum as the Two Models of Divine Self-Negation. Philosophies. 2024; 9(5):134. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050134
Chicago/Turabian StyleBielik-Robson, Agata. 2024. "“Humbled onto Death”: Kenosis and Tsimtsum as the Two Models of Divine Self-Negation" Philosophies 9, no. 5: 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050134
APA StyleBielik-Robson, A. (2024). “Humbled onto Death”: Kenosis and Tsimtsum as the Two Models of Divine Self-Negation. Philosophies, 9(5), 134. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9050134