The
characteristic of the modern age is that men concentrate on themselves
and what they can and want to do. This and this alone is what life is
about. No outside source can guide, command, or coerce us. Man is
autonomous. He is only what he makes himself to be, whatever it is. He
does not make himself into what he “ought” to be. The word “ought” has
no meaning.
The world, meantime, is full of a benevolence or charity gone wrong.
We want to create a world in which everyone is taken care of, preferably
by ourselves. This justifies our existence. Most people are the objects
of our “care,” not the ones who forge their own destiny. We want to
“cause” others to be complete. We are against poverty, inequality, and
especially “discrimination.” We want equality of outcomes. We are leery
of excellences. Fame and fortune should be equally distributed. Our
vision of equality verges into uniformity.
The function of our public life is to make these things happen. We
are “free” only by assenting to our own laws. We formulate an image of
man as we want him to be, not as he is created to be. The notion that
authority is a “service of others” includes remaking others, even
medically, so that they will be “happy” with what we allow them to be.
We bring forth children in all sorts of ways in the oddest familial
arrangements, or lack thereof. We none the less expect them to
acknowledge our benevolence and to be blessed by the exercise of our
“rights” over them, including our “right” to prevent them from being
born.
Christians have long wondered about the divine intervention
that we call “incarnation.” Basically, this term means that God,
through a free action of His own, instructed by word and example what it
was that He had in mind for the human race as a whole and for each
person conceived, born, and died within it. By all standards, this
particular manner in which God revealed Himself to us was unexpected,
astonishing. Also, it was apparently quite inefficient, as this divine
initiative still is not even close to preaching the Good News to all
nations that “Christ is Lord.”
Surely, Christ would have won more folks over had He come in more
glory and power, more drama. People respect such things. We should not
second-guess the Lord, I know, but the plan of redemption was surely, to
say the least, inefficient for its given purpose. Most Jews rejected it
from the beginning, while the Gentiles who took it up spent much of
their time fighting with each other about what it meant. Many nations
that once called themselves Christian are busy giving it up. And
Christians themselves find that the rulers of the nations more and more
require things, words and deeds, that they cannot accept and still be
Christian. Many become secularists, or Muslims, or some other
explanation of reality that does not entail what Christ taught.
But, of course, in thinking of this situation, we must begin with the
question of whether our plan for the world is exactly the same as the
one that was found in revelation. What was the purpose of the
Incarnation?
Was it about reorganizing the world so that it would be a “decent”
place for us to pass through during our four score years and ten? Why
did Christ not seem to give a rap for explaining to us how to promote
economic development or harmony amongst the varieties of folks who live
and love on this planet? About the only passage in the New Testament
that has anything to do with international relations is that which send
the Apostles forth to baptize and teach all nations. Many passages in
the New Testament suggest that, in the end of time, few will accept the
revelation that God wanted us to know about.
To be sure, Christ did give us some good advice which, if we followed
it, we probably would be much better off. He reiterated the
Commandments for one thing. Then He added that if we even think of
violating them, we are in sin. He had little to say about politics and
economics, art and letters. He was not a revolutionary either. He just
did not think that was His purpose. We could figure these immediate
things out for ourselves if we wanted to. Many a critic has wondered why
walking around Palestine for a couple of years was all the time and
exposure that the Father thought we needed to learn what we needed from
His Son. It takes twice that long to obtain a doctorate these days.
Presidents and senators, let alone judges, serve for longer periods of
time
It is not that Christ did not have a lot to say, but surely He should
have been more concerned with social and political structures, with
freeing the slaves, and with the eradication of poverty. He did say, in a
passage we often forget, that the poor would always be with us, yet we
go about trying to eradicate poverty. And many kinds of poverty can be
detected, including intellectual poverty. Christ talked a good deal
about the “world.” He created it and saw that it was good. Yet, the same
world could be a danger to us. We could and often did put it in the
place of God. The world without God has become our playground.
Recently, I came across the following astonishing passage of Karl Rahner, from his book on Spiritual Exercises.
“Christ passes up marriage, art, and even friendship, for the men He
gathered around Him do not really understand Him, so that He really
remained very much alone. He does not pursue politics or science. He
does not solve any of the social problems of His time. He showed no
resentment towards those things. He did not despise them. He just did
not busy Himself with them. The only thing we can really say about Jesus
is that He was a very pious man” (122). Such a passage gives us much to
think about. It may be one of the most counter-cultural passages we
will ever see.
Like Socrates, Christ never wrote a book. Though He seems to have
enjoyed children, flowers, and ordinary things, Christ was not
particularly concerned about this life but about our eternal life. If we
missed out on that end, nothing else much mattered. We are so much
immersed in social activism and the things of this world that we do not
recognize the central point of Christianity. We were not primarily
created for this world, but only in it for a
relatively short space of time, enough time, no matter what polity or
era we live in, to decide for ourselves whether or not we will accept
the purpose for which we are created. This is the primary thing that
revelation had to tell us.
If we look at the four reasons why Aquinas said that a divine law or
revelation was “necessary,” that is, understandable, we will notice that
each of these four reasons (I-II, 91, 4) was designed to clarify
something about eternal life. The first was that we needed a clearer
idea of God, our end, than what we could figure out by ourselves. The
second was that we could use more order in our inner thoughts in order
so that we could observe the external laws better. Thirdly, we could use
clearer understanding of what sins are, and finally we should take
seriously the teaching, that Plato also understood, of eternal rewards
and punishments for what we do in this world. If we think about it, the
fact that we know these things makes us more, not less responsible, or
more irresponsible, depending on which way we go.
“We should have expected,” Rahner continues, “that He (Christ) would
compose a magnificent literary work; we should have especially expected
that He would reform the world politically and socially, that He would
establish in some visible way the Kingdom of God.” In other words,
Christ did not do any of the things that we might have expected of the
great and magnanimous man. Obviously, we would suspect that if He did
not do such expected things, the reason for it was crucial. Success in
these areas was not what God had in mind for us. Christ did not consider
success in these affairs of this world to be “essential.”
The passage in Rahner that most struck me, I think, was this one: “It is difficult for us to accept the fact that Jesus really cannot do anything else except save souls”
(123). What a remarkably illuminating passage! Christ is a “pious” man.
He does not dabble in or perfect literature, politics, art, technology,
or science. As a carpenter, he produced no masterpiece that we can find
in the British Museum. Even the often eloquent words the Evangelists
attribute to Him are disputed by the Scripture scholars. What is left is
the central point of Christianity: Christ dwelt amongst us essentially
so that we would understand that eternal life is the reason for our
creation.
What about all the things to do in the world? He leaves them for us
to figure out by ourselves. He just wants us to keep in mind what each
life is ultimately about.
“Created reality,” Rahner concludes, “gives man a place in which he
can make his free choices” (174). Ultimately, no one else can make these
choices for us. The priority is: “Seek ye first the Kingdom of God,”
then “all these things will be added to you.” By reversing this
principle, we fail to understand that Jesus’s life was directed to
leading each of us to eternal life. The many things that He did not do
in this life were not meant to say that human things were worthless,
only that they were not first.